Bank of Kentucky v. Schuylkill Bank

1 Parsons 180
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedJanuary 28, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 Parsons 180 (Bank of Kentucky v. Schuylkill Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Kentucky v. Schuylkill Bank, 1 Parsons 180 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1846).

Opinion

The cause was heard by Judges King and P ARSONS, in November, 1845; and on the 28th of January, 1846, the opinion of the Court was delivered by

King, President. —

On the 17th of December, 1839, the complainants, the Bank of Kentucky, filed their original bill on the equity side of this Court, against the defendants. The bill, among other things, charged, that the complainants theretofore had con[209]*209stituted the Schuylkill Bank their agent for the city of Philadelphia, for the purpose of receiving remittances; paying dividends; keeping books of transfer, and permitting transfers of stock; receiving old and granting new certificates. That they had discovered that certificates of their stock, amounting at par value to upwards of $900,000, had been surreptitiously issued by and under the seal of the Schuylkill Bank, and the signature of its Cashier, and were then outstanding against the complainants. That these certificates were not the representatives of stock or certificates, which had been transferred or surrendered. That for these certificates, the complainants had reason to apprehend they might be made responsible, although they never had received any equivalent for the same, nor had any knowledge of the intention of the Schuylkill Bank to issue them. That the funds derived from this breach of trust had come to the possession of the defendants, with the full knowledge of their Cashier of the sources from whence they were derived. And that it was the intention of the Schuylkill Bank to apply them to the discharge of its obligations to depositors and bill holders. The relief prayed for, was that the defendants might be decreed to deliver to the complainants all moneys so received; to disclose the extent and amount of stock so surreptitiously issued; to account to and satisfy the complainants for all liabilities which they had thus occasioned them, if such was the effect of their proceedings ; and that an injunction might issue against the defendants, restraining them from parting with any funds in their possession or control, derived from the said surreptitious issues; and any other funds held by them, until the loss with which the complainants were threatened, might be supplied and guarded against. The Schuylkill Bank not objecting to a special injunction to the extent of enjoining it against parting with or disposing of any moneys in its possession derived from the issue of the spurious stock of the Bank of Kentucky, such an injunction issued accordingly. Things rested in this way until the 13th of June, 1842, when the Legislature of Pennsylvania passed an Act, relating, among other things, to the subject of this controversy. This Act provides that the complainants should be authorized to proceed in equity in this Court against the defendants, and any other person or persons they may think fit to make a party, defendants, either by a new and original bill, or by amending and enlarging any bill then pending in this Court for the settlement and decision of all controversies, complaints, claims, and questions between -these banks; and especially all and every controversy, claim, and question, arising out of cer[210]*210tain alleged excessive issues of certificates of stock of the said Bank of Kentucky, or liabilities therefor, and commonly known by the name of spurious stock; or out of any disposition or .transfer of the same, or any liability arising therefrom; and all and every account or accounts between said banks, of what nature or kind whatsoever, so as to make a final end thereof; — and that in such proceedings it should not be necessary nor required nor allowed to make or bring in any other party or parties but the said banks, except as aforesaid; and that the said Court be authorized to take cognisance and jurisdiction of any suit in equity so as aforesaid instituted, and to proceed to hear and determine the matters aforesaid, between the said banks, and without other parties than as aforesaid, after the manner and course of a Court of Equity: — and to make such final decree thereon, and to grant such relief as to justice and equity pertain.” Then follow some direct enactments and provisoes not material to be here introduced. Another section of the Act directs “ that, in the proceedings authorized by the first section of this Act, the Bank of Kentucky shall be taken and considered as representing the holders of 4 spurious stock,’ and suing not only for their own use, but also for the use of said holders.” On the 22d of February, 1842, the legislature of Kentucky passed a law granting certain powers to the Bank of Kentucky, which act authorized the bank to increase its capital stock one million of dollars, and gave it ample authority to compromise with the lonáftde holders of spurious stock issued by the Schuylkill Bank, by exchanging share for share such spurious for genuine stock, and by other means provided in the law. In pursuance of this law, the Directors of the Bank of Kentucky have from time to time, since its enactment, compensated nearly all the holders of the spurious stock issued by its Philadelphia agent, so that few of these holders remain unsatisfied.

On the 6th day of September, 1842, the complainants brought what they term “their amended and supplemental bill,” against the Schuylkill Bank and Hosea J. Levis. This bill refers generally to the original, and then proceeds at great length and with great precision to charge the injuries complained of, for w'hich redress is sought against the Schuylkill Bank. It sets forth the corporate existence of the complainants; their authority to appoint in Philadelphia a transfer agent of their stock; the appointment of the Schuylkill Bank as such agent; its acceptance of the same; and the terms of such acceptance; the prescribed forms of executing the duties of the appointment, and generally the duties and obli[211]*211gations of the trust. It proceeds to charge the defendants with the false issue of upwards of 13,000 shares of Kentucky Bank stock, and that it was done in so artful a way, that it was not until the change in the Philadelphia agency of the bank, and when, on the 16th of December, 1839, the transfer books were about being removed, that the fraud was discovered. The bill then proceeds to explain the means resorted to by the bank for the discrimination of the good from the spurious stock, and the impossibility, from the complication of good and bad stock, 'held by the same owners, of arriving at any satisfactory or practical result. It charges that the proceeds of the sale of this spurious stock went immediately and directly into the Schuylkill Bank, and were applied to the payment of its debts and liabilities, and that by this means the existence of that bank was continued. That on the 16th of December, 1889, when the over issue was first ascertained, there was standing to the individual credit of Hosea J. Levis, then President of the Schuylkill Bank, a sum exceeding $300,000: that on that night, having resigned his office, he drew his check for this sum in favour of H. J. Levis, Cashier, and thus his individual account was closed, and H. J. Levis, Cashier, was credited with the amount of the check; and by this means the Schuylkill Bank possessed themselves of this large amount, and have applied it to the use of that bank. That Levis, on the night of the day these transactions took place, repeatedly declared, that the issues of spurious stock were made, and the stock sold to raise money to get the Schuylkill Bank out of difficulties and embarrassments, and that the whole proceeds were applied to that object, and not to his individual use.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Parsons 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-kentucky-v-schuylkill-bank-pactcomplphilad-1846.