The People v. . Doty

80 N.Y. 225, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 87
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 80 N.Y. 225 (The People v. . Doty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. . Doty, 80 N.Y. 225, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 87 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Folgee, J.

This is an action brought by the People of the State of New York, to recover of the defendant a large sum as penalties, for putting forth the sign of a savings bank. *227 It appears in proof, that by the defendant's direction, there was placed, in plain sight, on the outside of the building which he owned and occupied, and in which he and one Warner did a banking business, the words “B. Doty’s Savings Bank; ” that he and Warner did their banking business under the name of “ The Farmers’ Bank of Batavia,”- and in that business received deposits of money from, divers customers, discounted notes, sold exchange, and did all ordinary banking business, save that they did not issue notes to pass as money. They were not organized as bankers under any law of this State; but took the name of “ The Fanners’ Bank of Batavia.” Nor was the defendant or Warner authorized to be an individual banker under the banking laws of this State.

The complaint alleges that the right of action has accrued, under the forty-ninth section of chap. 371 of the Laws of 1875, passed May seventeenth of that year. That act by its title,''is one relating to savings banks; and the forty-ninth section is in these words : “ It shall not be lawful for any bank, banking association or individual hanker to advertise or put forth a sign as a savings banks or in any way to solicit or receive deposits as a savings bank ; and any bank, banking association or individual banker which shall offend against these provisions shall forfeit and pay for every such offence the sum of .one hundred dollars, for every day such offence shall be continued, to he sued for and recovered in the name of the people of this State, by the district attorneys of the several counties, in any court having cognizance thereof, for the use of the poor chargeable to.said county in which such offence shall be committed.” There is no question which of the offences declared in this section is the one charged upon the defendant; it is that of putting forth a sign as a savings bank. Nor is there .question but that he did the act. Whether he penally offended by doing it, hangs alone upon whether he was while doing it an individual banker. For though, as we shall hereafter show, the defendant and his partner, Warner, might as well, in the common acceptation *228 of terms, have been sued under this section as a bank or a banking association, as the defendant be 'sued as an individual banker; yet. the plaintiffs have seen fit to plead against him as doing the act in the capacity of an individual banker, and have in their pleading spoken of him in that capacity as an individual banker under the laws of this State ; and that means. under the statute laws of this State in relation to banking ; which laws know of but one kind of person as an individual banker. It is somewhat inconsistent with this pleading, that the plaintiffs now contend that the defendant is an individual banker not under the statutes relative to banking, but in what they style the common understanding and usage of that term. They claim to recover on the ground only that as an individual banker he violated the 'statute. And the contest is what .is meant in this section by the two words, “ individual banker.” -Tkferc is no contest as to what would be meant by either word if it stood alone. With completeness enough for this case, a banker is one who keeps a place for the traffic in money ; who there receives it from others, and keeps it with his own, using the whole fund as his own, or remits it at request to other places ; who. repays it at the will and call of his customer; who furnishes money to others on the discount of their obligations, or on securities brought by them; andwho buys and sells bills of .exchange. To these is sometimes added the issuing of his notes to pass as money, when allowed by law to do so. The business of the defendant partook of lame or all, of these parts, except the issuing of notes.' He was a- banker. An individual is one entity, one distinct being, a single one, and when spoken of the human kind means one man or one woman. To individualize is to single, out from the species. So that the rigid definition of ■the two words “individual banker” is, one person banking alone.. ' As the defendant did not bank alone, but together with Warner, he was not,- in this strict and abstract sense of the words, an individual banker. And as this action is for a penalty, perchance we would break no rule if we construed *229 the section thus strictly in favor of the defendant. There will be no need of só narrow a reading of it. 'This rigid rendering is put, to show that elsewhere than iivit must the plaintiffs seek the legislative meaning in the use of the term, “individual banker,” if they are to rfiaintain their action. The plaintiffs’ contention is that the Legislature used the word “ individual” in the sense of natural, and that by the words “ individual banker,” it meant such a banker as any one or more members of the commonwealth may be, in the exercise of no more than the rights common to all, and not resting on any special franchise or privilege derived from positive law. That is to say, that individual banking is that which is distinguished from banking done under a special charter given by the sovereign and creating a corporation, or by an association formed under a general statute, and is such banking as is dependent on no corporate or granted right. In that sense, it would matter not that a person had jointly ventured in banking with another, or with several; they would not be a corporation or an association resting upon statutory permission. He and they would be partners or co-adventurers, and would all be individual bankers. We do not think that contention can be maintained. Had this statute been the first use of the phrase, or had there been prior statutory use of it in that sense, there would be more plausibility in this claim. But it is not a new phrase in legislation upon the subject of banking, nor with that meaning, commonly used in acts. Chapter 363, Laws of 1840, page 306, section 4, is quite significant: “Mo banking association, or individual banker, as such, shall issue * * * any bill or note * * * .” The addition of the ' words “ as such,” to the term “individual banker,” shows that the. banking laws looked upon him who was a banker by virtue of them as having an artificial character separate from his natural one. He might issue notes in his proper-person," or in his general business, but in his capacity of individual banker, given him by law, he might not. And it is of use to note the fellowship in which the phrase is found in the *230 statutes. “ No banking association, or individual banker as such, shall issue or put in circulation any bill or note of said association or individual banker, unless the same shall be made payable on demand and without interest : ” (Chap. 363, Laws of 1840, § 4; see, too, §§ 8-12, same chap.; chap. 319, Laws of 1841, §§ 1, 2; chap. 202, Laws of 1840, §§ 1, 4, 5; chap. 218, Laws of 1843, § 3.) These termsthus contrasted go together through the banking acts. Such citations might be made from laws of many years.

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.Y. 225, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-doty-ny-1880.