Yardley v. Philler

167 U.S. 344, 17 S. Ct. 835, 42 L. Ed. 192, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2103
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 24, 1897
Docket296
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 167 U.S. 344 (Yardley v. Philler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yardley v. Philler, 167 U.S. 344, 17 S. Ct. 835, 42 L. Ed. 192, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2103 (1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Clearing House Association of Philadelphia is a voluntary organization, created by the cooperation of national banks *346 doing business in that city. Its affairs are governed by rules and regulations adopted by agreement between the banks forming the association, and the general direction of its operation is under the control of a president, secretary and ■manager, and of a committee selected by the members of the association. As the name of the association implies, it is intended to afford a uniform and convenient method by which daily settlements of balances can be had between the banks entering into the association. In addition to the function of affording a means for the daily clearing of balances, the Clearing House Association, by agreement among its members, issued, at periods when it was deemed best to do so, clearing house certificates. These certificates were delivered, under the discretion of the managers, when applied for by a member of the association, and were secured by the pledge of bills receivable or assets taken from the portfolio of the bank obtaining the certificates. These certificates were available as cash in settlements between the banks and for other purposes, and the object of issuing them was, in times of panic or strin-. gency, to create, to the extent of the certificates, solidarity of responsibility between the banks, as each bank was liable for a proportionate share of the certificates in case of default in their payment, thus fortifying the credit of one by the credit of all. Moreover, the certificates afforded a means by which a bank with good assets could use them in order to obtain certificates which were, for banking purposes, the equivalent of cash, when, from any stringency or panic, the assets themselves, although entirely sound, could not be readily convertible into current money.

Article 2 Of the constitution of the Clearing Association . provided as follows:

“ Art. 2. Its object shall be to effect at one' place the daily exchanges between the several associated banks, consisting of a morning exchange and a runner’s exchange, and the pay- ' ment, at the same place, of the balances resulting from such, exchanges. The responsibility of the association for such exchanges is strictly limited to the faithful distribution by the mañagerj among -the creditor banks for the time being, of *347 the sums actually received by him; and should any losses occur while the said balances are in the custody of the manager, they shall be borne and paid by the associated banks, in the same proportion as the expenses of the clearing house, as hereinafter provided for.”

Article 11 said:

“ Art. 11. Should any of the associated banks fail to appear at the clearing house at the proper hour, prepared to pay the balance against it, the amount of that balance shall be immediately furnished to the clearing house by the several banks exchanging at that establishment with the defaulting bank, in proportion to their respective balances against that bank, resulting from the exchanges of the day, and the manager shall make requisitions accordingly, so that the general settlement may be accomplished with as little delay as possible. The respective amounts so furnished the clearing house on account of the defaulting bank will, of course, constitute claims on the part of the several responding banks against that bank : Provided, That the amount of the due bill given by the defaulting bank, in settlement of its debit balance in the runner’s exchange of the previous day, and deposited by the clearing house in its depository bank, shall be deducted from the total charge of such bank, and shall be the first claim against the securities deposited by the defaulting bank, under article 17.”

Article 17 was as follows:

“ Art. 17. Each bank, member of the Clearing House Association, shall deposit securities with the clearing house committee as collateral for their daily settlements, in the following percentage or assessment on capital:
“ 1st. Banks with capitals of $800,000 and over, ten per cent.
“ 2d. Banks with capitals of $500,000 and under $800,000, fourteen per cent; but not to be required to deposit over $80,000.
“ 3d. Banks with capitals over $250,000 and under $500,000, twenty per cent; but not to be required to deposit over $70,000.
*348 “4th. Banks with capitals of and under $250,000 shall ■deposit not less than $50,000.
“ The committee shall apply the deposit of any defaulting bank to the payment of the balance due by such bank at the •clearing house, or to the reimbursemént, pro rata, of the several banks furnishing said balance, under article 11; and the .surplus, if any, shall be held as collateral security for other indebtedness to members of this association.”

By article 9 of the constitution the hour for making the morning exchange at the clearing house was fixed at eight and a half o’clock, and the hour for making the runners’ exchange at half-past eleven. By the same article it was provided that a bank becoming a debtor by the morning clearing ■must pay the sum debited to it to the clearing house between the hours of eleven and twelve o’clock that day, and at twelve .and a half o’clock of the same day the bank being a creditor in the daily clearing should receive from the manager of the •clearing house the sum of the credit to which it was entitled. The settlement at the runners’ exchange was made by due bills, and these due bills were deposited by the manager of the •clearing house in his bank account, kept with one of the banks belonging to the association, and were checked against by him as if the due bill were cash. Such due bill, when so received on deposit by the bank and treated by it as cash, became a •credit item, presented by it, in the clearing of the following morning. In addition, where claims were presented by the runner of one bank for payment to another bank during the ■course of a business day, the bank by whom the money was to be paid, to obviate the risk of carrying it, instead of handing over money, gave to the runner a due bill for the amount, which, on its face, was stipulated to be payable in the clearing •of the next day.

The Keystone National Bank was a member of the Clearing House Association. It deposited with the association, in accordance with the rules, securities to guarantee its obligation to meet its daily clearing. It had obtained, moreover, from the Clearing House Association clearing house certificates to a large amount, and in December, 1890, by an agreement *349 between the association and the Keystone Bank, the securities deposited by the Keystone Bank to guarantee its liability to pay any balance arising from the daily clearing, were returned to that bank, and were by it deposited anew with the Clearing House Association as security for clearing house certificates. It resulted from this transaction that the Keystone Bank did not have in the hands of the Clearing House Association any. security to guarantee it's obligation to meet its daily clearing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 U.S. 344, 17 S. Ct. 835, 42 L. Ed. 192, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yardley-v-philler-scotus-1897.