Case of the Empire City Bank

8 Abb. Pr. 192
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Abb. Pr. 192 (Case of the Empire City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case of the Empire City Bank, 8 Abb. Pr. 192 (N.Y. 1858).

Opinion

By the Court.—Denio, J.

I am of opinion that the determination appealed from cannot be sustained, upon the ground on which it was placed by the general term of the Supreme Court. It has not been contended but that the bank actually issued circulating notes, procured according to the provisions of the General Banldng Law; for that fact was incidentally stated in several of the papers which were before the court. For instance, the second application of Mr. Purser, upon which the order to show cause was granted, complains that the bank had, subsequent to its failure, paid demands against it, to a large amount, to creditors other than bill-holders and depositors ; and the order to show cause itself, recites that the bank is an association issuing bank notes, to circulate as money. Moreover, the receiver, in his report, states that he had received the securities which had been placed in the hands of the superintendent of the banking department, over and above the amownt of the outstanding evreulation of the bank; and the affidavit of Purser and Hone, upon which one of the orders to stay proceedings was granted, contains an estimate of the probable gains of the bank from the loss of its circulating notes, which had been issued to [206]*206customers. But the objection assumes that, in a special proceeding like this, primary application must, in order to confer jurisdiction, contain a plain statement that the corporation belongs to the class mentioned in the statute—that is, that it is a corporation, or joint-stock association, for banking purposes, issuing bank notes, &c., to circulate as money, after the 1st day of January, 1850. (Laws of 1849, 340, § 1.) As the bank was incorporated in 1852, and as the incidental statements referred to show that it was all along assumed that the corporation was a bank of issue, the present objection is one of an exceedingly formal character.

If it be conceded that an omission in the application to bring the bank proceeded against within the statutory description would render the proceedings void, it was incumbent upon the parties who appealed to the general term to show that such a defect really existed, by causing to be returned all the papers which were before the judge who granted the initiatory order.

How, it appears by that order that the judge had before him not only the former application of Mr. Purser, but application of the Union Bank, the American Exchange Bank, &c., of Isaac Erost and others, all creditors of the bank proceeded against, whose demands had been refused payment more than ten days before granting the order. If these papers, which are stated in the order to have been filed by the judge, contained the allegation, the omission of which is complained of, the order was unexceptionable. That they did contain it is rendered probable by the fact that the order describes the bank as one which issued circulating notes, a fact which the judge could regularly have known only from the papers before him. The other applications may have been deficient as to the allegation equally with the affidavit of Purser, but it cannot be affirmed that these were until it be shown by their production. I think, therefore, that the general term fell into an error in reversing the order of the special term for want of jurisdiction, where a portion of the papers, in which the fact conferring jurisdiction if it existed would regularly appear, were not before them.

But there is another answer to this objection. The process against the stockholders commenced with the order of reference cf August 14, 1855. They were not parties to what the act required to be done anterior to that order. The object of the [207]*207prior proceedings, besides restraining the bank from further transactions, was to procure an account of the unpaid debts and liabilities, and a statement from its books of the several persons who were and had been stockholders, from January 1, 1850, when the personal liability first attached, or in this case from its creation. Then the matter was committed to a referee, and notice in the nature of process was to be given to the persons appearing to be, or to have been stockholders (§§ 16, 17). This was the beginning of the litigation. The referee’s report was to be made to a special term of the Supreme Court, where the parties interested were entitled to appear and contest its conclusions, with the right to appeal to the general term, and to this court, as in other cases.

It appears from this statement, that the proceedings to charge the stockholders with the debts of the corporation are required to be had before a court of general jurisdiction, in which the parties sought to be charged are entitled to appear and defend, and carry their case from court to court, by way of review, as in the case of regular actions in that court. In such cases I understand the rule to be, that jurisdiction is to be presumed, unless the contrary appear. (Foot a. Stevens, 17 Wend., 483, and cases cited.) The Supreme Court at special term had general jurisdiction of proceedings against the stockholders of banks of issue, to charge them with the unpaid debts of such banks. The parties now litigating were proceeded against as persons so liable. Determinations in the nature of judgments were obtained against them, establishing such liability for the debts of the Empire City Bank.

Assuming that nothing appeared to show whether that bank was or was not a bank of issue, still the judgments cannot be questioned for defect of jurisdiction, because they were rendered by a court having general jurisdiction of the subject, and the formal steps had been taken to subject the persons of the parties to the proceeding.

As an objection for defect of proof that the association was a bank of issue, the answer is, that it appeared prima fade, from the report of the receiver, that it issued currency, and nothing to the contrary was shown on behalf of the stockholders. It may be said, too, that this fact was impliedly conceded by the course of the proceeding, for neither in the voluminous testi[208]*208mony which was given on behalf of the stockholders before the referee, or the numerous exceptions which were taken to the report, is there any suggestion that the bank did not belong to the class which was subject to this jurisdiction. As such a fact, if it existed, could have been easily established, and would have put an end to the controversy, by showing that no liability existed, the omission even to suggest it is an implied admission that no question of that kind could be successfully made.

That point being disposed of, the other objections may be taken up in their natural order. The. statute under which the proceedings were had, was challenged as being a violation of the constitution of the United States and of this State. By the Federal constitution, no State can rightfully enact a law impairing the obligation of contracts. It is argued that, by the General Banking Law, the associations which it authorizes are alone responsible for its contracts, the shareholders being wholly exempt from liability; and it is insisted that this is in the nature of a contract between the State and the shareholders, and that the constitutional guaranty of the integrity of contracts in the national constitution would be illusory, if a State could, by changing its constitution, subvert all existing engagements; and hence that the guaranty applies as well to State constitutions as to other State laws.

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Related

Slee v. Bloom
19 Johns. 456 (New York Supreme Court, 1822)
Foot v. Stevens
17 Wend. 483 (New York Supreme Court, 1837)
Briggs v. Penniman
8 Cow. 387 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1826)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Abb. Pr. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-of-the-empire-city-bank-ny-1858.