Bank of the Commonwealth v. Triplett

29 Ky. 549, 6 J.J. Marsh. 549, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 249
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 18, 1831
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Ky. 549 (Bank of the Commonwealth v. Triplett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of the Commonwealth v. Triplett, 29 Ky. 549, 6 J.J. Marsh. 549, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 249 (Ky. Ct. App. 1831).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson,

delivered the opinion of the court.

To a petition and summons brought by the president and directors of the bank of the commonwealth, against John T. Mason, William T. Barry and Thomas Triplett, on a promissory note executed by the defendants to the plaintiffs for $282, payable a hundred and twenty days after date, at the Muntster-[550]*550ling Branch. Triplett pleaded that, <it the time the note was executed by him, he was a director of the bank of the commonwealth; and was, therefore, not competent to sign said note as security; and that he did sign it as a security, and not as a principal.

The circuit court overruled a demurrer to the plea, and thereupon rendered judgment in favor of Triplett,, to reverse which, this writ of error is prosecuted.

Were it conceded that Triplett could not be a plaintiff, as a director, and a defendant in his own right; and that, therefore,if he were a director when the suit was brought, or even when the cause of action accrued, the action is not maintainable;, nevertheless the plea does not present any such bar; for it does not aver that Triplett is one of the plaintiffs, or that he was a director when the suit was brought, or when the cause of action accrued: and,, besides, it is evident that the plea was not drawn for any such purpose, as that of presenting such a defence as that here alluded to.

But the aim of the pleader was to shew that the note was void as to Triplett, in consequence of the facts alleged: and, in this point of view, the plea presents a new question, hitherto untouched..

The seventh section of the charter declares that, “none of the said officers shall become security, or be bound for any debt contracted for, or on behalf of, the said bank; except his or her own accommodation.” And the tenth section of a supplemental act, declares, that, “neither the president, nor any director, or other officer of the principal bank, or any branch thereof, shall be bound as security for any debt contracted with said principal bank or any branch thereof.

If there had been nothing more in the foregoing interdiction, than the declaration that “none of the said officers shall become security,” we could not doubt that such a provision should be construed as merely directory; and that an officer of the bank, who had been taken as a surety, contrary to the legslative advice, would, like others, nevertheless, be bound by his undertaking. In Bartlett vs. Vinor, Carth. 252, Holt, C. J. laid down the following rule: [551]*551“Every contract made for or about any matter or thing which is prohibited and made unlawful by any statute is a void contract, though the statute itself doth not mention that it shall be so, but only inflicted a penalty on the defaulter; because a penalty implies a prohibition, though there are no prohibitory words in the statute.” Rutherforth, in his Institutes, investigates this whole subject, in a philosophical and masterly manner, on principle; and states some qualification of the rule prescribed by Holt. This is not a fit occasion for attempting any analysis or authoritative exposition of an important branch of jurisprudence, which has not hitherto been distinctly and firmly settled in all its bearings. In the foregoing extracts from the statutes there is no denunciation of any penalty; nbr is there any express prohibition, except what may be considered as a direction to the officers themselves. They have no personal interest in the bank; and, perhaps, would not sustain any of the loss which might result from the invalidity of contracts, by any of themselves, as sureties to the institution. They are only the agents of the state; she is the constituent, and the party interested in the stock, and in the inviolable observance of the foregoing rules, prescribed by her will to her agents, for their government, and for her security. It may sometimes be their interest to disregard the rule; and it would be more especially their interest to do so, if contracts made in violation of it, should be void. Now the chief reason why contracts in violation of law may be void, is, that by declaring them void, all persons who may be prompted by' their interest to disregard the prohibition by making them, may be deterred by an apprehension of certain loss: and this personal interest is the principal sanction for the conservation of the public policy. Thus when smuggling is prohibited by law, if all contracts for contra-brand goods, imported in violation of the law, be void, those whose cupidity might prompt them to smuggle goods, would be deterred from doing so, in proportion to the probability of losing the benefit of their sales. But the principle, thus illustrated, does not apply to this case. It was known that the officers might be annoyed, the affairs of the bank embarrassed, and its administration perverted, if its managers [552]*552S^0tl^ permitted to lend their credit and influence to those who should desire to obtain its accommodations. It might be the wish, and even the interest of some of them, to secure indulgences to their friends, and advantage indirectly to themselves, bj the credit and functional influence of their own names; and thus there might be danger of injustice, favoritism, injurious combinations, and great loss to the commonwealth. But if an officer, upon whose credit as surety, money had been loaned, by the directory, violation of the charter, should not be legally responsible for the debt, it would have been much better for the legislature to have said nothing on the subject; for the assurance of irresponsibility, would, itself, encourage and facilitate the practices which •the legislature intended to prevent: and, so far, the precautions of the legislature would, by the impunity which they would secure, invite the abuses which they aimed to repress.

The legislature had a right to declare, that, if any officer of the bank should be taken as a security, his contract should be void. But such an intention is so inconsistent with legislative prudence, and so incompatible with reason and policy, and the end contemplated, that we do not feel at liberty to give such a construction, if any other be allowable consistently with the language which has been employed.

The provision in the seventh section of the charter applies to the mother bank, and includes all contracts by officers of the bank, to the directory; excepting only, those made for their own accommodation. The provision in the tenth section of the supplemental act, includes all the officers of the principal bank, and and of all its branches; and applies only to sure-tyships: and each section declares, in substance, that no officer of the bank shall ilbe bound” by any contract, as surety, to the bank. But we cannot suppose that, by those expressions, the legislature intended to declare, that if an officer of the bank should be permitted to become a surety to the bank; and should, thereby, enable a friend to draw money from the bank, he should not be, in any event, liable, upon his note, for the amount thus drawn out by his intervention and procurement. We rather interpret the [553]*553words, all taken together, to import, or to have been intended to declare that the directors should not take any officer of the bank, as a surety; or, in other words, that no such officers should be permitted to become bound, as a surety. Thus the sections will harmonize and accord with justice and sound policy, and the obvious end of their enaciment.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Ky. 549, 6 J.J. Marsh. 549, 1831 Ky. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-the-commonwealth-v-triplett-kyctapp-1831.