President of the Bank of Louisville v. Young

37 Mo. 398
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 37 Mo. 398 (President of the Bank of Louisville v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
President of the Bank of Louisville v. Young, 37 Mo. 398 (Mo. 1866).

Opinion

Wagner, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record in this case shows that in 1857, one Campbell, who was president of the Bank of Louisville, Kentucky, a [402]*402foreign corporation, came into this State as agent of the bank, and brought with him a large amount of foreign bank notes, for the purpose of using the same in buying and selling bills of exchange, checks and drafts, and discounting bills and notes, and loaning the same in this State; and that a large portion of the notes so brought were issued by him and circulated in this State. That II. A. Conant & Co. applied to said Campbell, in the city of St. Louis, for a loan for $5,000, and the loan was made upon the note of Conant & Co., endorsed by George Pegram and the defendant, which note was discounted, and $4,842 paid to Conant & Co., in Kentucky bank notes, then at a discount of one per cent. The loan was made by agreement at ten per cent, per annum, but the rate of interest actually charged, it is contended, was greater. There were various renewals of this note, by bills of exchange and notes, and partial payments made on each renewal, when finally Conant & Co. made a new note for the balance remaining due, endorsed by the defendant alone, before the maturity of which Conant & Co. failed. But, subsequently, renewals were still made, at the request and on the endorsement of defendant; and at last, to close the matter; he took up the note of Conant & Co., and gave his note in its stead, which is the note here sued on. It furthermore appears that the Perpetual Insurance Company of St. Louis was the collecting agent and correspondent of the plaintiff, both prior and subsequent to the loan to Conant & Co. Large quantities of foreign bank paper were deposited with the secretary of the insurance company, who paid it out under instructions from plaintiff, the usual course being to have the paper of applicants for loans passed on at plaintiff’s place of business in Kentucky, and then remitted here, with directions to pay out certain specific amounts. But the paper in this case was discounted here, and renewed on divers occasions at the office of the agent.

The charter granted the plaintiff by the Legislature of Kentucky, was set up in defence, by which it is declared; in § 12, “ that said bank should not contract for or receive a [403]*403greater interest than at the rate of six per cent, per annum, for the loan or forbearance of money; and interest on promissory notes, negotiable and payable at said bank, and there discounted, shall be calculated on the true time such notes have to run, including three days’ grace,” &c.

The laws of the State of Kentucky were also given in evidence, by which it was provided that all contracts and assurances made directly or indirectly for the loan or forbearance of money, or other things, at a greater rate than legal interest (six per cent.), shall be void for the excess over the legal interest; and in case of banks or corporations, if a greater discount is taken, the whole contract for interest shall be void, and anything paid thereon as interest may be recovered back by the person paying the same, or any creditor of his may recover the same by bill in equity.

At the conclusion of the testimony, plaintiff asked the court to declare the law to be that if the defendant gave the note sued upon, then he had not, in his answer nor by the evidence, presented any defence against the note, and the plaintiff was entitled to recover; which declaration the court refused to give.

The court then, at the request of the defendant, gave the following instructions :

1. If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiffs are a corporation of Kentucky, and that, in 1857, plaintiffs, by an agent doing business for them in this State, loaned H. A. Conant & Co. $5,000, more or less, of bank notes issued by plaintiff, or any foreign corporation, and Conant & Co. gave plaintiff their bill or note, endorsed by defendant, for such loan ; and if the jury further find that the bill or note originally given has been reduced by payments from time to time, with renewals of the paper and extension of the time thereon, and that the note now sued on is a renewal of the original paper, so given by Conant & Co., and was made to secure a balance of said original loan, the note now sued on is null and void, and the plaintiff cannot recover.

2. If the note sued on was given mediately and remotely [404]*404in renewal in part of a loan of $5,000, made by the plaintiff to Horace A. Conant, for which said Conant gave his note with the defendant and another as endorsers; and if, in making said loan, the plaintiff contracted for and received a greater rate of interest than at the rate of six per cent, per annum, then plaintiff cannot recover in this action.

Plaintiff then took a non-suit, and, failing to have the same set aside, brings the case here by writ of error.

The instruction or declaration of law asked by the plaintiff was, we think, rightly refused. It was virtually declaring by the court that there was no evidence adduced by the defendant constituting a defence. This was not warranted by the facts in the case. It is urged in argument that the first instruction given for defendant was not justified by the evidence.

The instruction is predicated on the fact that the plaintiff, in making the contract of loan and the various renewals, had violated the law in regard to illegal banking and the circulation of depreciated paper currency. (R. C. 1855, p. 285.) It is provided by § 14 of the act to prevent illegal banking, that all bonds, bills or notes, or other instruments of writing, securing the payment of any money or bank notes, loaned or advanced by any foreign corporation or unincorporated banking company, situated or located, or which is doing business by its officers or agents within this State, to such foreign corporation or unincorporated banking company, or execute to any agent, or person holding himself out as agent of such corporation or unincorporated banking company, or to any corporation or person, whether such bond, bill or note, or other instrument of writing, be made payable, or made to secure the payment of such loan of money or bank notes to such foreign corporation or unincorporated banking company, or to the agent thereof, for the use of the same, or such agent, or any other person or corporation, either directly or indirectly, for the use of such foreign corporation or unincorporated banking company, in whatever name or form the same may be drawn, shall be taken and held as utterly void and of no effect.”

[405]*405The obvious intention of the act was to exclude certain associations of persons, foi’eign corporations, from coming in competition with the authorized banking establishments of this State, and to prevent their circulating depreciated currency. And, with this view, it makes utterly void all bonds, bills or notes, or other instruments of writing, securing the payment of any money or bank notes loaned or advanced by any foreign corporation or unincorporated banking company, situated or located, or which is doing business by its officers or agents, within this State.

A foreign corporation, doing the prohibited business through its agent, comes within the penalty of the law.

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37 Mo. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/president-of-the-bank-of-louisville-v-young-mo-1866.