27 Vt. 87 | Vt. | 1854
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The counsel for the defendant claim, that this action cannot be maintained on this bill of exchange in the name of the cashier, but that the action should have been in the name of the Bank of Toledo. This bill is payable to Matthew Johnson, Cashier, and it is said that, as the courts of this state have held that such a note or bill, is a promise to the bank from whom the consideration moved, and may be sued in their name, it should follow that Johnson cannot have the action in his own name, and that it is absurd to hold that either the cashier or the bank may bring the suit at pleasure.
At somewhat of an early day, in the case of the Town of Arlington v. Hinds, 1 D. Chip. 431, it was held that where the note was given to Luther Stone, town treasurer, or his successors in office, the action might be maintained on it in the name of the town of Arlington; and, in that case, the position was advanced by the judge who gave the opinion of the court, that, though the action might be maintained in the name of the town, yet it would not follow but what Stone might also have the action in his own name. The principles of that case have been followed in several subsequent cases. The case in Chipman arose under somewhat peculiar circumstances, and the court must have been pressed with the necessity of sustaining that action to prevent a failure of justice in
But it is claimed, that if the action can be maintained on the paper by the cashier, still he cannot recover upon the money
It is said the draft was discounted by the Toledo Bank, and that as the cashier holds it in trust simply for the bank, he cannot recover upon the money counts. But that is nothing to the defendant. In the case of Chase & Grew v. Burnham et al., 13 Vt. 447, the note was endorsed in trust for collection, and yet it was held the endorsees might go upon the money counts. The trust was a matter which simply concerned the parties to it, not the maker of the note, who had agreed to pay it to the payee, or his order.
Judgment affirmed.