2 Doug. 191 | Mich. | 1846
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The cause has been argued in this court on the part of the respective defendants, upon the plea and answer, and also a point is taken and insisted upon by each, that even if the the plea and answer are respectively unsustained by proof, and therefore, not sufficient to bar the complainant’s
Upon the part of the complainant it is insisted that the plea of Britain is not sustained by the proofs, and that the answer of Wheeler, with the proofs in support of it, presents no sufficient bar to relief as against him; and the complainant further insists, that the matters alleged in the bill are sufficient to entitle him to relief, and that, at all events, it is now incompetent for the defendants to make any questions in regard to their sufficiency.
It becomes then material to consider, in the first place, whether it is noVfr competent for the defendants to avail themselves of the' alleged objection to the case made by the bill. It is laid down, fhat when a plea is interposed, and the complainant replies to and takes issue upon it, the truth of the plea is the only subject of question, so far as the plea extends; and its sufficiency is admitted j that the defendant must prove the facts alleged in it; and that if he fails in this, so that, at the hearing of the cause, the plea is held n'o bar, and it extends to the discovery sought by the bill, the plaintiff is' not to lose' the benefit of the discovery sought, but the court will order the defendant to be examined on interrogatories to supply the defect. Mitf. PI. 302, and cases there cited; Bea. Eq. PI. 325; 2 Yes. Sen. 247; 6 Madd. R. 63.
It follows then that the complainant is, in such case, entitled to relief according to the case made by the bill; and if a discovery is necessary to give him the full benefit of the relief sought, that may be obtained upon interrogatories. But if the bill contains no case upon which he would be entitled to. any relief whatever, how can the court afford him any ? Suppose the bill is- taken as confessed: if the complainant has made no case in his bill which would entitle him to any remedy whatever,- can he
If I am right in the views above expressed, then the case of Green v. Graves, 1 Dough Mich. R. 351, is decisive of this case. It was in that case held that the general banking law was unconstitutional, and that a receiver appointed by the court of chancery, of the effects of one of the banks organized under its provisions, could not maintain an action on a note executed to the bank.
It is alleged in the bill in this case, that the bond and mortgage which are the foundation of the suit, were, Jan. 20, 1839, executed to the Detroit City Bank, a body corporate and politic, in the city of Detroit, in the state of Michigan ; that, in March, 1839, the bank commissioners of the state filed a bill of complaint in the court of chancery, against the said Detroit City Bank, charging the insolvency of said bank, and a violation of the law under which the same was organized, and praying an injunction, and a receiver to take charge of its property and effects ; that by an order of that court in December of the same year, Julius Eldred and others were named and duly appointed receivers, and authorised to take charge of its property and effects, and do all other necessary things appertaining to their office as such receivers, pursuant to the laws in such case provided. The bill then sets out an assignment of the bond and mortgage, by the receivers, to the complainant.
What law was it under which the bank was organised, the provisions of which were thus charged to have been violated by the bank in the bill filed by the bank commissioners? It could have been no other than the general banking law. By our statute, acts of incorporation
Upon the plea itself, and proofs relating to it, it might be doubtful whether the bill should have been dismissed. The facts proved did not show a performance of the condition upon which the bond and mortgage appeared to have been delivered. But upon the cross-examination of the main witness by the defendant’s counsel, testimony was given tending pretty strongly to show an assent to the delivery, after a full knowledge of the facts which were insisted on by the complainants as a compliance with the conditions.
Upon the ground before considered, however, the decree must be affirmed. *
J)ecree affirmed.