210 N.W. 998 | Minn. | 1926
1. On February 13, 1918, the officers of the defendant delivered to the Minnesota Loan Trust Company an instrument in the following form:
"Crookston State Bank, Crookston, Minn.
"February 13th, 1918.
"For Value Received, The undersigned promises The Minnesota Loan and Trust Company of Minneapolis, Minnesota, that if, at any time within one year from the consummation of any loan submitted through the undersigned, it is found that the borrower, the land, buildings or improvements are otherwise than as represented in the application submitted, then the undersigned will forthwith, upon request, take from said company any such loan paying therefor in cash its face value with accrued interest.
"Crookston State Bank,
"By J.A. Northrup, President. "L.L. Foskett, Cashier. "J.A. Northrup, "L.D. Foskett."
On September 25, 1918, the defendant submitted an application made by Weldon to the trust company for a loan of $4,000 to be secured by a mortgage upon his farm. The trust company accepted it. The defendant bank was in the position of a broker. It received from Weldon $125 for its commission or services. The note and the mortgage were not a part of the bank's assets. *251
Later and within the year the trust company asserted that the land and buildings were not as represented in Weldon's application and suggested that the bank take the note and mortgage pursuant to the agreement of February 13, 1918. The matter was finally settled by the bank, under date of August 9, 1920, guaranteeing the note. The note and mortgage were renewed and under date of December 26, 1923, the bank agreed that its former guaranty should stand as a guaranty of the renewal note. There was no consideration for either of the agreements except the liability of the defendant on its original undertaking which we have quoted.
The agreement of February 13, 1918, was ultra vires. A state bank is without granted or incidental power to make such contract, nor is it authorized to guarantee notes in which it is not interested. See Farmers Merchants Nat. Bank v. Smith, 23 C.C.A. 80, 77 F. 129; Grow v. Cockrill,
2. We go farther. A transaction such as is before us is contrary to public policy. A state bank is charged with duties to the public. It is more than a mere private corporation for pecuniary profit. Because of its relation to the public the state supervises its activities. Eberlein v. Stockyards M. T. Co.
It is not conceivable that a bank in the practice of sound banking principles, in maintaining the stability which its duties to its depositors and the public demand, can contract to retake loans which it has submitted from borrower to lender and for which it receives from the borrower a commission. Recent experience indicates the intolerable risk to depositors and the public of similar practices. That a contract is against public policy should not be held lightly. 3 Williston, Cont. §§ 1629-1630. But such a contract as that before us is unauthorized, is in defiance of safe banking, and tends to bring financial suffering and distress to the depositors of the bank and to the public who cannot escape the general result though without contractual relations with the bank. Neither bank nor trust company could fail to see the evil tendency of the unauthorized contract. The cases first cited in this paragraph tend to support the conclusion we reach. And see Seitz v. Michel,
3. The plaintiff claims that the defendant is estopped from asserting the invalidity of the guaranty because it received a commission. We have adopted the general rule that a corporation may be estopped to assert the invalidity of ultra vires contracts by participating in their benefits. Hunt v. Hauser Malting Co.
Besides, our holding is that there is no estoppel to assert the validity of a contract which is against public policy. Seitz v. Michel,
Order affirmed.