delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action to recover money paid to the plaintiff in error for certain bonds. One defence set up in the answer was that the bank was a national bank, and that the sale of the bonds was without the authority of the bank, and was illegal and void. Judgment went against the bank, it was affirmed by the appellate division of the Supreme Court,
As we are of opinion that the defendant in error is entitled to keep his judgment, it does not matter so much as otherwise it would whether the result is.reached by a dismissal of the writ, on the intimation of
Walworth
v.
Kneeland, 15
How. 348, 353; see
Conde
v.
York,
The declaration goes upon a rescission of the contract. It contains ambiguous language, but the allegations of tender of the bond and that the tender still is kept good make the ground sufficiently clear. The question then is, leaving on one side the averment just quoted from the answer, and assuming that the parties were attempting a transaction forbidden by the-law, whether the nature of the attempt prevents one of them from
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withdrawing from the bargain on the ground of preliminary fraud. If the withdrawal were on the ground of repentance alone the law might, or might not, leave the parties where it found them. See
Central Transportation Co.
v.
Pullman's Palace Car Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
National Bank and Loan Company v. Carr.
No. 165. Argued with No. 166 and by the same counsel.
Mr. Justice Holmes : This case is similar in substance, pleading and argument to the foregoing, with the additional fact that the president of the bank acted as the confidential adviser of the defendant in error and did not reveal to her that the bonds belonged to the bank or that he was on both sides of the transaction and interested against her. As soon as she found out that the bank was the seller she repudiated the sale.
Judgment affirmed.
