19 Barb. 568 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1855
This is a controversy arising out of the incongruous alliance and subsequent very natural bankruptcy of the Knickerbocker Bank and the so called Knickerbocker Savings Institution. It illustrates in a ’manner calculated to strike, and even to shock all notions of fair dealing, the tendency of the one to prey upon the vitals of the other, and then upon its own. The plaintiff, it appears, in his character of a member of the Banking Association, on the 21st of March, 1854, obtained from the funds of the Savings Institution—and it will be borne in mind that the chief .managers of the former, as the published lists show, were trustees of the latter, and carried on their operations in the same vicinity—a loan, so called, of $10,200, payable with interest, on demand, substituting in the place of the money so withdrawn from the Savings Institution his promissory note and a certificate of 450 shares of the so called stock of the Knickerbocker Bank. This loan, he now says, his friends in the Savings Institution had no legal right to make, and he, therefore, however much accommodated at the time, is under no legal obligation to repay it; and he accordingly files his bill in equity—the conjunction can hardly fail to provoke a smile— very modestly praying that the supreme court, sitting in its
Roosevelt, Justice.]