28 Pa. 383 | Pa. | 1857
The opinion of the court was delivered by
A writ of quo warranto having issued against the Commercial Bank, upon a suggestion filed by the attorney-general, alleging that the bank had forfeited its charter by certain acts of misuser, the present motion was made to quash the writ. A number of reasons have been assigned in support of the motion, but they may be resolved into two. One goes to the formal defects in the manner of setting forth the complaint; the other to the merits, and raises the question, whether the acts complained of are sufficient to entitle the Commonwealth to demand a forfeiture of the charter. It is clear that if the Commonwealth has the right to amend the information, either on or at any time before trial, she cannot be put out of court and thus deprived of that right by a summary motion to quash for mere defects of form in the suggestion. In England, an information, even where the object'is the punishment of a criminal offence, is not like an indictment, which is the finding of the grand jury and therefore cannot be altered in substance by amendments; but informations may be amended at any time before trial: 1 Str. 185; 2 Str. 871; 1 Salk. 371; 4 T. R. 610; 4 Burrow 2147. Eor this reason they will not be quashed on the motion of the defendant, except it appear that the court had no jurisdiction to try them: 1 Chit. Crim. Law 868-9. If this be the rule in England, even in informations for criminal offences, we see no reason why the right to amend should not be allowed with great liberality in this country, in cases designed solely for the determination of civil rights. Such is the character of the proceeding now before us: 1 S. & R. 382. We are of the opinion that the Commonwealth has the right to ámend in this
The bank may, therefore, purchase them in good faith at the current rates of exchange, although those rates may greatly exceed one-half of one per cent, for thirty days. But if the purchase of a bill of exchange is merely a device to obtain a greater rate of interest than the bank is authorized by law to receive, it is as much a violation of the act of incorporation, as a direct loan at the prohibited rate. If a bill be payable at the place where it is purchased, or at a place which has the current rate of exchange in its favour, or if there is any understanding that it is not to be paid at the place designated but to be renewed, it would be difficult to reconcile the charge of a premium for exchange above the prescribed rates of discount for loans with anything like good faith. So where a sum is charged notoriously above the current rates of exchange, the same difficulty would exist. No form can be given to a prohibited act which will make it valid, if the intention be to evade and violate the law. That intention should, however, be alleged in the pleading, where it is relied on as invalidating a transaction good in point of form; and the jury are to decide upon its existence as a matter of fact. It was declared by the Supreme Court o.f Ohio, that “to allow a device of this nature to defeat a salutary provision of law, and to sanctify usury by banks, would be equivalent in many cases to relieving them from all restraint." Miami Exporting Company v. Clark, 13 Ohio Rep. 16. But it is not alleged in the suggestion that the bills of exchange referred to were purchased with intent to evade the pro
The banks of this state have been clothed with the high and important privilege of creating a circulating medium by substituting their own promises to pay as a currency, in the place of gold
These are the views at present entertained. We have been obliged to express them in order to dispose of this motion. But the question, whether the acts complained of amount to a forfeiture of the charter, will be open to further investigation in the final decision of the cause.
The motion to quash the writ of quo warranto is overruled.