64 F. 706 | 2d Cir. | 1894
The Spring Garden National Bank of Philadelphia was taken possession of by the bank examiner by direction of the comptroller of the currency on May 8, 1891, it being then insolvent. The plaintiff in error was duly appointed its receiver. On the day of its failure there was standing to the credit of the Spring Garden Bank on the books of the Tradesmen’s National Bank of New York a balance of deposit account amounting to $88,592.30. To recover that sum this action was brought.
The evidence shows that the sum thus standing to the credit of the Spring Garden Bank was the proceeds of the discount of three separate lots of notes, amounting in each case to about $50,000, 'made on December 31, 1890, January 31, 1891, and April 7, 1891, respectively, and that such discounts were obtained under an agreement by the Spring Garden Bank that it would not draw against the apparent proceeds of the discounts, and that the notes discounted could be charged back “before, at, or after maturity.” By exceptions, duly noted, to the admission of evidence of this agreement, and to the direction of a verdict, for the defendant, plaintiff in error raised the point that such agreement was a fraud upon the banking act, contrary to public policy, and therefore void. The national bank act provides that every national banking association in Philadelphia “shall at all times have on