People v. Binghamton Trust Co.

34 N.E. 898, 139 N.Y. 185, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 635, 94 Sickels 185, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 987
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 34 N.E. 898 (People v. Binghamton Trust Co.) 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
People v. Binghamton Trust Co., 34 N.E. 898, 139 N.Y. 185, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 635, 94 Sickels 185, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 987 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

*187 Gray, J.

In this action the People of the state, by their attorney-general, seek to recover a judgment in their favor, which shall decree that the defendant is exercising franchises not conferred upon it by law, and which shall adjudge in their favor and against the defendant for the amount of the penalty prescribed for carrying on business in violation of section 283 of chapter 409 of the Laws of 1882, known as the Banking Law.

.By that section it is made unlawful for any corporation, association, or person to advertise or put forth a sign as a savings bank, or in any way to solicit or receive deposits as a savings bank; ” and, for every offense against these provisions. the offender shall forfeit and pay......the sum of $100 ......to be sued for and recovered in the name of the People of the state, by the district attorneys of the several counties, for the use of the poor, chargeable to said county in which said offense shall be committed.”

The district attorney did not bring this action, but he has joined in its submission. Inasmuch as no objection has been raised to the form of the action, and in view of the public interest in a determination of the issue raised, we shall pass over any question of that kind, and we shall assume that a recovery might be had in such an action, if, upon the facts established, a violation as alleged is made out.

The facts were agreed to by the parties. It appears that the defendant was a trust company organized under chapter 546, Laws of 1887. Its mode of doing business is to issue a pass book to customers, upon the receipt of deposits, containing sundry so-called “ rules governing deposits; ” that it issued and distributed a circular descriptive of the nature of the corporate business and pointing out the advantages to the public in dealing with the company; and that it also published in the papers a certain advertisement descriptive of its business. With respect to the pass books issued by tins defendant, it was argued "that, as they were exactly similar to those issued by savings banks, in the feature of a set of interest rules, a violation of the Banking Law'is evidenced. Whether it is true that the pass books are *188 alike in the feature alleged, we cannot say; inasmuch as the fact is neither admitted, nor shown by the record. But, assuming that such likeness exists, are we then to say that there has been a violation of the law'(

If those rules are such as savings banks have adopted, in their relations and dealings with depositors, I see nothing in them but a regulation of the manner of doing business; wliich has nothing in its nature to make it so peculiarly appropriate to the savings bank business, as, in the view of the law, or of the ordinary mind, to constitute any test of the organic busi-. ness; or that the niles are other than would be appropriate for adoption for the regulation of any business in which deposits of money are received and held upon an obligation to pay interest. 1 do not see that the rules, which are given in the circular as governing the Interest. Depart- ' ment,” and which arc printed in the pass book, are such as should be confined in their use to a savings bank business. They are • eight in number. The first states the hours for business ; the second, that entries of deposits and withdrawals of moneys are made through a pass book; the third, that to draw out moneys there must be a written order, or check, and that the right to withdraw is subject to a condition, to be imposed at the option of the company, requiring a certain notice to be given, varying with the amount proposed to be drawn; the fourth fixes the rate of interest which will be ¡laid on deposits left for three months, and states how it will be compounded and computed; the fifth reserves a right to the company to close and refuse accounts; the sixth states that moneys may be deposited for minors under written directions ; the seventh provides for the case of a loss of the pass book, and the eighth states that the acceptance of the pass book, with its entries, shall be the evidence of an agreement, by company and depositors, to be governed by these rules. The trust company has the power, under the fourth section of the act under which it exists, “ to receive deposits of trust moneys, securities and other personal property from any person or corporation, and to loan money on real or personal *189 securities.” With this rather hroad privilege, and having the power, by its first section, £‘ to make contracts,” there can be no question as to its right to agree with its depositors with respect to their relative duties and obligations. That agreement is embodied in the eight rules, and in no one can we find any such innovation upon commercial practices, or such a novelty in idea, as to characterize it as especially applicable to any peculiar institution. These rules are, evidently enough, the product of a consideration of the nature of the obligation < which the trust company assumes towards the depositor, and of certain prudential requirements, which have been suggested by a business sense and by the experience of men, founded upon commercial transactions and crises. The company’s power, by the eleventh section of the act, over the deposits extends to a use of them in making loans and in a pretty wide range of investments. Its relations with a depositor are, obviously, those of debtor and creditor. The moneys belong to the company when deposited, and through their use, in the permitted ways, are gained the moneys from which to make the interest payments agreed to. Without being a banking corporation, as such is legally understood, it is a moneyed corporation and possesses many of the powers of a banking corporation ; as may be inferred from the eleventh section, in prohibiting a construction which would authorize the issuance of bills to circulate as money. These circumstances sufficiently show that, in the formulation of rules to govern deposits, the company but compels the adoption of a reasonable and prudential agreement as the basis of its relations with a depositor. The statute has not prescribed a set of rules, or of regulations, for doing business with depositors, for the adoption by the one or the other class of corporations; nor has it done anything more than to define and limit their powers, duties and privileges. I know of no principle of law which, as to commercial transactions within their chartered powers and involving the receipt or borrowing of, and the obligation to repay, moneys, denies the entire freedom to regulate them by such a contract as the parties are willing to enter into.

*190 The learned attorney-general, conceding that trust companies may receive deposits of moneys and may pay interest upon them, argues that they may not transact or regulate their business upon the general plan, or in the manner usually adopted by savings banks. Why may they not ? Can there be such a thing as an exclusive appropriation of a system of conducting commercial transactions, and thereby to symbolize it to the world ? I do not think that savings banks, however closely in the public interest they should be guarded, should be accorded a monopoly of any set of business rules. The vice of the position, taken for the People in this controversy, seems to be found in attaching a wrong sense to the language of the section.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.E. 898, 139 N.Y. 185, 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 635, 94 Sickels 185, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-binghamton-trust-co-ny-1893.