First National Bank v. Michigan City Bank

80 N.W. 766, 8 N.D. 608, 1899 N.D. LEXIS 59
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 80 N.W. 766 (First National Bank v. Michigan City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Michigan City Bank, 80 N.W. 766, 8 N.D. 608, 1899 N.D. LEXIS 59 (N.D. 1899).

Opinion

Young, J.

The First National Bank of Corunna, Mich., sues the Michigan City Bank to recover the amount due upon certain promissory notes which it alleges it purchased from said bank in [609]*609due course of business, and for value. It is conceded that the notes were forgeries as to the makers. Plaintiff states its cause of action in three counts, — the first upon a purchase; -second, upon defendant’s indorsement of the notes; and, third, upon a separate written guaranty of payment. The answer of defendant denies that it sold, indorsed, or guarantied the payment of said notes. A jury was waived, and the case was tried to the Court, resulting in findings and a judgment favorable to the defendant. Plaintiff appeals, and the case is here for trial anew.

It is undisputed that all of the transactions which took place between the plaintiff and defendant upon which the alleged liability of the defendant is based were had with one H. B. Cram, who purported to be defendant’s cashier, and to be acting as such in such transactions as occurred. It is not claimed by plaintiff that it did any portion of the business with any other person or officer of the defendant bank, and it does not appear that there ever was any dealing between the plaintiff and defendant other than that here in question; so that the entire alleged liability of the defendant is based upon the acts of Cram. The defendant is organized under Chapter 23 of the Laws of 1890, providing for the organization and government of state banks. Its certificate of authority, authorizing it to commence the business of banking, was issued by the secretary of state on January 23, 1893. Prior to that time the stockholders had named its directors in the articles of association. There is no record of a formal meeting of the directors for any purpose until June 6, 1893, when a president and vice president were elected, and H. B. Cram was also elected as cashier. It is admitted by the defendant, however, that it had been doing a banking business since April 6th, and that during such time Cram acted as cashier, with the knowledge and consent of the directors. Plaintiff contends that he acted as cashier with the same consent and knowledge on the part of the directors prior to April 6th, and at all times after the bank was organized to do business. Whether his assumption of authority to act as cashier during this earlier period was with the consent and knowledge of the directors is a mooted question of fact, to which counsel for both parties have devoted much attention. The view which we take of the limitations upon a cashier’s authority to bind his bank to the obligations which are here sought to be enforced is necessarily decisive of the case, and renders a determination of this disputed question unnecessary. It may be assumed that Cram was at all times the cashier of defendant bank, and that he was clothed with the usual authority of cashiers. Nevertheless, in our opinion, his acts, which are here relied upon to create a liability against the defendant, are so far beyond the ordinary duties and implied authority of a cashier that they do not bind the corporation, unless it is shown that he was specially authorized by the directors to do what he did, or unless [610]*610his acts have been ratified by them. The transaction was this: Early in the winter of 1893, Cram called at plaintiff’s bank to interest it in discounting some paper for the defendant bank. It seems that plaintiff’s cashier then orally agreed to rediscount a reasonable amount, and that the plaintiff then and at all times relied wholly upon Cram’s promise that the defendant would itself pay all of the notes it should rediscount, when they became due. After this conversation, on February 22, 1893, Cram wrote plaintiff as follows: “If we make a deal, we guaranty all paper, and will pay all paper as fast as it becomes due. You send the notes to this bank for collection, and, as -fast as they become due, we will send you New York drafts for same.” Plaintiff’s reply seems to have been favorable, for on February 27th Cram mailed to it 14 notes, aggregating in amount $2,527, and in his letter accompanying them said: “I note what you say in regard to discounts. These notes are all due next fall, and, as-I told you before, we will send N. Y. drafts for these as fast as they become due.” Some time after receiving these notes, plaintiff remitted for them by sending two drafts drawn upon its New York correspondent payable to H. B. Cram, cashier. It sent $1,050 March 16th, and $1,477 on April 7th. Both drafts were received by Cram, and were deposited by him in the National German-American Bank of St. Paul, to the credit of an account which the evidence shows he carried there in the name of the Michigan City Bank, and were paid by the New York bank, and charged to plaintiff’s account, in due course of business. When the notes matured, plaintiff sent them to the defendant “for payment.” Upon their receipt, Cram wrote to plaintiff, using this language: “I will remit to you on the 13th of this month on the past-due discounts;” and on November 13th he sent plaintiff a New York draft for $1,889.58, covering the amount due on 9 of the notes. On January 25, 1894, Cram sent plaintiff 14 other notes, requesting it to discount them, and, after taking out the balance due on the notes formerly discounted, to remit the balance. Plaintiff selected 4 notes out of the 14, which amounted to $773.64. Out of this amount it reserved the balance due it, which was $743.60, and for the excess sent its draft on a Chicago bank, payable to H. B. Cram, cashier, in the letter returning the notes not discounted. This small draft was deposited by Cram in the Grand Forks National Bank to the credit of the defendant. These four notes so selected are the ones described in the complaint. It is conceded that they have not been paid, and that they, as well as all of the notes sent by Cram, were forgeries as to the makers. None of these notes appear to have been listed upon the books of the bank. It appears that Cram’s dishonest methods were discovered some time after he drew the draft upon defendant’s funds for the $1,889.58 remitted to plaintiff, and his resignation as cashier was obtained by the directors; but it was some time later before any of the officers of the bank knew of the existence of the four notes in suit, or that [611]*611plaintiff held other notes which it claimed to have discounted for defendant through Cram, as- cashier.

We have stated the facts thus fully to show that this transaction was intended and understood by plaintiff to be merely a rediscount by it of certain paper which it supposed belonged to the defendant, and to be due to the latter from its customers. This, we take it, is not an unusual transaction between banks, and is one of the methods resorted to by them for lending and borrowing money. A bank whose necessities require it to raise funds for use usually secures them either by giving its own direct obligation or by re-discounting its customers’ paper, with an accompanying promise to take it up when it is due, as was done in this case. Either method creates an obligation of the borrowing bank, which is represented by the note given or the note discounted. Both are methods of borrowing money.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 N.W. 766, 8 N.D. 608, 1899 N.D. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-michigan-city-bank-nd-1899.