Merchants' Bank v. State Bank

77 U.S. 604, 19 L. Ed. 1008, 10 Wall. 604, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1159
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 30, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by320 cases

This text of 77 U.S. 604 (Merchants' Bank v. State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants' Bank v. State Bank, 77 U.S. 604, 19 L. Ed. 1008, 10 Wall. 604, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1159 (1871).

Opinion

*637 Mr. Justice SWAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts. The plaintiff in error was the plaintiff in the court below. It appears, by the bill of exceptions, that upon the evidence in behalf of the plaintiff being closed, the defendant’s counsel moved the court to instruct the jury that it was not sufficient to warrant them to find a verdict for the plaintiff upon either of the counts in the declaration. This instruction was given. The jury found for the defendant. The plaintiff’ excepted, and has brought that instruction here for review. This renders it necessary to examine the entire case as presented in the record. According to the settled practice in the courts of the United States, it was proper to give the instruction if it were clear the plaintiff could not recover. It would have been idle to proceed further when such must be the inevitable result. The practice is a wise one. It saves time and costs; it gives the certainty of applied science to the results of judicial investigation; it draws clearly the ■ line which separates the provinces of the judge and the jury, and fixes where it belongs the responsibility which should be assumed by the court. The fa'cts disclosed in the bill of exceptions‘are neither numerous nor complicated. The defendant called no witnesses. There is no conflict in the-testimony. The questions which it is our duty to examine are questions of law. None are made upon the pleadings, and it is unnecessary to consider them. It is sufficient to remark, that the declaration is so framed as to meet the case in every legal aspect which it can assume.'

On the 26th of February, 1867, Fuller, the plaintiff’s cashier, received from the Second National Bank of Boston $200,000 of gold certificates, and paid the bank, upon their delivery, the amount of their face and a premium of 25 per cent. Payment was made in currency and legal tender notes. The next day he received from the same bank $200,000 more of like certificates, and paid for them at the same rate in currency and a ticket of credit by the Merchants’ Bank in favor of the National Bank for $175,000. Both transactions were *638 pursuant to an arrangement with 'Mellen, Ward & Co., brokers, in Boston. The market premium upon gold at that time was 40 per cent. It was understood between Fuller, the cashier, and Mellen, *Ward & Co., that the latter might receive the same amount of gold from the Merchants Bank, at any time thereafter, by paying the amount advanced, compensation for the trouble the bank had incurred, and interest at the rate of six per cent. There had been like transactions upon those terms between the parties prior to that time. The president of’the bank was consulted in advance as to both the purchases from the Second National Bank, and approved them. The following testimony is taken from the record:

“George II. Davis testified as follows: I am the paying teller of the Merchants’ Bank. From about the 1st of January, 1867, and previous to the 23d of February, the bank several times received gold, or gold certificates from Mellen, Ward & Co., for which it paid currency a. the rate of $125 for $100 in gold. At that time they had deposited in the bank about $90,000 in gold. No note, memorandum, or check was taken connected with it in any way. The gold was added to tlie gold of the bank; on my cash book it was added to the item of gold, and the gold was mixed with the gold of the bank in the vault. If it consisted of certificates, they were put in a pocket-book kept in my trunk with other certificates and bills. (The paying teller’s book was put in, and from the entries in it on the 26th, 27th, and 28th of February, 1867, it appeared that the gold received from Mellen, Ward & Co. was added to the gold of the bank.)”

On the 28th day of February, Carter, of the firm of Mellen, Ward & Co., and Smith, the cashier of the State Bank, called together at the Merchants’ Bank. Carter said to Fuller, “We have come in for gold.” Smith, the cashier, said, “ We have come to get an amount of gold,” and that he would “pay for it by certifying these checks,” referring to-two papers which Carter held in his hand. The teller handed Fuller 8.4 gold certificates of $5000 each, making the sum of $420,000. Fuller announced the amount. Smith said *639 that was the amount wanted, and the amount covered by the checks. He received the certificates, certified the checks, and handed them over to the plaintiff’s cashier. They were drawn by Mellen, Ward & Co. upon the State National Bank in favor of Fuller, the plaintiff’s cashier, or order, and were certified “Good; C» H. Smith, cashier.’»’ One was for $250,000, and the other for $275,000. Smith thereupon left the bank with the certificates in his possession. Nothing was said by Fuller to Carter, or by Carter to Fuller, in relation to the checks, and Fuller did not know what checks Smith referred to until they were delivered to him. Smith did not certify or deliver the checks until he had got possession and control of the funds upon which his certificates were apparently founded, and this was known to the plaintiff’s agent when he received the checks. Later, on the same day, Smith and Carter called again at the Merchants’ Bank. Fuller was absent. Smith received $60,000 more of-.gold and gold certificates from the teller, and gave in return a check for $75,000, drawn by Mellen, Ward & Co. on the State Bank, payable to “gold or bearer.” Like the two previous checks, it was certified “ Good; C. II. Smith, cashier.” This arrangement was in pursuance of the same agreement as that under which the gold certificates were delivered in the earlier part of the day. Both transactions were alike within its scope.

On the 1st of March, Havens, the president of the Merchants’ Bank, called at.the State Bank and complained that Smith had not paid the checks. Smith said he was going out to get the money. Havens inquired, “Didn’t you have the money — the gold? Were not gold certificates delivered to you?” He answered, ^ Yes: I had them here, but they are not here now. I ¡am going out to get it, and will come in and attend to it.” Subsequently, in the same conversation, he said, “ You hold the State Bank.” Later in the day Havens called upon Stetson, the president of the State Bank. Stetson denied that Smith was authorized to certify the cheeks, and appealed to a director wh© was present. The director was silent. In an account which Fuller ren *640 dered to Mellen, Ward & Co. after their failure, showing the disposition of various collaterals which. Mellen, Ward & Co. had deposited from time to time, with the Merchants’ Bank, the amount paid for gold was put down as a loan, and interest was charged, but in his testimony before, the jury he denied that the money was loaned, and insisted that the gold was bought by the Merchants’ Bank. The agreement bétween Mellen, Ward & Co. and the Merchants’ Bank rested wholly in parol. No written voucher -was given or received on either side touching any of the transactions between the parties. The record discloses nothing else in this connection which it is material to consider.

The State Bank was organized under the act of Congress “to provide a national currency,” &c., of the 3d of June, 1864. *

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Bluebook (online)
77 U.S. 604, 19 L. Ed. 1008, 10 Wall. 604, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-bank-v-state-bank-scotus-1871.