O'Brien v. . Grant

40 N.E. 871, 146 N.Y. 163, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 282, 101 Sickels 163, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 649
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 21, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 40 N.E. 871 (O'Brien v. . Grant) 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
O'Brien v. . Grant, 40 N.E. 871, 146 N.Y. 163, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 282, 101 Sickels 163, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 649 (N.Y. 1895).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The St. Nicholas Bank claims the right to apply the securities and moneys theretofore deposited with it by the Madison Square Bank towards the reimbursement of its payments,, or clearances, of the latter’s checks on the morning of August 9th, 1893. With respect to that claim the proposition of the-plaintiffs is twofold. They say that rule. 25 of the clearing house did not require the Saint Nicholas Bank to clear the checks-drawn on the Madison Square Bank, presented after it became-aware of the insolvency of the latter, and that such insolvency terminated the relation of clearing house agent and rendered any payments made unauthorized; or, if the clearing house-rule is susceptible of the interpretation that it required the Saint Nicholas Bank to honor checks drawn on the *172 Madison Square Bank after its insolvency became known to it, the contract between the banks, in so far as it contemplated such payment and the use of the securities of the Madison Square Bank to secure the advances made by the Saint Nicholas Bank, was an illegal preference under the statute. The controversy must turn, in my opinion, upon the nature of the relation which existed between the two banks in question and the clearing house and upon what was the extent of the obligation entailed upon the St. Nicholas Bank, in engaging to receive and to clear checks drawn upon the Madison Square Bank, when presented through the clearing house. [For the plaintiffs it is argued that, as between the Madison Square Bank and the St. Nicholas Bank, the relation, simply, ■of principal- and' agent -was created and, therefore, upon the insolvency of the former becoming known, on the morning of the day when clearances of the previous day’s checks were to ¡be effected, that the latter bank was not entitled to pay checks drawn upon the former bank. But I think to view the relation as such is altogether incorrect and unwarranted by the facts. In a certain and limited sense the St. Nicholas Bank, of course, would act as an agent, in clearing and paying cheeks drawn upon the Madison Square Bank. That, however, was .a mere feature of that larger contractual relation, into which the two banks had entered with the Clearing House Association, and which characterized all their dealings. The agreement ■of January, 1891, was one to which there were three parties; ■each of which was moved to enter into it by a legitimate-consideration. The Madison Square Bank acquired the very substantial advantages, which the members of the Clearing House Association enjoyed, in the increased convenience, dispatch and safety of banking transactions. The. St. Nicholas Bank acquired .advantage, benefit and a protection by the deposit of collateral- securities ■ to the amount of $100,000 and of the cash, required to be made by the Madison Square Bank. The cash ■deposit was to be free of interest and maintained at a daily balance of $50,000. The members of the Clearing House Association, in extending to the Madison Square Bank the right to *173 have its checks cleared and paid through one of its members, were assured that all checks presented would be paid up to, and including, the day following the giving of notice by the St. Nicholas Bank of the termination of the arrangement-between itself and the Madison Square Bank. The learned referee very correctly defines the arrangement between these two banks and the clearing house as constituting a tripartite agreement upon ample consideration, for the mutual benefit of all the parties who entered into it. That agreement provided for the length of its duration ; for the maintenance at all times of the stipulated security to protect the St. Nicholas Bank and bound that bank to receive and pay the checks drawn upon the Madison Square Bank as it would its own.

The St. Nicholas Bank could only agree and arrange to clear for the Madison Square Bank, in accordance with conditions imposed by the constitution and rules of the Clearing House Association; and an essential condition was that the arrangement could not be discontinued, nor should its liability cease, until after the completion of the exchanges of the morning next following the receipt of a notice of discontinuance. There was nothing in such a provision of the constitution of the clearing house,'which was objectionable, legally speaking, or otherwise. It was perfectly competent for the-banks to form themselves into this voluntary association and to agree that they should be governed by a constitution and by rules. When adopted, they expressed the contract by which each member was bound and which measured its rights, duties- and liabilities. (Belton v. Hatch, 109 N. Y. 593.) If not in conflict with rules of law, they must be awarded that effect which is always accorded to the deliberate engagements of parties. The provisions of section 25 of the constitution of the Clearing House Association were designed as a security and a protection for the members, in the event mentioned. When the Madison Square Bank made its arrangement with the St. Nicholas Bank 'and, also, made compliance with the terms of the demand of the clearing house circular, I think it is clear that a definite contractual relation was. at once created between the- three *174 parties; whose provisions and relative engagements were effectually defined and controlled by the constitution and rules of the clearing house, in so far as they touched the proposed clearances of checks. The contract, which bound the members of this voluntary association of banks and regulated their duties, rights and liabilities, permitted the representation of an outside bank, through a member; provided that member assumed' a liability, which should not cease, until the completion of clearances on the morning next after its notice of a discontinuance was given. That liability, so exactly provided for, is, however, sought to be limited to cases, where insolvency has not supervened, as to the non-member bank. If the relation here was strictly that of an agent acting for a principal the question might be a serious one; but even then much might be said in favor of "the liability which the agent had, with the assent of the principal, assumed. That, however, was not the relation. The Madison Square Bank was a ■contracting party in an agreement, to which the other parties were the St. Nicholas Bank and the Clearing House Association, and it had accej>ted and had become bound by provisions in the latter’s constitution and rules. That agreement- was entered into at a time when it was perfectly competent to make it and its duration was fixed by section 25 of the constitution of the clearing house. As the respondent’s counsel says, every bank entitled to the payment of checks sent by it through the exchanges of the clearing house, in due course, had a right to rely upon the liability of any other bank ■clearing for the non-member and unless this liability continued definitely and up to a certain period, the liability ■of the clearing bank would not be fixed and enforcible. Here, the effect of the constitution and rules of the ■clearing house upon the agreement was as though it had been stated, in so many words, that it should commence upon January 13th, 1891, and should be at an ■end on August 9th, 1893, after the clearances of that day had been completed. "What was there in the agreement .and its incidents, which contravened any rule of law or of *175

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Bluebook (online)
40 N.E. 871, 146 N.Y. 163, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 282, 101 Sickels 163, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-grant-ny-1895.