N.Y. State Loan and Trust Co. v. . Helmer

77 N.Y. 64, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 739
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 77 N.Y. 64 (N.Y. State Loan and Trust Co. v. . Helmer) 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
N.Y. State Loan and Trust Co. v. . Helmer, 77 N.Y. 64, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 739 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Miller, J.

This action is brought on two promissory notes made by the defendants, payable to their order and indorsed by them, which, it is alleged, were transferred, before they became due, to the plaintiff.

The demurrer to the answers of the defendant Helmer is upon the ground of insufficiency, in not stating facts which constitute a cause of action. The first answer alleges that the plaintiff was a corporation created by an act of the Legislature of this State, and that it had engaged in banking business in violation of the laws of the State ; that the notes in question were delivered to the plaintiff and discounted for the defendants by the plaintiff, while carrying on said business as a bank of discount and deposit, in violation of its charter ; and that the plaintiff had not the right, power or authority to take, receive, hold, own or have the said several notes, and each of them is null and void. The second answer is of a similar character and presents the same question. The third answer alleges an agreement between the parties for a valuable consideration made at the time plaintiff received the notes for the extension of the time of payment of the notes after they became due, for six months next following, by the giving of new notes in renewal of the notes upon which this action is brought. That defendants tendered the new notes as agreed at the maturity of the notes in suit, which plaintiff refused to accept. The first and second answers and the demurrer present the question whether the plaintiff can discount notes made for that purpose, and received from the original parties before they have passed into other hands, and pay over the avails thereof to such parties. The right to discount such notes is claimed to exist under the third section of the plaintiffs charter-; (vol. 2, S. L. of 1870, 1621) ; tiy which it is declared that the *67 company “shall have power to grant, bargain, sell, buy or receive all kinds of property, real, personal or mixed, or to hold the same in trust or otherwise; ” * * * “ to receive upon storage, deposit or otherwise, merchandise, bullion, specie, plate, bonds, promissory notes, ” etc.; * * * “and to advance moneys, securities and credits upon any property,- real or personal,” etc. It is insisted that these, notes in suit were personal property ‘which the plaintiff had a right to buy, receive and hold, or to advance money upon ; but we think that the transaction did not constitute a purchase, within the meaning of the statute, and that the language employed therein was intended to embrace actual sales of such property, instead of a loan, or discount of notes, in the usual and ordinary form of discounting commercial paper of this description. The plaintiff did not buy or receive the notes to hold the same in trust, but took the same in consideration of the discount paid thereon. Nor Avere the notes received upon storage or deposit, Avithin the meaning of the act. Nor were advances made upon them, except by way of discounting the same. The statute does not mean any such advance of money upon a promissory note, made for the express purpose of raising money by a loan at a banking institution. The words ‘1 or other Avise ” Avere not intended to confer banking powers upon the plaintiff, but to embrace a holding of the property differently, or otherwise than as a trust. They might be held to apply to the payment of some expense incurred for .the depositor by the corporation in the management of property, as, for instance, the improvement of real estate ; and it would be giving a wide and extended interpretation to such language, to hold that they impliedly conferred banking powers upon the corporation. While the words contained in this provision may confer authority to buy personal property, and even include the purchase of promissory notes of third parties, it Avould be going very far to say that they covered a loan of money obtained upon a promissory note by a discount of the same to the maker or holder. It is not necessary in this case to deter *68 mine whether the notes were property, in the sense used by the statute, and quite enough that they were not received as such. But conceding that the interpretation of the statute claimed by the plaintiff is correct, and that it embraces all the powers which are claimed, the demurrer cannot be upheld, for the reason that it does not appear from the answers, which must be taken as true in every respect, that the notes in question were bought, received or held, or that money ■was advanced upon the same, within- the provision cited. The ■ first and second answers in addition to the allegations already stated aver that the plaintiff kept a regular office for discount and deposit, carried on a regular banking business', discounted promissory notes and other commercial paper, bought and sold a large amount of exchange, received a large amount of deposits, and paid the same on the checks of depositors, and, in fact, did the ordinary business of a bank of discount and deposit. - It is also alleged, in one of the answers, that the proceeds of the notes in question were credited upon the books of the plaintiff to the defendant, Bowen.

Upon the facts alleged, the question to be determined is whether the plaintiff possesses authority, under- its charter, to discount notes, the same as any other banking institution, credit the proceeds, and pay out the same upon the chocks of one of the parties ; and not whether the plaintiff can lawfully buy and receive promissory notes and advance moneys upon the same. There is a plain distinction between the two cases ; and having that distinction in view, it is quite apparent that the plaintiff exceeded its powers in discounting the notes in question, and violated the provisions of its charter and the laws of this State passed to restrain illegal banking.

The plaintiff only possessed such powers and franchises as were especially conferred by its acts ‘ of incorporation ; -and these must yield and be subject to the general provisions of the Revised Statutes, as is expressly provided by section nine of the plaintiff’s charter. The discounting of the notes by *69 the plaintiff was an exercise of power which is expressly prohibited by law. The Revised Statutes (vol. 1, [Edm. ed.], 559, § 4) declares that no corporation “ not expressly incorporated for banking purposes shall, by an)r implication or construction, be deemed to possess the power to discount bills, notes,” etc. As the plaintiff was not authorized to conduct the business of banking by its act of incorporation, this provision was a restriction upon its charter, and the discount of the notes in question was contrary to law. Such discount of the notes is also in conflict with other provisions of law against unauthorized banking. By section 3, (1 R. S. [Edm.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.Y. 64, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ny-state-loan-and-trust-co-v-helmer-ny-1879.