Southern Bank v. Brashears

1 Disney (Ohio) 207
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJune 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Disney (Ohio) 207 (Southern Bank v. Brashears) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Bank v. Brashears, 1 Disney (Ohio) 207 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

Spencer, J.

This is an action upon a bill of exchange, drawn by Mark Buckingham upon the defendants, Q-. Brashears & Co., in favor of, and payable to the order of, the plaintiffs, dated November 9, 1853, for the payment of $4,053.12, in ninety days. The bill is dated at Cincinnati, and is addressed to the defendants at Cincinnati, and .is there payable; it was accepted by defendants, and dishonored at maturity. The plaintiffs having made out a prima facie case, are entitled to recover the amount of the bill, with interest, unless barred by the facts set up in defense. They are as follows:

On June 25,1853, Raper, Cox & Co. drew a bill of exchange upon Mark Buckingham, dated at Cincinnati, and addressed to Buckingham at Cincinnati, whereby they requested the latter, in four months after date, to pay to the [209]*209order of themselves $3,984.34, at Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company Bank, in Cincinnati, for value received; which hill was accepted by Buckingham, and, being indorsed by Raper, Cox & Co., was sent by them to the Southern Bank of Kentucky, at their banking house in Carrollton, Kentucky, and by the latter purchased, or discounted, taking out therefrom $120.18,' and paying over to the order of Raper, Cox & Oo. the sum of $3,864.16, as the net proceeds; of the sum taken out, $80.84 was charged as interest, at the rate of six per cent, per annum, or one per cent, for every sixty days, and $39.84 for exchange between Carrollton and Cincinnati, being at the rate of one per cent. The acceptance by Buckingham was made, in fact, for the mere accommodation of Raper, Cox & Co. Before the bill matured, Raper, Cox & Co. failed, and assigned and transferred all their assets to Buckingham, to indemnify him against his liabilities on their account. A portion of the stock was in the hands of the present defendants, for sale, as auctioneers, at the time when the bill in suit was drawn. On the day appointed for sale, the plaintiff brought suit upon the original bill against the parties to it, and was about to attach the property to be sold; to avoid which the bill in suit, drawn by Buckingham upon Brashears & Laws, was made and accepted — being for the amount of principal and interest on the original bill, adding interest for the time the substituted bill had to run — the defendants to retain indemnity out of the sales made.

-It is claimed on the part of the defendants, that the discount, or purchase of the original bill, was made in violation of the plaintiff’s charter, which limits it in the discount of bills and notes, to charge by way of interest at the rate of one per cent, only for every sixty days; whereas, in the present instance, interest was not only charged at that rate, but an additional sum of one per cent, was charged as interest, or for forbearance in fact, under color of exchange; that being in violation of the plaintiff’s - charter, the purchase was void; and the plaintiff, having no claim upon [210]*210the original bill, can have none upon that which has been substituted for it, the latter being given without consideration.

Assuming that the 'plaintiff’s right upon the original bill is to be determined solely by the law of their incorporation, and that such law has been violated in the transaction, upon which the right is founded, by the taking of more than six per cent, interest on the purchase, or for a loan of money, it is undoubtedly true that such right, or claim, is wholly gi’oundless, for want of power or capacity in the plaintiff to make the purchase. 8 Ohio, 280, Bank of Chillicothe v. Swayne, et al.; 2 Pet. 527, Bank U. S. v. Owens; 7 B. Monroe, 548, Pilcher v. The Banks. It is equally true that if the plaintiff had no right of action upon the original bill, they can have none upon its substitute from want of consideration. 4 McLean, 250, Orr v. Lacy; 3 How. U. S. 71, Walker v. Bank of Washington; see also 2 Conn. 280, Botsford v. Sanford.

Had the plaintiffj then, any authority, by the charter, to make the contract involved in the purchase of this bill ? By section 2 of the charter, it is provided that the business of the bank shall be “ to lend money, discount promissory notes and bills, and deal in exchange.” Whether the contract under consideration be regarded as the discount of a bill, or as a purchase of exchange, or as a mere loan of money, it would be equally authorized under this section of the charter, at whatever rate the loan, discount, or purchase, might have been made. But section 23 of the charter provides “that said bank shall not contract for, or receive, a greater rate of interest than 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 time such notes have to run, including three days of grace, and shall be paid in advance, and on banking principles, in conformity with Rowlett’s tables of discount and interest ”— i. e., at the rate of one per cent, for every sixty days.

It will be seen that this section of the charter makes no [211]*211allusion to the purchase, or discount of bills of exchange, or of promissory notes, payable elsewhere than at the bank itself. As to these, no limit,' or rate, seems to be prescribed, unless they come within the class of “loans of money.” It seems to me, also, that the loans here referred to are of those sums which are expected to be returned to the bank, at the place where and by the person to whom loaned; and hence the allusion, in the latter part of this-section, to notes payable at the bank, and the phrase is used, as in section 2, in contradistinction to “dealing in exchange;” so that it would be a legitimate transaction to purchase or discount a note, or bill, payable elsewhere than at the bank, which involved the operation of an exchange of money, though more was charged in the purchase, or discount, than would amount to interest at the rate of six per cent.; provided, that it was a fail’ charge for the difference of exchange, and was not a mere cover, or shift, to exact more than the interest allowed. In the present case, therefore, though the bill were, in fact, executed by Buckingham for the accommodation of the drawers, and it was so known to the ¡slaintiff at the time of the discount, yet if it were expected, as between the parties, that it would be paid at maturity at Cincinnati, where payable, the plaintiff had a right to charge, in addition to interest, the fair rate of exchange between the place of discount and the place of payment, upon a bill of that description. The ground of distinction between a bill, or note, payable at the place where discounted, and one payable at a distant point, is obvious enough. In the former case, no operation whatever of exchange is performed — no risk, or expense, or delay, in the collection and transmission of the fund, is incurred, whereby loss, or diminution, in the amount of the interest, is either- hazarded, or sustained. In the latter case, all of these have to be encountered, and should be provided for; and the law allows a suitable compensation. Whether the bill, or note, be, in fact, an accommodation, or a business transaction, in that respect, makes ho difference, the elements of charge for exchange remain the same; that is, in either [212]*212case there is the same risk, the same delay, and the same expense, in the collection and in the transmission of the funds.

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Related

Buckingham v. McLean
54 U.S. 151 (Supreme Court, 1852)
Botsford v. Sanford
2 Conn. 276 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1817)
Pilcher v. Banks
46 Ky. 548 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1847)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Disney (Ohio) 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-bank-v-brashears-ohsuperctcinci-1856.