3 Edw. Ch. 395 | New York Court of Chancery | 1840
Although the note held by the petitioner for five hundred dollars is not a note which this banking association could lawfully issue for circulation as money, yet it is prima facie evidence of an indebtedness which it was competent for-the bank to contract for some purpose incidental to the banking business ; and until it-is shown to have beén issued not for the benefit or on account of the bank, but for the private or individual benefit of the officers or persons who have put their names to the note in fraud of the banking association, it must be deemed and taken to be obligatory and binding upon the association.
No facts are shown to impeach the note, as a note issued on behalf of the bank, and the petitioner is, therefore, entitled to be regarded as a creditor of the bank to the amount of the note.
Then, as such creditor: what remedy has the petitioner or what right to come into this court ?
" By the twenty-second section of the general act (authorizing the business of banking) he might sue at law and recover judgment and have execution as in ordinary cases. By the twenty-seventh section, the association may be proceeded against and dissolved by the court of chancery in the same manner as any moneyed corporation may be proceeded against and dissolved. A moneyed corporation may be proceeded against and dissolved by bill or petition filed by the attorney general or by
The discretionary power given to the Chancellor by the twenty-fifth section is merely a visitorial power and is not given to authorize a dissolution or any other interference with its concerns, except an examination for the purposes therein designated and a publication of the result. It has been recently decided in the supreme court and in the court for the correction of errors that these banking associations are not corporations within the meaning of the constitution requiring a two-third vote to pass the act creating them: and if not corporations in that sense, then I think they are not corporations within the meaning of the revised statutes liable to be proceeded against for insolvency or other causes therein specified : 2 R. S. 462, 464. If so, it is not to the revised statutes that this court is to look for its authority or jurisdiction over these institutions, but to the act itself under which they are formed.
Then, does this petition set up or allege any of the grounds mentioned in the act 1 it does not pretend that there has been any neglect or omission to furnish the semi-annual statements to the comptroller or any other particular violation of the provisions of the "act except one, namely, in not having on hand twelve and a half per cent, in specie as required by the thirty-third section. This is an admitted fact; but it is no longer of importance, because on the fourteenth day of May last, eight days after this petition was presented, the thirty-third section was repealed
There are several other matters set forth in the petition, but I do not perceive that any of them are acts amounting to a violation of the provisions of the law so as to warrant this proceeding. Whatever rights the petitioner may have as a creditor, are cognizable at law ; and he must be left to pursue them there.
His motion here, for a receiver, must be denied, with costs to be taxed ; and it will follow, as a matter of course, to dismiss the petition and dissolve the injunction.
) Act of May 14, 1840, chap. 363.