Bates v. Bank of the State

2 Ala. 451
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 2 Ala. 451 (Bates v. Bank of the State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates v. Bank of the State, 2 Ala. 451 (Ala. 1841).

Opinions

ORMOND, J.

— The first question presented is upon the plea: Whatare its allegations ? and what did the parties intend to putin issue? The plea which is elaborately drawn, consists of several distinct facts, all however connected together and evidently supposed by the pleader to tend to the result which is relied on as a bar to the action, that the transaction was a “dealing in goods, toares and merchandise” and therefore prohibited by the charter of the Bank.

It commences with setting forth certain rules and regulations adopted by the Bank, for its government in the projected design of advancing or leading money on the security of cotton, placed under its control, and proceeds to allege that the defendant, Bates, being possessed of one thousand and twenty-two bales of cotton in Mobile, one Major Cook, pretending to act as the agent of the Bank, under the rules and regulations aforesaid, advanced to the defendant on the cotton, seventy-nine thousand, six hundred and thirty-two dollars, seventy-five cents. — , That thereupon the cotton was delivered to Pitcher & Ball, the agents of the Bank, appointed to receive it by the 14th article of the rules and regulations of the Bank set out in the plea; that thereupon Cook executed a receipt or statement, setting forth the receipt of the cotton and advance of the money, under the rules and regulations entered into by the Bank; that thereupon the bill of Exchange here sued on and fifteen others, amounting in all, to the sum of seventy-nine thousand six hundred and thirty-two dollars, seventy-five cents, were executed and delivered to Cook.

[460]*460It is then avered in the plea, that the said sum of money was received for and on account of the cotton so delivered, and not for or on uccount of the said bills of Exchange, but that the bills of Exchange were to be held by the Bank for the purpose of securing to it the payments of such sums as the nett proceeds of the cotton when sold, might be less than the sum of money advanced upon it.

On the part of the plaintiff in error, it was insisted that the last averment in the plea, was the statement of a substantive fact, showing the intention of the parties to the contract and admitted by the demurrer to be true; whilst the defendant in error by its counsel, insisted that this statement in the plea was merely a conclusion from the facts previously stated, and could not be considered as the averment of a distinct and independent fact.

There is no rule of pleading better established than that a plea should present a single ground of defence, though it may consist of many facts so connected together as to present a single point. Thus in this case, the regulations of the Bank, and the acts of the parties in Mobile, the delivering of the cotton, the receipt by Bates of the money, and the execution and delivery of the bills of Exchange, though entirely distinct in their nature, may all be embraced in one plea if they all tend to produce a certain result and were well pleaded, if the design of the pleader was to state the facts necessary to enable him to raise the question whether the transaction thus set forth was authorised by the charier of the Bank, or, whether as affirmed by him, it was a “dealing in goods, wares and merchandise,” and therefore unauthorised and void. If as he now contends, the last averment in the plea was of a faGt shewing the intention of the parties unconnected with the previous allegations of the plea ; why were the previous allegations introduced? Are the aver-ments that the rules and regulations recited in the plea were made by the Bank; that pursuunt thereto, and by authority derived therefrom, Bates received the money specified in the plea, deliv-ivered his cotton, and executed and delivered the bills of Exchange to the agents of the Bank, mere surplussage? or were these averments not intended rather, to present to the court all the [461]*461facts of the transaction that the law arising thereon might be determined. ■ It seems to us that no other conclusion can be attained, and that the statement which it is contended now, is the averment of a separate and independent fact, is merely the conclusion of the pleader from the facts previously alleged. If the plea be not so considered, it would then present two distinct issues of fact; one upon a contract made under the “rules and regulations” of the Bank, as recited in the plea; and another upon a contract by which the money was advanced on cotton without reference to those “rules and regulations.” This could not be supported if such was the design of the pleader: but we are very clear that such is not the meaning of the plea, but that the last averment, is to be taken in connexion with, and as subordinate to, the previous averments in the' plea, which indeed would be without meaning unless so interpreted.

The pleader in describing the acts of Cook, the agent of the Bank at Mobile, speaks of him as “the pretended agent of the Bank:” but we do not understand that it was thereby intended to put the fact of his agency in issue, if such had-been the intention, it should have been distinctly averred, that he had no authority to act as agent of the Bank. But such could not have been the design of the pleader, because it is admitted in the plea, that the defendant dealt with him as the agent of the Bank, received from him the money which was advanced, and took from him a receipt or statement setting forth the whole transaction; it is also averred that the Bank received'both the ■cotton and the bills of Exchange, which is in eifect an admission by the Bank of the agency of Cook.

It was however insisted in argument, that the Bank had no power to create an agent for the purpose of carrying into effect the contract described in this plea. If the contract is not in itself illegal, it will not become so by being made on the part of the Bank, through the medium of an agent.

Whatever may be the rule as to corporations existing only by the common law, it is now well settled both in England and the United States, that whatsoever a corporation, created by statute, may lawfully do, it may transact by its agent — . [462]*462That such agent may be appointed by a corporate vote, and that such appointment will be inferred in the case of an artificial as of a natural person, by such acts as create a presumption of agency.-4 Bar. & Cress. 575—13 Peters’ 519—12 Whea. 64—12 Serg. & Rawle, 264—21 Wendell, 296—8 Wheaton, 338. (See also, Angel & Ames on Corporations, 122, and the authorities cited in support of the text.)

The questions of law arising out of the plea, which go to the merits of the case, are—

1st. The effect of the prohibition iirthe 40th section of the act of incorporation, against the purchase of any draft or bill of exchange for a larger amount than five thousand dollars.

2d. Is the contract described in the plea, within the meaning of the 20th section of the charter, which forbids the Bank to “ deal in goods, wares, or merchandize.”

1. The bill of exchange sued on, in this case, is for less than five thousand dollars, but it is averred in the plea, that upon the delivery of the cotton to the agent of the Bank, and the receipt of the money advanced upon it, that this bill and fifteen others, for five thousand dollars each, all drawn and endorsed by the same persons, bearing date and payable at the same time, were executed and delivered to the agent of the Bank.

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2 Ala. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-bank-of-the-state-ala-1841.