47 N.Y.S. 528 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
Against the right of the plaintiffs, as assignees, to recover the credit balance which appeared in the account of the defendant bank
As to the right of equitable set-off, urged as the third ground of defense, this we must regard as disposed of by the case of Fera v. Wickham, (135 N. Y. 223), adversely to the defendant. Nor did the learned trial judge, in disposing of the motion for the direction of a verdict, attach much weight to the fourth ground, that the plaintiffs are not the owners of the claim in suit; but the' basis of his ruling was that, as the application for the discount was made in the name of the bank, purporting to be a bank of deposit,- and the defendant had no notice to the contrary,, the form of the application was calculated to deceive, and in point of fact did deceive, the defendant; and, in addition thereto, it appeared that Thomas P. Wallace, who was the solé owner of said bank, and did business under the name of a corporation which had no legal existence at the time of the application for the discount, was insolvent, and that this gave the defendant, upon discovering the true state of affairs, the right to rescind the discount and charge the.amount back.
As there was no request to go to the jury, both parties haYing moved for the direction of a verdict, the case was thus submitted to the court, and any facts which the jury would have been 'warranted from the evidence in finding, or any inference that they might, under proper instructions, have drawn from those facts, may be deemed to have been found and drawn by the court in favor of the defendant. (Clason v. Baldwin, 152 N. Y. 207.) If the conclusions which the court drew were reasonably inferable from.the evidence^ or were such as the jury could have drawn, then the vei" diet directed should not be disturbed.
The facts as above summarized will show that, considering the methods adopted by Wallace, plaintiffs’ assignor, the defendant and its officers might well have been led to believe, as they testified they did, that they were dealing with an incorporated banking institution, and that it was only because of that belief that they gave the credit
On the other hand, it was contended that no express representations were ever made by Wallace that the Marion Deposit Bank was a corporation; that not only the form of the letter head was consistent with the real state of facts, but when considered^ in the light of the provisions of the Ohio statute requiring corporation names to begin with the word “ The ” and end with the word “ Company,” the presumption was that the Marion Deposit Bank was not an incorporated institution, and that the letter head in substantially the same form had been used by Wallace for thirty-five years.
This latter evidence, even if fortified by the testimony sought to be introduced and which was excluded, tending to show-that individuals in Ohio did business under similar names and style, cannot destroy the inference fairly to be deduced from the defendant’s evidence, that it was misled and deceived by the manner in which Wallace conducted his business into the belief that it was dealing, not with him individually, but with an incorporated bank. If Wallace conducted his business in form so as to make it reasonably to be inferred by persons dealing with him that he was an officer of an incorporated bank, and if his manner of conducting the business strengthened this belief, and one relying upon these appearances acted to his injury, he would be justified, upon learning the true state of affairs, in refusing to be bound by any contract into which he might have entered, or in continuing a credit that he might have given.- Nor is the effect to be ascribed to such á misrepresentation lessened by any showing that it was justified by reason of the laxity of the banking laws of the State of Ohio. For, while it may be true that a person may use the name bank -in connection with an individual business, it must not be so used as to deceive or induce one who loans money to believe that he is loaning it to a bank, when in fact he is loaning to an individual. The ■ lender is entitled to
It is .true that the president of the defendant testified that the draft in question was discounted on the strength of the Marion
It is insisted, however, by the appellants that it was error to admit certain evidence introduced by the defendant from which the inference of insolvency was drawn. Thus, objection was made tó the statement of the liabilities of Wallace made by the assignees in November, 1896, upon the ground that it failed to show, or tend to show, the condition of Wallace in July, 1896, when the draft was discounted. This statement was one made by these plaintiffs and referred -to the condition of Wallace as of a date four months subsequent, it is true, to the time of the discount, yet fixing a period when with some certainty a conclusion could be reached as to his then condition; and there is no claim but that, at the time the assignment was made, Wallace was hopelessly insolvent. This, with some testimony tending to show that there were no losses between July and November, and no extraordinary shrinkage in assets or increase of liabilities between the dates named, laid some foundation from which, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the court could infer that in July Wallace was irretrievably involved. The evidence objected to, as to the statement made by the assignees in November, supplemented by other testimony showing, the condition from that period back to July, was not incompetent.
It was not error to exclude evidence showing the custom of other banks in Ohio in the matter of the form of letter heads, because the
What we have- already said with reference to the ruling as to admitting in evidence the statement of liabilities filed by the plaintiffs on November 16, 1896, is equally applicable to the inventory and account of the assignees filed on November tenth. We have examined other rulings upon evidence which have been questioned, and while some of the exceptions might be technically right as respects the form of the questions which the court permitted to be answered, they are not of sufficient moment to justify our reversing a judgment which was entered upon a verdict, as this was, directed by the court; because here we have, outside of any objectionable evidence, facts established by competent proof from which the learned judge had the right to infer, not only the misrepresentation as to the person with whom the defendant was dealing, but also that, at the time the discount was made, Wallace was in such a state of insolvency that he could not have had aiiy reasonable ground to assume when he obtained the discount that he would ever- repay the amount.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the judgment should. be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Rumsey, Patterson ■ and Parker, JJ., concurred. .
Judgment affirmed, with costs. -