5 N.Y. 37 | NY | 1859
No reply to the defendant’s answer, setting up the defence of usury, was necessary, the action having been commenced after the amendments of the Code in 1852 took effect.
The payment of the defendant’s checks, drawn for Western and Canada currency, by the plaintiff, in such currency, was not a violation of the statute against usury. No agreement whatever between the parties in relation to these checks is found by the referee. The facts found are, that the defendant drew the checks payable in Western and Canada bank bills; and that they were so paid by the plaintiff; and that such bills, although received at par by merchants and others in the course of busisiness, were not bankable at Buffalo, and were not received by the plaintiff, in his business as a banker, at par; but that there was no agreement between the parties that the checks should be so drawn.
The referee finds that the Exchange Bank of Buffalo is an individual bank, owned by the plaintiff, and the defendant’s counsel insists that the referee erred in allowing to the plain
The only remaining question arises upon the objection of the defendant that the plaintiff had not shown himself the owner of the checks drawn upon the bank and the note payable to it. This depends upon the question whether an individual banker is a corporation. If so, the checks and note were the property of the corporation, and the plaintiff could not recover in his individual character. An individual banker must be a corporation sole, if one at all. A corporation sole, as defined by Kent (2 Com., 273), consists of a single person who is made a body corporate and politic in order to give bim some legal capacities and advantages, and especially that of perpetuity, which, as a natural person, he cannot have. The successor takes the corporate property and privileges. A cor
There is no provision made for succession. By section 7, chapter 189 of Laws of 1857, the right of the heir-at-law or the legatee of the banker to continue the business is recognized, and a legislative construction is put upon section 9 of chapter 242 of the Laws of 1854, by which the banker is still enabled to sell and transfer his banking business to his partner, in good faith. By the latter section the right of sale and transfer of the business, with its privileges, is restrained. All these provisions, I think, show, that in the opinion of the Legislature, the banker is not a corporation. , While this would not be conclusive in a clear case, it is entitled to consideration in a doubtful one. I cannot conceive this a doubtful question. I can discover no reason in the powers conferred by the act upon individual bankers, or in any of the restrictions imposed, for holding them corporations. The business of
The judgment should be affirmed.
Strong and Gray, Js., expressed no opinion; all the other judges concurring,
Judgment affirmed.
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