40 N.Y.S. 1001 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1896
The relator is a savings bank duly incorporated -under the laws of the state of Connecticut, and .transacting business exclusively within that state. It is a shareholder in certain banks located in the city of Hew York, and has been assessed by
The sole question presented for determination is whether under the laws of the state of Connecticut the relation between a savings bank and its- depositors is that, of debtor and creditor. The question in this state seems to be no longer open to doubt. People, etc., v. Mechanics & Traders’ Savings Institution, 92 N. Y. 7. In that case Judge Andrews says (p. 9): “ The primary relation of a depositor in a savings bank, to the corporation, is that of creditor and not that of a beneficiary of a trust. The deposit when made becomes the property of the corporation. The depositor is a creditor for the amount of the deposit, which the corporation becomes liable to pay, according to the terms of the contract under which it is made. When payment is made the claim of the depositor is extinguished, and he has no further claim upon the funds or assets of the bank.”
The learned counsel for the respondents, however, contends that the' question has been otherwise determined in the state of Connecticut, and refers to the statutes of that state in regard to such banks, and the following decisions of its court of last resort upon the subject. Savings Bank of New London v. Town of New London, 20 Conn. 111; Coite v. Society for Savings, 32 id. 173; Greene v. Sprague Manufacturing Co., 52 id. 330; Price v. Society for Savings, 64 id. 362. It is true that the cases referred to, and others which might have been quoted, state that savings banks are large incorporated agencies for receiving and loaning the money of their depositors, and that they are merely places of deposit where money can be left to remain or be taken out at the pleasure of the owner. But when these cases are considered in the light of the facts upon which they rest, I think it becomes plain that the court simply intended to express the idea that, associated with a direct obligation to repay the deposit on demand, there was also’ a fiduciary relation between the bank and the depositor, growing out of the peculiar nature of the corporate business. As such corpora
There is nothing in the statutes of the state of Connecticut which suggests the existence.of any other kind of a trust than this. A brief statement of the contents of chapter 110 of the General Statutes of the state, entitled “.Savings Banks,” which has been offered in evidence, indicates this. It regulates 'the manner in which the assets of the bank shall be invested; limits the deposits from any one individual in one year to a sum not exceeding $1,000; provides for the salaries of the officers; prohibits any officer from being a borrower of money from the bank; limits the rate of interest which it may exact on loans of its funds, and its expenditures in the purchase or construction of a building for its purposes; requires the appointment annually by the trustees of not less than two auditors, to examine and ’ report upon the condition of the bank;' declares that “ the net income of any savings bank in excess of a sum equal to one-eighth of 1 per cent, of its deposits, actually earned during the six months last preceding, and no more, may be semi-annually divided among its depositors; ” prohibits any savings bank from making a dividend until its surplus shall have accumulated to a sum equal to 3 per cent, of its deposits, such surplus to be kept as a contingent fund; authorizes the trustees in declaring dividends to discriminate between deposits of $2,000 and less and those over that sum in favor of the former, with the qualification that such discrimination shall not exceed 1 per cent, annually; requires the treasurer of the bank to give security, and prescribes certain rules in reference to meetings, reports and the filling of vacancies.
It will be observed that these are in the nature of regulations of and limitations upon the manner in which the corporate functions of such.banks are to be exercised; and in so far as the depositors are the beneficiaries of the corporation, as they are under the laws of the state of Hew York as well as under those of the state of" Connecticut, they have an interest in the. lawful and provident exercise of such powers. There is, however, nothing in .the statute
We find, this double aspect, so to speak, of the relation between a savings bank and its depositors apparently recognized in cases
The cases to which I have referred are sufficient to show that the attempted definitions of the legal relation between a savings bank and its depositors which they' contain are not to be accepted in any one case as complete, but only as partial statements, from, different points of view, and, it may be good, as far as they go, for the purposes of that case. I find nothing in the authorities cited from the Connecticut reports which forbids a construction similar to that which' has been adopted in this state in'the case of People v. Mechanics & Traders’ Saving Institution, supra. Conceding a relation of; trust and 'confidence between a bank or its trustees and a depositor, the primary relation is still, I think, as Judge Andrews has defined' it. to be in this state, that of debtor and creditor. It follows, therefore, that the respondents erred in
Ordered accordingly.