125 Mass. 333 | Mass. | 1878
The plaintiff bank brings this action against the defendant as the indorser of a promissory note. The note is in the possession of the bank as the holder of it. The defence is, that the plaintiff purchased the note of one Benyon; that the plaintiff is a national bank; that a national hank has no author-Ay to buy a promissory note; that the purchase of it was therefore ultra vires; and the conclusion of law which the defendant claims to be the legal result of these facts is that no action can be maintained upon the note by the bank. It is important that
What is the contract which it is said is ultra vires ? Not the contract in suit, but another contract, to wit, the contract with Benyon, who is not in any sense a party to the contract in suit; nor is it necessary to the maintenance of this action to connect him with it. The contract with Benyon, assuming such a contract to have been made, and, for the purposes of this discussion, assuming it to have been ultra vires, is not executory; this suit is not to enforce it; but it has been fully and completely executed. It is true that the contract with Benyon was one of which the contract in suit was the subject matter. The question then arises, Can a party to a contract in itself lawful, and into which all the parties to it had authority to enter, be made null or be incapable of enforcement, because the plaintiff has entered into and fully performed, with another and totally distinct party, a contract in reference to it which was unauthorized, even though by such contract he becomes a party to the contract is suit?
Applying the rule to a natural person, Would it be a defence, by a maker of an unpaid promissory note, to prove that the plaintiff obtained the note in a fraudulent bargain ? or that the plaintiff took it from one not a party to it, in payment for intoxicating liquors illegally sold? or that he took it from a third person in discharge of a gaming debt, or in any transaction in which the person had no right to be engaged ? These are all cases in which the party would acquire his title by transactions beyond his authority. These are questions which, under the law of this Commonwealth, it is not necessary to decide or consider.
In this Commonwealth, it is not necessary that the plaintiff in a suit upon a promissory note should have the legal title or beneficial interest in the note, nor indeed that he should have any title or any interest in it. Adjudications of this point, commencing with Little v. Obrien, 9 Mass. 423, are scattered through more than a hundred succeeding volumes of reports, embracing a period of about seventy years, have been unquestioned during all that time, and are daily recognized as the law of the Commonwealth. In Little v. Obrien, this very question of ultra vires was raised by the defendant, and both the questions, whether a contract with a corporation was ultra vires, and whether a plaintiff having no title could sue, were raised and elaborately argued for the defendant, by Mr. Story, who after-wards and for so long a time adorned the bench of the Supreme Court of the United States. The cause was argued before that eminent magistrate, Chief Justice Parsons, and his distinguished associates, Justices Sewall and Parker. In announcing the decision, the court uses this suggestive language: “ Whether, for this misbehavior of the corporation, the government might not
In this Commonwealth, the only questions which are involved are, First, Has the plaintiff legal capacity to sue ? Second, Is the plaintiff the holder of the negotiable note declared on ? On neither of these questions can there in this case be any doubt. Even if it were necessary to show that the contract was one which the plaintiff is competent to hold, then, as we have already seen, the contract is such a one; and the fact that the holder became possessed of it in the manner claimed is a wholly immaterial fact. To illustrate further the fact that it is not necessary that the plaintiff bank be the owner of the note in order that an action may be maintained upon it, suppose that this note had been discounted in the ordinary course of business, and the bank had filled the blank indorsement, as at any time it had authority to do, and as before judgment is entered it is proper to do, by writing over the indorser’s name the words, “ Pay the within to the National Pemberton Bank,” and, undei its authority to negotiate the note, had transferred it, without
If the act of purchase was wholly unauthorized, the utmost legal effect is that the transaction was wholly void, and Benyon is still the owner of the note. What then? The most that could be claimed is, that the bank receives the payment of it in trust for the real holder; precisely as it would, if it had recovered the amount, as in the case above supposed, after it had sold the note to a third person. With the equities between such parties, this defendant has no concern.
It is said that, if this be the correct view of the law, the statute in relation to usurious contracts would be nullified; that a bank could say to a customer, “We cannot discount this note, but we will buy it,” and thereupon does buy it, at a rate at which they were not authorized to discount it, and thus avoid the penalty of usury. Such result by no means follows. If, in this case, the intervention of Benyon were a mere device for the purpose of obtaining, as between the original parties to the note, a loan of money at a usurious rate of interest, the question presented would be a very different one. There is here no such claim or pretence. The amount given for the note was the face of the note, less the legal interest from the time of the alleged purchase to the maturity of the note. There are, however, other appropriate considerations in such case. The suit then must be between the parties to a wrongful contract still executory; and whether, in such case, the plaintiff would not be estopped to deny that such contract arose in any other mode than by discount, we need not discuss. It is quite sufficient to deal with questions as they arise, without speculating upon what would ba the legal effect of a totally different condition of facts,
In Rohrer v. Turrill, 4 Minn. 407, the defence to an action on a promissory note was that the plaintiff was not the owner of the note, but had disposed of it to a third person in fraud of creditors. The court say that the fact that the plaintiff had disposed of the note to a third person is a complete defence to the action, and add that it is no concern of the defendant whether that disposition was fraudulent or not; as he had not paid the note, but owed it, it was not a matter for him to inquire by what arrangement it went into the hands of a third party; the actual transfer was to him a perfect defence; and the court cannot avoid suggesting the incongruity of the claim of the defendant that the title of the third party was fraudulently obtained, which, if competent, would simply show that such transfer passed no title, and that the suit was properly brought in the name of the plaintiff, who would be the real owner in such case.
We are therefore of opinion that there was no error in the refusal of the presiding justice to rule as requested by the defendant’s counsel. The ruling asked was, upon the facts of the case, a wholly immaterial one, upon which the court was not called upon to make any ruling. Exceptions overruled.