Porter v. Canyon County Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance

263 P. 632, 45 Idaho 522, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 9
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1928
DocketNo. 5032.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 263 P. 632 (Porter v. Canyon County Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. Canyon County Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance, 263 P. 632, 45 Idaho 522, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 9 (Idaho 1928).

Opinion

T. BAILEY LEE, J.

On November 16, 1925, the Western Commercial Bank in Caldwell, while insolvent accepted a deposit from defendant, Canyon County Farmers’ Mutual Fire Insurance Company, and delivered such company as security therefor $20,411.81 worth of its assets consisting of certain warrants. On December 23d following the bank closed and was placed in the hands of the Commissioner of the Department of Finance. Demand for the surrender of the warrants was made upon the Insurance Company, which demand having been refused, the Commissioner sued for their recovery, or, in lieu thereof, their face value together with accrued interest. The defendant Insurance Company demurred generally and upon the three special grounds that the court had no jurisdiction of the defendant’s person or of the subject matter; that plaintiff had no legal capacity to sue, and that plaintiff was estopped to maintain this action “for the reason that it appears from the face of the complaint that he seeks as assignee of one of the parties to the contract referred to and pleaded in the complaint to be relieved from the performance of a contract fully executed by defendant on the ground that said contract is ultra vires and beyond the authority of'his assignor.”

We are called upon to consider only the merits of the general demurrer and the plea of estoppel. Sec. 39 of chap. 133 of the Idaho 1925 Session Laws, provides:

“Giving Security for Deposit Prohibited. It shall be unlawful for any bank to pledge, mortgage or hypothecate to any depositor any of its real or personal property as security • for any deposit and any pledge, mortgage or *525 hypothecation made in violation thereof shall be unenforceable; provided, however, that this provision shall not apply to any deposits of moneys of the United States and public funds deposited in accordance with the provisions of any depository act of this state, or the United States.”

This enactment clearly declares a public policy prohibiting preferences in favor of one depositor over other depositors and general creditors of a bank. It is contended that a contract made in violation of this statute is merely illegal and not void, since its invalidity is not in terms declared; and, such being the case, the law will leave the parties where it finds them. As to the nature of a contract undertaken in defiance of a direct legislative inhibition, we have found nothing more succinct than the language employed in Swanger v. Mayberry, 59 Cal. 91, where on page 94 the Court said:

“The general principle is well established that a contract founded on an illegal consideration, or which is made for the purpose of furthering any matter or thing prohibited by statute, or to aid or assist any party therein, is void. This rule applies to every contract which is founded on a transaction malum in se, or which is prohibited by statute, on the ground of public policy.”

This invalidity vitiates the contract between the immediate parties. 6 Cal. Juris., 150, sec. 106, citing copious authorities. Other authorities holding such contracts void are especially; Black on Interpretation of Laws, 2d ed., page 87; Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, page 640, sec. 449; Barton v. Port Jackson, etc., 17 Barb. (N. Y.) 397; People v. Board of Supervisors, 122 Ill. App. 40; Swing v. Swing Furnace Co., 133 Ill. App. 216; Hirning v. Toohey, 49 S. D. 496, 207 S. W. 462; Julius v. Walcott, 113 Okl. 7, 237 Pac. 605; Pulitzer Pub. Co. v. McNichols, 170 Mo. App. 709, 153 S. W. 562; Pinney v. First Nat. Bank, 68 Kan. 223, 1 Ann. Cas. 331, 75 Pac. 119; Robertson v. Hayes, 83 Ala. 290, 3 So. 674; Terrett v. Bartlett, 21 Vt. 183; Siter v. Sheets, 7 Ind. 132.

*526 Defendant urges that the instant case presents the well-recognized exception that where the statutory prohibition is found in a statute, the purpose of which is the regulation of business, the courts will .treat the contract as valid, unless it is manifestly the intention of the statute to make it void. This rule was announced in Vermont Loam, Company v. Hoffman, 5 Ida. 383, 95 Am. St. 186, 49 Pac. 314, 37 L. R. A. 509, but in that case the doing of the particular business was not of itself prohibited. The statute imposed as a condition precedent the taking out of a license, and declared the failure so to do to be a misdemeanor; and the court upholding the contract directly declared that it would not have done so, had the business itself been in terms prohibited. The rule is clearly enunciated in Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, page 651, where, after stating it, the writer says: “and it would seem clear that it cannot apply where there is an express prohibition of the act or contract, either for the protection of the revenue or for any other purpose.”

The distinction is most ably discussed in Sunflower Lumber Co. v. Turner Supply Co., 158 Ala. 191, 132 Am. St. 20, 48 So. 510. It has been held that even in the absence of a statute prohibiting it, a bank cannot pledge its assets to secure a depositor, such act being “ultra vires and void.” (Commercial B. & T. Co. v. Citizens T. & G. Co., 153 Ky. 566, Ann. Cas. 1915C, 166, 156 S. W. 160, 45 L. R. A., N. S., 950; Divide County v. Baird (N. D.), 51 A. L. R. 296, 212 N. W. 236.) The reason underlying these two strong cases may be reduced to the proposition that a bank organized under a statute permitting it to do business on terms and conditions and subject to liabilities prescribed in the statute has no power to pledge its assets to secure a deposit where such power is not expressly awarded by law. It having been determined that the contract of pledge was void, it remains to discover what right, if any, the Commissioner had to maintain the suit. The defendant Insurance Company adroitly argues that the Commissioner stands *527 in the shoes of the bank, and, not having rescinded or offered to return defendant’s deposit, is estopped to demand relief. In other words, the parties being in pari delicto, the law will not aid the one as against the other. The fallacy of the argument is at once evident. While it is true, as was said in State v. City of Sapulpa, 58 Okl. 550, 160 Pac. 489, that “where the bank Commissioner assumes possession of a state bank he does not take the assets thereof for value and without notice, but subject to all claims and defences that might have been interposed against the bank, had it continued under its corporate management,” this cannot serve to defeat equities superior to those of parties asserting the particular defense. Under the laws of this state, the Commissioner stands as a trustee to protect the rights of all claimants, particularly those of depositors and general creditors. Under the law, the right of the defendant can be only that of a general depositor as such; it can acquire no greater right than that inuring to any other general depositor as such.

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Bluebook (online)
263 P. 632, 45 Idaho 522, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-canyon-county-farmers-mutual-fire-insurance-idaho-1928.