Palmer v. Yates

3 Sandf. 137
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedSeptember 22, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Sandf. 137 (Palmer v. Yates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. Yates, 3 Sandf. 137 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

By the Court. Duer, J.

This is a bill for the foreclosiu’e of a mortgage, for securing the payment of 25,000 dollars, executed and delivered by the defendant, Henry Yates and his wife, in September, 1838, to The Horth American Trust and Banking Company, an association organized under the general banking law of this state. The consideration of the mortgage was the nominal amount, or par value, of two hundred and fifty shares in the capital stock of the company, for which the defendant, Yates, as an original associate, had subscribed; and the legality of the consideration, and consequently the original validity of the mortgage, is not impeached or denied. It is, however, contended, that the debt which the mortgage purports to secure, has been in effect extinguished by an actual payment of one third of the amount, and by a set-off exceeding the residue to which the mortgagor is said to be entitled, and which is composed of various sums of money, alleged to have been due to him, from the company, when, in consequence of its insolvency, a general receiver of its property and effects was appointed.

The title of the plaintiff to enforce the payment in this suit, of whatever amount may appear to be due upon the mortgage, is just as unquestionable, as the validity of the mortgage. This title is derived from two sources, one or the other of which must be valid. In the early part of 1840, the bond and [143]*143mortgage of the defendant, together with - a large amount of other securities, were assigned by the company to Lewis Curtis, Richard M. Blatchford, and John L. Graham, in trust, to secure the payment of certain sterling bonds to be issued by the company ; and if this assignment were void, all the securities which it embraced, upon the dissolution of the company, became the property of the general receiver. The trustees, however, and the general receiver, in compliance with certain orders of the late coiu-t of chancery, have united in an assignment of all these secm’ities to the plaintiff, who, by virtue of another order of the same court, was appointed a special receiver, with authority to collect the amount, and enforce the payment of securities placed in his hands. These facts have all been established by the requisite proofs, and are not contested.

In an ordinary case, it would be needless to inquire whether the real title of the plaintiff is derived from the trustees, or the general receiver; but owing to the peculiar nature of the defence in this suit, this inquiry is, in our judgment, certainly proper, and perhaps necessary. If the assignment to the trustees were valid, and the defendant is chargeable with actual or constructive notice of its existence, prior to the transactions, upon which his defence is founded, the whole of his defence will be excluded, and a decree such as the plaintiff asks, must of necessity follow. And upon this supposition, it will be unnecessary, and, as we think, inexpedient to consider, whether as against a title, derived solely from the general receiver, the defence could be sustained. The questions which the suit, if founded solely upon the title of the general receiver, would involve, may and probably will arise in other cases; and from the nature of these quesions, we are unwilling to commit ourselves by any intimation of opinion, in relation to any of them, until it shall become our duty to decide them.

The only questions, therefore, that we propose to consider, and in relation to which any explanation of our views will be necessary, are, first, whether the assignment to the trustees, Curtis, Blatchford, and Graham, was operative and effectual; and, second, whether the defendant is to be charged with notice of that [144]*144assignment, at any time before all or any of the transactions upon which he founds his defence.

The validity of the assignment is denied, upon the single ground, that, contrary to the provisions of the revised statutes, it was unauthorized by any previous resolution of the board of directors of the company. (1 R. S. eh. 18, Tit. 2, sec. 8, page 591.) In considering this objection, we shall assume that those provisions of the revised statutes which relate to moneyed corporations are applicable, so far as without inconsistency they may be applied to associations organized under the general banking law; but it is proper to add, that the position we assume is regarded by us as far more questionable than it seems to have been considered in the cases, reported and unreported, to which we were referred upon the argument. Whether these banking associations are corporations at all, in the sense of the revised statutes, and whether the general banking law does not include all the provisions, restrictions, and liabilities, to which the legislature meant that the associations organized under the law, their directors and officers, shoidd be subject, are questions upon which we forbear to express any opinion, but which we hold ourselves at liberty to examine, and shall feel it our duty to examine with the care and attention which their importance demands, if they shall arise in any case in which it will be necessary to decide them. We think that no decision of controlling and paramount authority has hitherto been made in relation to either of them, unless that of the court of errors in Warner v. Beers may be so construed.

Conceding, however, that the views of the defendant’s counsel upon these doubtful questions are correct, we are still of opinion that the objection upon which they relied cannot be sustained, first, because the assignment to the trustees was in fact authorized in the mode that the statute requires; and, second, because the want of such an authority would not, in this case, be construed to render void the assignment.

It cannot be doubted that a banking association under the general law, may, by its articles of association and by-laws, divide the business it is authorized to transact into several [145]*145distinct departments, and constitute-a separate board of directors for each department; or which is the same thing, may intrust to a separate committee of the directors the exclusive charge of each department, clothing that committee with all the powers of a board, in relation to the business which its department embraces ; and it is exactly this course that the original associates of the ¡North American Trust and Banking Company actually followed in organizing the company. ' By the second section, article 10, in the articles of association, the directors as a board are empowered to make such by-laws, rules, and regulations for the management of the business of the company and the government of themselves, their officers, and agents, as they may think expedient, not inconsistent with law and the articles of association.

It is not denied that the by-laws which were produced and given in evidence were duly made in pursuance of this authority, and we are clearly of opinion that they are neither inconsistent with law nor with the articles of association. The first section in the first article of these.by-laws, declares that the business of the company shall be conducted under two divisions. The first division to embrace the business relating 'to bonds, mortgages, and other securities; and the second, the business of discount- and deposit, that is, the banking business, strictly so called.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Sandf. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-yates-nysuperctnyc-1849.