12 Kan. 238 | Kan. | 1873
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiffs in error seek by this proceeding to have reversed an- order of the district judge dissolving a temporary injunction. The facts, as disclosed in the petition,, (and this was all the evidence on the hearing,) are briefly these: On the 20th of April. 1872, the First National Bank of Ottawa loaned to the plaintiffs $14,954.08, which was an amount exceeding one-tenth of its capital stock, of which amount $10,000, and interest, was secured by a mortgage on real estate. The notes given for the $4,954.08 were transferred to the National Bank of Lawrence, and by it, after maturity, placed in judgment. ,t The notes secured by mortgage were not due when this action was commenced. It was alleged that this mortgage and securities were taken in violation of the National Banking Act under which the corporations defendant were organized, and that the Ottawa Bank threatened to transfer these notes and mortgage for value to some innocent purchaser before their maturity, and thus .prevent the plaintiffs from availing themselves of their legal defense to them. The prayer was, that the Ottawa • Bank might be temporarily restrained from transferring the notes and mortgage, and that upon a final hearing these instruments be decreed to be void, and ordered canceled. It is unnecessary for us to determine whether these securities are valid or not, for conceding that the whole transaction was one forbidden by the Banking Act, and that the notes and mortgage were void, and could not be enforced, still we think the petition discloses no cause of action, no ground for relief. The cardinal principle of equity, that which underlies its-whole jurisprudence, is this, that he who seeks equity must do equity. To grant the plaintiffs the relief they ask, would be ip plainest disregard of this principle. They admit borrowing from the bank over fourteen thousand dollars of its money. They have never paid it back, but still hold it all.