Rome Savings Bank v. Kramer

39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 270
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 270 (Rome Savings Bank v. Kramer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rome Savings Bank v. Kramer, 39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 270 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1884).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.:

The action is on a joint and several promissory note, dated 1st July, 1874, for $3,500, payable to the plaintiff'or order on demand, with interest. The note was executed for the benefit of St. Joseph’s church, in Rome, by the defendant Kramer and thirty-nine others, members of that church, and was given upon the surrender by the plaintiff of two other notes held by it as security for money loaned by the plaintiff for the benefit of said church, and upon which there was due at the time of the surrender the sum for which the note in suit was given. The note in suit was the only security for the debt, and is the only cause of action statéd in the complaint.

The sole defense set up is that the note in suit was taken by the plaintiff a<5 security in violation of the plaintiff’s charter and of the general laws prohibiting unauthorized banking, and is therefore illegal and void.

The plaintiff was incorporated by virtue of chapter 324 of the Laws of 1851. By the sixth section of the act the general business and object of the corporation was declared to be, to receive on deposit “ such sums as may be from time to time offered therefor by tradesmen, clerks, mechanics, laborers, minors, servants and others, and investing the same in the securities or stocks of this State, or of the United States, or in the stocks or bonds of any city authorized to be issued by the legislature of this State, or in such other manner as is authorized by this act.” It was also provided in the same section that “ no money deposited in the said institution shall be invested except in the securities or stocks mentioned in this section in opposition to the vote of any trustees; but by the consent and approbation of all the trustees present at a regular meeting, amounts not exceeding three thousand dollars to any one individual may be loaned ” on real estate, etc. And by the same section it was made the duty of the trustees of said corporation, “to invest, as soon as [272]*272practicable, in public stocks or public securities, or in bonds and mortgages, as provided for in this act, all sums received by them beyond an available fund of not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars, or not exceeding one third of the total amount of deposits with said institution, at the discretion of the said trustees, which they may' keep to meet the current payments of said, corporation, and which may by them be kept on deposit, on interest or otherwise, or in such available form as the trustees may direct.”

By the fourteenth section of the act the corporation was subjected to the provisions of the eighteenth chapter of the first part of the Revised Statutes, “ as far as the same are applicable,” among which are the provisions that no corporation shall possess or exercise any corporate powers, in addition to those expressly given, except such as shall be necessary to the exercise of the powers so given (1R. S.§3), and that no corporation, not expressly created for banking purposes, shall by any implication or construction, be deemed to possess the power of discounting bills, notes or other evidences of debt, etc. (Id., § i.j

By chapter 150 of the Laws of 1865, the said act of 1851 was amended so as to allow the plaintiff to loan on bond and mortgage to the sum of $5,000 in one loan, and by,chapter 845 of the Laws of 1868, savings banks were authorized to loan the moneys deposited with them in certain other specified securities, in addition to those mentioned in the former acts. The latter act was repealed in 1875. (Laws 1875, chap. 371, § 56.)

It cannot be contended successfully that the note in suit was obnoxious to the provisions of the restraining act. It was not discounted ” in the sense in which that term is used in banking operations, interest on the debt secured by it not haying been exacted or paid in advance. (City Bank v. Bruce, 17 N. Y., 507, per SeldeN, J., p. 515.) In fact, no money passed in the transaction attending its execution, the note having been given and accepted as a substi-tute_ for other notes held by the plaintiff as' a security for money previously loaned. But, treating the nóte in suit as given for a loan of money which the plaintiff had received on deposit, to be invested as required by the terms of its charter, the first question is, whether in loaning such money upon the security of the note in suit the corporation exceeded its powers.

[273]*273If the power to loan on personal securities resides in the act, it must be looted for in the clause relating to the “ available ” fund, and there the respondents’ counsel contends it is to be found. "With the exception of that fund, the moneys deposited with the plaintiff are to be invested in the securities specified in the act, and promissory notes are not among them. And the specification of particular securities is an.implied exclusion of all others. The main purpose of the plaintiff’s charter was to create an institution in which clerks, servants, laborers, minors and the other class of beneficiaries mentioned in the act might deposit their savings and have them securely invested for their benefit. The object was not- to furnish •banking facilities for the community, nor primarily to create a profit for the corporation. As the success of the scheme was necessarily dependent on the security of the investments, the act was carefully guarded in that respect, and public stocks and securities, and bonds .secured, by real estate mortgages, were the only securities specified in which investments might be made. That being the case, was it intended to permit the “ available ” fund, which as will be seen hereafter the trustees might, in their discretion, increase to one-third of the total amount of deposits, to be invested in mere personal securities ? The appellants’ counsel contends that the fund was not to be invested at all; but was to be kept ready for use to meet current .payments, and to that end to be kept either in the safe of the corporation itself, or on deposit on interest or otherwise. And he contends further, that the authority to “keep on deposit” is an authority, not to deposit with a private individual, upon the security of his certificate of deposit, or his promissory note payable on demand, but with a bank authorized by law to receive deposits. In 1847 the trustees of savings banks, who were authorized to make temporary deposits in any of the incorporated banks, were authorized to make such deposits with banking associations formed under the general banking law (chap. 478, § 1), and in 1865 with national banks. (Chap. 214, § 1.) And in 1854 all savings banks were authorized to deposit in trust companies. (Chap. 72, § 1.) Subsequently to the passage of two of the acts just above cited, and at the same session with the other, the charter of the plaintiff was ■amended, and the clause respecting the “available fund” was re-enacted without alteration. (Laws 1865, chap. 150.) The argu[274]*274ment is plausible that by the words “ on deposit,” the act intended a deposit in one of the banks or trust companies in which savings banks were authorized to deposit by law.

The argument of the appellants’ counsel, based upon the provisions above referred to and the general purpose of the act, is supported ‘by the opinion of Mr. Justice YaN Yoest at Special Term in Paine v. Barnum (59 How. Pr., 303), the opinion of Mr. Clifford A. Hand, the referee in the same case (vol. 4, Assembly Doc., 1879, p. 52), and the opinion of the late attorney general, Mr. Schoonmaker (Id., p. 44), in the case of the Syracuse Savings Bank.

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Related

The City Bank of Columbus v. . Bruce and Fox
17 N.Y. 507 (New York Court of Appeals, 1858)
Paine v. Barnum
59 How. Pr. 303 (New York Supreme Court, 1880)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rome-savings-bank-v-kramer-nysupct-1884.