Seventeenth Ward Bank v. Smith

51 A.D. 259, 64 N.Y.S. 888
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 51 A.D. 259 (Seventeenth Ward Bank v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seventeenth Ward Bank v. Smith, 51 A.D. 259, 64 N.Y.S. 888 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

This action, brought to recover the loss sustained by the plaintiff through an alleged breach of duty on the part of the defendant, has been fully tried and elaborately argued upon the appeal to this court, and we have reached the conclusion that the judgment [260]*260appealed from should be reversed. The defendant was the president and a member of the board" of directors of the plaintiff corporation. The plaintiff had a capital of $100,000, with a surplus of $50,000. At the time of the transactions complained of the Banking Law of the State, in so far as-it relates to this action, was contained in chapter 696 of the Laws of 1893 (Amdg. chap. 689 of the .Laws of 1892), which provided that “ No corporation or banker to which this chapter is .applicable shall: (1) Make any loan or discount to any person, company, corporation dr' firm, or upon -paper upon which any such person, company or corporation or firm may be liable, to an amount exceeding the one fifth part of its capital stock actually paid in and surplus; but this restriction shall not apply to loans or discounts secured by collateral security worth ten per centum more than the amount or amounts loaned thereon,” etc. On the 13th day of September, 1893, Mr. Smith, the defendant, loaned to Coffin & Stanton, of New York, rated as bankers, $40,000, taking two notes of $15,000 each, and two notes for $5,000 each, for different terms or on short calls. This loan was made by the defendant personally by a check drawn by himself as president, and without consultation with any officer or director of the bank. The check was for $40,000, which was $10,000 in excess of the sum which the bank had a right to loan under the law without taking collaterals worth at least ten per cent more than the loan. The two $15,000 notes were left outstanding or were renewed from time to time until the 30th of July, 1894,-when they were renewed, one by demand notes, the other for sixty days, while the two $5,000 notes were paid. Subseqiient to the making of this $40,000 loan, and while at least $30,000 of the original loan was outstanding, other sums were loaned to Coffin & Stanton by xthe defendant, so that the average of loans outstanding could not have been less than $40,000 substantially all of the time down to July 30,1894, at which time all of the outstanding notes, aggregating $40,000, were renewed by the defendant. Subsequently Coffin & Stanton failed, and the collaterals which had been deposited with the defendant at the time of making the original loan, and which were kept in the president’s safe, were sold, bringing in to the bank the sum of $6-,-299. Some portion of the renewed notes had been paid, so that at the time of the sale of. the collaterals the indebtedness aggregated $37,953, [261]*261which, less the sum received for the collaterals, makes the claim of . the plaintiff $31,654. The action was brought upon the theory of negligence on the part of the defendant in not using, proper care in determining the worth of the securities, and the question of the value of the collaterals was fully developed on the trial and submitted to the jury upon a charge which was as favorable to the defendant as he had any right to expect under the law. From the judgment entered appeal comes to this court.

There does.not seem to be any question of ultra vwes involved in this action; it was clearly within the legal capacity of the defendant, as the general manager of the affairs of the bank, under the pro-' visions of its by-laws, to loan the funds of the bank in excqss of one-fifth of its capital and surplus, provided he took collateral worth at least ten per cent more than the amount of the loan, and the question presented is thus one of fact. Did the collaterals which he took on the occasion of this loan meet the requirement of the law; were they worth at least ten per cent more than the amount of the loan? Or, as the question was submitted to the jury, did the defendant; exercise reasonable care and diligence in determining the value of the securities; did he have a right to suppose that the collateral was worth the amount prescribed by the statute ? The defendant in this ease was the agent of the corporation, upon whom duties devolved of management and of care; and for a failure in the performance of these duties he will be held liable at law for the damages which the corporation may be shown to have suffered. (Dykman v. Keeney, 154 N. Y. 483, 491.)

It seems clear that the statute having prescribed the rule of conduct for the officers of banking institutions, the board of trustees could not ratify the acts of this defendant in such a manner as to. deprive the plaintiff of a right of action to recover for a neglect of duty. “It is plain,” say the court in A. C. Nellis Co. v. Nellis (62 Hun, 63), “ that a board of trustees cannot ratify an act which they could not lawfully do in the first instance. The statute says : No loan of money shall be made by any such company to any stockholder therein.’ The principal object of that provision is to prevent a reducing of the capital under cover of loans to stockholders. It is intended for the protection of creditors. Now, if Howland, the treasurer, was forbidden to make these loans to defend.[262]*262ant, so were the trustees. But that which they are, by the statute, forbidden to do, they cannot ratify after it has .been done, • If any authority is needed for this, see Peterson v. Mayor (17 N. Y. 449); Brady v. Mayor (20 id. 312).”

If the board of trustees or directors could not ratify the acts of the defendant, neither could they adopt his acts,, nor could their judgment as to the worth of the securities become conclusive as against the plaintiff in this action. The one question, clearly stated to the jury, was whether the .securities were, in fact, worth ten per cent more than the loan, or had the defendant a right to • assume that they were worth that amount from the inquiries which he had made % The learned trial court charged the jury upon this point as follows : “ Now, decide that one question first, and if you decide that these securities were not worth ten per cent more than the amount of this loan, then you go further and you apply to that fact this measure of the duty on the part of the plaintiff (defendant) of fidelity, conscience and ordinary skill and care on his business, and inquire whether he knew that that was the case as to their value, or whether by the exercise of ordinary care and attention he would or should have known that that was the case, because under the law that is the same thing.” The board of directors had made no inquiry in so far as the evidence goes; they had taken no part in making the.loans; the acts complained of were the acts of the defendant in making the loans in excess of the "statutory rule without securing proper collateral, and the bank could not be estopped from holding the defendant liable for a neglect of that statutory duty There is clearly no legal presumption that the board of - director's ■ constitutes all of the stockholders of a banking corporation, and it is the duty of the bank, in its corporate capacity, to protect those who may be interested, either as stockholders or creditors, against the negligence or unlawful conduct of its officers. The case of Holmes v. Willard (125 N. Y. 15) does not assert a contrary doctrine, nor is the reasoning in that case ' inconsistent with the conclusion which we have reached in tire ■ case at bar-. ' In the Holmes Case (supra)

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Seventeenth Ward Bank v. Smith
83 A.D. 64 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
51 A.D. 259, 64 N.Y.S. 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seventeenth-ward-bank-v-smith-nyappdiv-1900.