Tracy v. Talmage

18 Barb. 456, 9 How. Pr. 530, 1854 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 78
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 18 Barb. 456 (Tracy v. Talmage) 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
Tracy v. Talmage, 18 Barb. 456, 9 How. Pr. 530, 1854 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 78 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1854).

Opinion

Roosevelt, J.

Among the claims' presented for liquidation-to the receiver of the late North American Trust and Banking [457]*457Company, was one on behalf of the state of Indiana, for $175,000, in the form of eighteen certificates of deposit, of the denominations of nine and ten thousand dollars each, dated Jan. 2,1841, and payable with interest at periods varying from five to twenty-two months after date. These certificates, it appears, were renewals of others previously given, and those again traced their origin to a written agreement of the 18th of January, 1839, between the Trust Company, a free bank formed under the general law, on the one part, and the Morris Canal Company (acting, according to the testimony, as agents for the state of Indiana) on the other. It was an agreement on the one part, without reference to any particular purpose, to sell twelve hundred “ bonds of the state of Indiana,” and on the other to give in payment the negotiable obligations” of the Trust Company, payable, not on demand, but on time, with interest; the lowest denomination of which (the highest being $150,000) need not, by the terms of the agreement, have been less than $24,750. Such an agreement, says the receiver, was an unlawful dealing by a corporation in public stocks, and an unlawful issuing by a corporation of a prohibited species of bank notes, and that no rights, therefore, cognizable by a court of justice, can accrue from it. To understand the point of the receiver’s objection to the claim, and of the answer to it, a brief recurrence to certain matters of public history is necessary. For many years prior to 1838, the business of banking in this state was a chartered monopoly, made so by various express statutory provisions, denominated collectively the restraining act. This act, under severe penalties, prohibited almost every branch of banking to any person, company or partnership, not specially authorized by corporate charters, doled out, from time to time, by successive legislatures to successive political or personal favorites. The granting of these charters, as may readily be conceived, in time became a great abuse, so much so that the convention, which was called in 1821 to revise the state government, inserted in the then new constitution a provision, requiring thereafter “ the assent of two-thirds of the members elected to each branch of the legislature to every bill creating any body politic or corporate.” Favoritism, fiever[458]*458tireless, fortified as it was by the restraining act, still continued, with its attendant corruption, until public dissatisfaction became so strong and so universal that the legislature were at length compelled to extirpate the root of the evil. Accordingly, on the 4th of February, 1837, so much of the restraining act “ as prohibited a persons, or association of person not incorporated, from keeping offices for the purpose of receiving deposits or discounting notes or bills,” was repealed. And on the 18th of April, in the following year, the whole system was remodeled, and the business thrown open to general competition, by the passage of a law entitled “ An act to authorize (instead of restraining) the business of banking.” Under this act, on the 18th of July, 1838, twenty individuals, invited by the liberal character of its provisions, formed themselves into an association, or partnership, for which they assume the name or style of “ The North American Trust and Banking Company.” The “association” thus formed construing the act which authorized their formation as expressly intended not to perpetuate but to abolish the principal or corporate monopoly, and to restore in a great degree the natural system of free banking, (it was popularly called the free banking law,) in January, 1839, as already stated, entered into a written contract with the agents of the state of Indiana, as any other company of individuals might have done, for the purchase from them, on credit, of $1,200,000 of state bonds, which immediately after were delivered to, received by, and appropriated to the use of the company, and the whole purchase money from time to time, as it fell due, regularly paid, except a balance, still outstanding, of about $175,000. This balance, in any form or to any extent, the receiver now refuses to recognize, insisting that the contract, out of which it arises, being, as he contends, prohibited by law, the association, as a consequence, were under no obligation either to pay for' or return the bonds of the state, or to account for any portion of their avails. The whole case, it will be seen, on the part of the receiver, (and here it seems to me is the error,) rests upon the assumption that whatever the legislature may have called these partnerships, or whatever may have been the legislative intention as to their character and [459]*459denomination, yet being in reality corporations, they are, and must be, nolens volens, subject to all existing prohibitory enactments, whether constitutional or merely legislative, affecting that kind of legal existences. Now, whether the free banks are corporations or quasi corporations, or only associations possessed, like limited partnerships, of certain corporate attributes, is to my mind, for the purposes of the present argument, quite immaterial. The only question is, (all constitutional difficulties having been disposed of,) did the legislature in forming them, or rather in authorizing their self-formation, intend that certain penal provisions of law, previously enacted to govern the action of chartered banks, (undisputed corporations,) should apply to. these new forms of limited partnership ; and is that intention, if entertained by the law-making power, expressed in a manner so clear as to require no implication or interpretation to discover it; the rule being inflexible, and as just as it is inflexible, that penal enactments, when not perfectly clear, admit of no extension by judicial inference. To me it seems obvious, as well from the wording of the free banking law, as from the whole history of its origin, progress and final passage, that no such intention was entertained by the legislature, and for the reason, mainly, that they wished, as was indispensable, to avoid any application of the provisions of the then constitution, which precluded, according to the universal understanding at the time, the creation or authorization of corporate bodies by any general law. (See Assembly Documents of 1838, No. 122, and the case of Beers v. Warner, 22 Wend. 103.) They accordingly, with an almost hypercritical caution, whenever speaking of the contemplated partnerships, denominated them associations of persons,” and in their organization, made none of the usual provisions for directors ;” allowed no suits or conveyances, except by, to or against the president for the time being, and by his natural or individual name; superseded the old-fashioned term stockholders by that of shareholders; and instead of assuming that all or any of the existing regulations in regard to corporate bodies, would of necessity apply to the new associations, selected from among these regulations a few deemed suitable and proper, and expressly de[460]

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Bluebook (online)
18 Barb. 456, 9 How. Pr. 530, 1854 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tracy-v-talmage-nysupct-1854.