The Ohio Life Insurance & Trust Co. v. Merchants' Insurance & Trust Co.

30 Tenn. 1
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Tenn. 1 (The Ohio Life Insurance & Trust Co. v. Merchants' Insurance & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Ohio Life Insurance & Trust Co. v. Merchants' Insurance & Trust Co., 30 Tenn. 1 (Tenn. 1850).

Opinion

Totten, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

The prominent and leading facts of this case, as they appear in the bill, and are admitted by the demurrer, are these: The complainant was incorporated by the legislature of Ohio, in the year 1834, with plenary powers as an Insurance and Trust Company, and with power to receive money in trust, and to accumulate the same at interest, and to allow such interest thereon as may be agreed on: to accept and execute all such trusts of every description as may be committed to it by any person whatever; to buy and sell drafts and bills of -exchange; and in a word, power to make and execute on its part the contracts and agreements set forth in the bill.. The complainant established an agency called a “Transfer Office,” in the city of New York, and one Wm. M. Yermilye was its agent and cashier at said office from 1843 until nearly the end of the year 1848. There was no law in the State of New York, prohibiting the complainant to exercise any of its functions and powers aforesaid in said State.

The Merchants’ Insurance and Trust Company of Nashville was incorporated in 1840, with a capital stock of $100,000, and to have the same rights and privileges as the Knoxville Marine Fire Insurance and Life and Trust Company, incorporated in January, 1838. The rights, powers and responsibilities created by this charter, will be more fully considered and stated hereafter.

The stock having been promptly subscribed, $25,000 only were paid in, and the balance secur-ed by note or otherwise to the corporation, and it commenced and continued in business under its charter, or in the name of its charter. It is further charged, that the said $25,000, so paid in, were afterwards refunded out of the profits and dividends; and the balance of the stock, if paid at all, was likewise paid out of the profits and dividends of said company. That soon after this com[4]*4pany was incorporated, it established agencies at New Orleans and Philadelphia, at which agencies and at the principal office in Nashville, it assumed and exercised the business and functions of banking; by dealing in exchange, buying and selling the same; by issuing checks or drafts upon Nashville, New Orleans, New York, and elsewhere, ’and receiving money therefor; by buying and selling bills of exchange and promissory notes; by receiving money on deposit, and by borrowing money, at interest. That said corporation also did a considerable business as an Insurance and Trust Company, properly and legitimately within the provisions of its charter. That a very large and extended business was done by said corporation; its semiannual dividends often amounting to twenty-five per cent, on its nominal amount of capital stock. It is further stated, that in March, 1846, a bill was filed in chancery at Nashville, in the name of the State of Tennessee, against said Merchants’ Insurance and Trust Company of Nashville to enjoin it and its agents from dealing in bills of exchange and other banking business; on the 12th of May, 1847, a decree was made granting such injunction, and on the 30th December, 1847, it was affirmed in the Supreme Court. That notwithstanding said corporation was thus notified by said bill that it had no power under its charter to deal in exchange, receive money on deposit, and in a word, to perform the functions of a bank as before stated; it continued the same business as it had done before the institution of said suit, until it finally suspended in October, 1847. The bill charges that the stockholders were advised of the nature and character of the business done by said corporation as before recited; and states various facts and circumstances, from which it is insisted, such knowledge on the part of the stockholders, may be inferred.

The bill then proceeds to state the nature of the claims and demands of the complainant against the Merchants’ Insurance and Trust Company at Nashville and its stockholders. These [5]*5claims and demands originated in contracts and agreements made and entered into by Caleb C. Norvell, as agent at Philadelphia of the Merchants’ Insurance and Trust Company of Nashville, and Wm. M. Vermilye, as agent and cashier at the Transfer office in the city of New York, of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company. The powers and authority conferred on said Norvell as such agent, are contained and set forth in the power of attorney exhibited in the bill; it is dated 18th May, 1846, and was to take effect in the discretion of said Norvell on the 1st July, 1846; it was so authenticated as to be admitted to record at Philadelphia, under the registry laws of Pennsylvania, and was accordingly recorded there, and a copy of it placed at New York for the inspection of said Vermilye.

It appoints said Norvell the true and lawful agent of said Merchants’ Insurance and Trust Company, and “empowers him in the most ample sense and manner for said company, and in their name to do and perform all acts of every description whatsoever, which in his judgment or discretion he may deem necessary, convenient or useful for the transaction of their business; the said company hereby ratifying and confirming the same, and the signature and endorsements of said C. C. Norvell, agent, to all instruments of writing whatsoever, and his negotiations and contracts are hereby declared to be as binding upon the said Merchants’ Insurance and Trust Company at Nashville, as though the same had been made by the board of President and Directors, signed by their President and •Secretary, and sealed with their common seal at their office in Nashville;” with power also to appoint a sub-agent and assistant, which was accordingly done. The said Norvell assumed said agency about the 1st July, 1846, and continued in it until the suspension of said company in October, 1847, and during the same period and before that time, George McGregor, was agent of said company at New Orleans.

[6]*6It became desirable to said company in the course of its business, at Nashville, New Orleans and Philadelphia, of the character and description before mentioned, to open an account with the complainant at its Transfer office in New York, and to get it to perform certain agencies connected with the collection and disbursement of funds at that place and in Europe. An agreement to effect these and other objects connected therewith, was made on the 17th October, 1846, by C. C. Norvell, as agent of the Merchants’ Insurance and Trust Company, and Wm. M. Vermilye, as agent of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company; and this agreement and arrangement continued to be acted upon by the parties until the suspension of the former company, which occurred as before stated in October, 1847.

In compliance with this arrangement, said Wm. M. Ver-milye, as agent and cashier of complainant, at said Transfer office in New York opened a business account with and in the name of said Merchants’ Insurance and Trust Company of Nashville, placed the funds and assets of said company, which came to his hands to their credit, and held the same subject to the checks or drafts of George Crockett, President of said Company at Nashville, George McGregor agent at New Orleans, and C. 0. Norvell agent at Philadelphia; the checks or drafts not to exceed “sixty days sight” or “seventy days date.” The whole account was to be under the superintendence of said C. C. Norvell, and “to be made good to the Ohio Company as to payments and safe as to acceptances” by the agency at Philadelphia; the payments to be reimbursed by cash and the acceptances secured with good paper or other collaterals equal thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Tenn. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-ohio-life-insurance-trust-co-v-merchants-insurance-trust-co-tenn-1850.