Durkin v. Exchange Bank of Virginia

2 Patton & Heath 277
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 Patton & Heath 277 (Durkin v. Exchange Bank of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Durkin v. Exchange Bank of Virginia, 2 Patton & Heath 277 (Va. Ct. App. 1856).

Opinion

^THOMPSON, J.

This is an important case, as well on account of the pecuniary interests at stake as of the novel and interesting legal questions involved in its decisionand it has been argued with a zeal and ability, on the part of counsel, worthy of its importance. These considerations have successfully invoked for it the most mature consideration of the court; and if, enlightened as our deliberations have been by the discussions of the bar, we have failed to arrive at correct conclusions, the failure is the natural and inevitable result of the diversity of human opinion and the fallability and infirmity of human judgment.

Decide this case as we may, our judgment will be productive of hardship to the losing part3: to the bank who committed their funds to the custody and safe-keeping of their cashier, upon the guaranty of his securities, who had become, as was believed, sponsors for his capacity, integrity, diligence and fidelity to his trust; to Durkin, the cashier, since the jury have acquitted him of intentional wrong or moral turpitude, have exonerated his character from suspicion or reproach, and have found that the loss in this case resulted from negligence and over-confidence in others; and to his sureties, in being visited with so heavy a responsibility for such a delinquency. But these considerations are wholly irrelevant, and ought and can have no bearing or influence upon the decision of the questions involved. It has been well remarked, by a great judge, that “hard cases are the quicksands of the law, ” and he might have added, that in the vain and abortive attempt to bend and accommodate the law to meet the exigencies of special and particular cases of hardship, we encounter the hazard of subverting all law.

Upon the question of hardship to the securities, too, it is not unworthy of remark, that should they escape responsibility for the acts and delinquencies of Durkin, it will not be because thej' did not intend to bind themselves; for it is conceded that they so intended, and *that all parties believed they had so bound themselves; (and to withhold that concession and affirm the contrary now, would be to lay the foundation for an imputation of bad faith to the securities, especially those of them who were members of the Board of Directors), but because of the failure or omission on the part of the Directors to do and perform those merely formal acts now alleged to be requisite by the condition of the bond to charge them, oí which constituted a condition precedent to the accrual of their liability.

[753]*753Seven errors are assigned to the judgment under review, founded upon exceptions taken to the rulings of the court, below: .

“1. Dor over-ruling the demurrer to the whole declaration, which alleged generally, that the defendant Durkin did not well, &c. perform ‘the duties of said office of cashier,’ without saying, ‘which were prescribed by the Board of Directors,’ although the defendants were liable for the performance of such duties only as may be so prescribed.”
“2. Dor over-ruling the demurrer to the second breach assigned, which alleged that the duty set forth in the breach was prescribed by the Board of Directors, but did not set forth in what manner it was prescribed, so as to enable the court to see that it had been properly done. The manner in which the duties were to be prescribed was a question of law, and the rule is, that ‘where a man owns that he has done a thing which involves in it a question of law, whether it is done as the law directs, the quo modo must be averred.’ Wright v. Tutter, 4 Day, 322; Thomas v. Van Ness, 4 Wend. 553; Chitty Pl. 357.”
“3. Por over-ruling the demurrer to the fourth breach assigned, which did not aver directly that the duty had been prescribed by the Board of Directors. The averment is, that money came into the hands of Durkin ‘by authority and prescription of the said Board of Directors, to be by him kept,’ &c. If this can be regarded in any sense as alleging that the *Board prescribed that it should be the duty of Durkin to keep the money, (as it hardly can be,) it is at best only indirect and argumentative, and bad on general demurrer. Dickinson v. McCraw, 4 Rand. 158. And the second and fourth breaches were both further defective in not alleging that Durkin had notice of the duties prescribed to him by the Board.”
■‘4. Por rejecting the pleas tendered to the 2d and 4th breaches, which averred that duties were not prescribed by any order, resolution, or vote of the Board, and in rejecting the pleas Q and E, tendered to the same breach, when the case was called for trial. The two last involved the proposition, that the defendants were not liable on the bond, until the duties of the cashier had been prescribed; the others involved the proposition, that the defendants were not liable for the performance of the particular duty set forth in the breaches respectively, unless it was prescribed by some order, resolution or vote of the Board.”
“5. Por refusing to give the instructions asked by the counsel for the defendants, and giving others inconsistent therewith.
‘ ‘The instructions moved by the defendants declared that, although the directors of the bank and the cashier himself were of opinion that the safe keeping of the money of the bank was a duty devolved upon the cashier and properly appertained to his office, by law or usage, or otherwise, and that his securities were legally bound for the fulfillment of the same, yet if, in point of fact, that duty was not prescribed to the cashier by the Board of Directors, after the execution of the bond and before the happening of the default, the defendants were not liable. And that such duty must have been prescribed by the Board by some resolution or order, appropriate to evince their sense in that behalf, with the intention thereby to ascertain and declare the duty of the cashier in and about the money of the bank.
“The instruction given by the court upon the subject of prescribing the duties of cashier was ambiguous, and “'led to conflicting views oí its meaning on the part of the opposing counsel. The counsel for the defendants insisted that the instruction imported, that the Board of Directors had taken up the subject of the cashier’s duties for consideration, and come to a conclusion in relation thereto, which ascertained and expressed the sense of the Board for the time being, touching the duty of the officer; but the court stopped the counsel, and instructed the jury that such was not the true import of the previous instruction. The court then proceeded to explain its meaning to be, that ‘no particular mode of proceeding was necessary to be observed by the Board in their action upon the subject ; but that it was necessary for the said Board of Directors, acting as a Board, to indicate their will in some distinct and intelligible mode, that it should be the duty of the cashier, Durkin, to take charge of, and faithfully keep and account for, and pay off when required,’ &c. ‘the money,’ &c. and that their will in relation thereto must be made known to him; but ‘that this prescription of his duty, or declaration of their will in relation thereto, and a knowledge of it by said Durkin, maj’ be inferred by the jury from facts and circumstances, which will satisfy their minds’ of the facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Patton & Heath 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durkin-v-exchange-bank-of-virginia-vactapp-1856.