Hubbard v. . Briggs

31 N.Y. 518
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 31 N.Y. 518 (Hubbard v. . Briggs) 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
Hubbard v. . Briggs, 31 N.Y. 518 (N.Y. 1865).

Opinion

Wright, J.

The case, in some of its features, is interesting. It was an action commenced in 1843, to recover damages for an alleged fraud, which consisted in making false representations concerning the soundness and solvency of the “Hillers’ Bank of Hew York” (an association at Clyde, formed under the general banking law), whereby the plaintiff was induced to subscribe $5,300 to the stock of that institution, and to give his bond and mortgage for the amount of such subscription. In the several counts of the declaration the defendant was charged with representing, or causing to be represented to the plaintiff, that the bank was in a good, safe, sound, solvent and prosperous- condition; that it had done, and was doing a good and profitable business, and had made profits by its business, &c., and that the plaintiff was induced thereby to take the stock, and that the representations were false and fraudulent. As to the injury to the plaintiff, it was alleged in one count that he lost the money secured to be paid by the bond and mortgage, and the value of the mortgage, and the land conveyed thereby, and the nominal price and value of the fifty-three shares of stock; in another, that he was likely to lose the $5,300, the price agreed to be paid for the stock, and secured by the bond and mortgage; in another, that he paid for the stock, and the stock was of no value; and in another, that he took the stock at the price of $5,300 to be paid, and it was of no value.

The case has been twice in this court on appeal, and was tried for the seventh time in April, 1863, when the plaintiff had a verdict. This trial seems to have proceeded with great deliberation and care. Ho exception was taken to the *520 charge of the judge; and every request of the defendant’s counsel to charge, having any materiality or application to the case (except the request to instruct the jury that their verdict should be for the defendant), was complied with. Unless, therefore, upon the merits the plaintiff ought to have been nonsuited, or a verdict directed for the defendant, or there was some ruling as to the admission or rejection of evidence prejudicing the defendant, the judgment should be affirmed.

The case will be better understood by an allusion to the leading facts dedueible from the evidence. The Millers’ Bank of Sew York was organized under the general banking law, about the 1st of December, 1838, the association consisting originally of five persons with a declared capital of $300,000. Each of these persons subscribed for six hundred shares of the stock, but paid no considerable part of their subscriptions in cash. In fact, the bank started oh credit. One hundred thousand dollars of Arkansas stocks were bought on credit from one Beers, a broker, at six per cent premium, to be paid for in monthly installments of $10,000 each; and all the payments ever made for them were in the circulating notes of the bank, or by turning out customers’ notes which the bank had discounted. The association deposited with the comptroller $70,000 óf these stocks, and $50,000 of bonds and mortgages taken from subscribers to its capital, in May and June, 1839, and received circulating bills for them. Thirty thousand dollars of the stocks were returned to the broker in the winter of 1840, and for the amount retained, the bank at that time owed Beers $28,000, and in the summer of 1840, when it failed, it had paid but $46,000 in all of the purchase. In August, 1839, the bank received from Ford & Sons, and others, $40,000 of Michigan stocks as security for their notes thereafter given to it. For part of their notes the bank issued .time drafts on the Uorth American Trust and Banking Company, payable to Ford & Sons, and Ford & Smith, to pay for part of the stocks. The testimony as to the amount of these time drafts, is quite indistinct, one of the directors estimating the amount at from $10,000 to $15,000. The *521 bank deposited the Michigan stocks with the comptroller, and received circulating notes for them. In the summer of 1839, it had a suspended debt of over $50,000, which was afterwards increased. The principal debtors were William Ford & Sons, Ford & Smith, Chapman & Frisbie and B. S. Bedfield, the cashier. The three firms seem to have had large control of the bank in the spring and summer of 1839, and were the heaviest borrowers. All of them were original directors, and were all reelected in September, 1839. The time drafts and suspended debts, in the fall of that year, embarrassed the institution. In December, 1839, for the purpose of getting circulating bills, the bank bought $28,000 of Illinois stocks on credit, and deposited them with the comptroller. The bills were used for discounting paper, and some of the discounted paper was assigned to those who indorsed notes to pay for the stock. But little money, comparatively, seems ever to have been paid into the bank; and in order to raise money through the summer of 1839, it sent its bills east, and redeemed them with the flour of Ford & Smith, two of the directors, and who were carrying on the flouring business in the county of Wayne. In July, 1839, it sold $7,000 or $8,000 of its bills in Hew York, at a discount, to get funds for redemption. In December, 1839, it deposited some $15,000 or $16,000 of its bills with a broker at Albany, and got therefor $4,000 in specie, and a certificate of a specie deposit for the balance, and paid a bonus of three-fourths of one per cent. In January, 1840, the bank had a circulation of over $170,000, without means for redeeming bnt a small part of it. As early as December, 1839, it had assigned most of its available securities to the defendant and others, to secure them against liabilities incurred for the bank. The Beers debt embarrassed the association to the last. In July, 1840, the bank failed. Through the spring, and up to the time of the failure, various ineffectual efforts were made to sustain its credit, meet its pressing liabilities, and provide for its redemptions. In the spring and summer of 1840, the State stocks held by it depreciated some fifty per cent; a large portion of the suspended debt was ldst; and *522 about the middle of July, some $30,000 of notes being presented for redemption in one day, the institution failed to redeem. On the 18th of July, the bank assigned to the defendant and others, some $39,000 of securities held by it, to secure them against their liabilities for it; and in the following December, it assigned all its effects to a receiver. There was a total loss of the capital, and the securities lodged with the comptroller paid the bill holders but ninety-four per cent.

Thus, it very clearly appears that the institution was embarrassed from the beginning. It started upon a borrowed capital, and that debt oppressed it throughout all its existence. ISTo stock was really subscribed for until April, 1839, when, in that and the two succeeding months, there was a subscription of $60,300; the sum of $5,400 being paid in cash, $3,500 in notes, and $55,400 in bonds and mortgages. Up to January, 1840, it had no other capital except $40,000 of Michigan State stocks brought into the concern, in the summer of 1839, by Ford & Son, Ford & Smith, and Chapman & Frisbee. These parties were the principal borrowers from the bank, and continued to be up to January or February, 1840.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.Y. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbard-v-briggs-ny-1865.