79 Iowa 432 | Iowa | 1890
The defendants are indicted under chapter 153 of the Laws of the Eighteenth General Assembly, which provides “that no bank, banking house, exchange broker, deposit office, or firm, company, corporation or party engaged in banking, broker, exchange or deposit business shall accept or receive on deposit * * * any moneys, bank bills or notes, or United States treasury notes or currency, or other notes, bills or drafts circulating as money or currency, when such bank, or banking house, exchange broker or deposit office, firm or party is insolvent,” and that “if any such bank, banking house, exchange broker or deposit office, firm, company, corporation or party, shall receive, or accept on deposit, any such deposits, as aforesaid, when insolvent, any officer, director, cashier, manager, member, party or managing party thereof, knowing of such insolvency, who shall knowingly receive or accept * * * any such deposits as aforesaid, shall be guilty of a felony, and upon conviction shall be punished” as therein provided. The
Our attention is directed to Code, section 4298, to the effect that the indictment must be direct and certain as to the particular circumstances of the offense charged, when necessary to constitute a complete offense. The indictment in this case charges that the defendants, as such bankers, did, at a certain time and place, being then insolvent, receive the deposit in question. That is certainly á statement of the facts constituting the offense, in ordinary and concise language, and in such manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended. Such alone is the requirement of the law. Code, sec. 4296. Under such averments, the state may prove that they received the deposits through the cashier of their bank.
“$110. Cad well’s Bank, Logan, Ia., May 17, 1888.
“This certifies that Mrs. Mary E. Oliver has deposited in this bank one hundred and ten dollars, payable to the order of self, in current funds, on the return of this certificate properly indorsed. No. 2142.
“John X. Aleck, Cashier.”
Enough of the testimony has'been stated to understand the purport of our ruling. The testimony was under objection; and it is particularly urged that he should not have been allowed to state his conclusions as to the solvency of the defendants. The witness did not give his opinion, independent of data as to their solvency, but he merely gave the result of his calculations. It is true that in making these estimates, by which the final result was reached, the witness used estimates, made by himself and others, including the assignee, of the value of the assets; but the result of the estimates appears in the accounting, and his
One J. V. Mallory, who had been a cashier in the Boyer Valley bank for some years, and knew of its-condition to the fall of 1887, and who had had conversation with one of the defendants tending to show to some extent the condition of the firm, was asked if he knew the condition of the firm as to solvency in the spring of 1886. There was an objection to the question, which was overruled. The witness did not answer the question, but'stated that he should not think they were solvent. It was certainly proper to inquire if the witness knew their condition. The answer was not
Y. Defendants presented to the court a series of instructions, sixteen in number, designed to cover the entire law of the case, a part of which are substantially embodied in the charge of the court. Defendants, however, complain that in many respects the court fell into error. Several of the grounds of complaint as to the instructions involve the principles discussed as to the admission of the testimony, and it will be unnecessary to consider them again. To illustrate: The instructions asked made it necessary, in order to convict, for the jury tó find that the deposit was received personally by the defendants; that it would not be sufficient to show that it was received by their cashier upon their authority. The court’s instructions gave the law in accord with our view as hereinbefore expressed. With this statement, it will be unnecessary to refer to quite a number of points made in argument.
That portion of the instruction which reads : “The funds of a bank are supposed to be ready at hand to meet'the wants of its patrons, and of the commercial, trading and manufacturing communities in which they are located,” is quoted by appellants; and they urge that thereby the jury was given to understand that, unless the funds of defendants’ banks were so ready, they were insolvent, and the rule is denounced as “fallacious” and “senseless.” We think the greater mistake rests in attaching to the language a meaning not intended, and not properly deducible. The part of the instruction quoted does not pretend to give a rule as to insolvency, for that is definitely stated in another part of the same instruction. The instruction attempts to explain, somewhat, the general relation of banks to the public, evidently as. an aid to the jury to better understand the definite rule as to solvency which is given, and, in determining the correctness of the rule,
Appellant refers to, and apparently relies with much confidence upon, the rule as announced in McKown v. Furgasen, 47 Iowa, 637, as properly defining the word “solvent.” In that case the court below held the rule to be that a party, to be solvent, must have property sufficient to pay debts liable to execution. This court disapproved the rule, and said: “Solvency is ability to pay all debts or just claims. Insolvency is inability to pay such debts. A party may have this ability whose property is not subject to execution. Such persons cannot, in any proper sense, be said to be insolvent.” This language is used in a case involving the fraudulent transfer of a note; the alleged fraud consisting in false representations as to the solvency of the maker. If the rule announced in that case is to obtain in all cases, then, of course, the court’s instruction in this case is wrong, and the judgment should be reversed. We, however, think the rule as to. solvency is not invariable. Its proper construction is dependent upon the conditions surrounding, and the purpose to be accomplished by its use. In the act in question, it is employed with reference to the security or protection of depositors in banks. It would certainly be a narrow construction to say that the law designed no more than to protect parties against absolute loss of money deposited. It would be nearer in harmony with the spirit and purpose of the law to say that its design was. that depositors should receive their
The case of Daniels v. Palmer is a Minnesota case, reported in 35 Minn. 347; 29 N. W. Rep. 162; and the, legal significance of the word in that case arises under the provisions of the insolvent laws of the state. We make the following quotations from the case, including authorities cited therein: “The court, in his charge, instructed the jury that ‘ an insolvent is a person whose estate is not sufficient to pay his debts, or one who is unable to pay his debts from his own means. A person is solvent who has property subject to legal process sufficient to satisfy all his legal obligations.’ An exception to this instruction raises the principal question on this appeal, viz.: What constitutes insolvency, within the meaning of this statute % The term ‘ insolvency ’ is not always used in the same sense. It is sometimes used to denote the insufficiency of one’s entire property and assets to pay all his debts. This is its popular and most general meaning. Herrick v. Borst, 4 Hill, 650.
The supreme court of Pennsylvania, having the insolvency of a person under consideration, as bearing on his right to administer an estate, said: “Insolvency is the state of a person who, from any cause, is unable to pay his debts in the ordinary or usual course of trade. A man, to avoid insolvency, is not expected to be able, at once, to put his hand in his pocket, and pay every debt he owes, but he must be able to pay or to provide for all his debts as they fall due in the usual course of business.” Levan's Appeal, 3 Atl. Rep. 804. That case has reference to a party not in business, but its importance lies in the fact that his solvency is being considered in relation to his legal capacity to receive and control the property of others; and the court, in that connection, seems to have given the word a restricted meaning, as is the case with regard to merchants and tradesmen.
The federal court in Missouri, having under consideration the word “solvent,” as used in an act making it larceny for insolvent banks to receive deposits, which act, for the purpose of defining the word, is not different from ours, said in its charge to a jury: “In the ordinary acceptation of the term ‘ insolvent,’when applied to a bank, means inability to meet liabilities in the usual course of business. But a bank may be solvent, and yet, from temporary causes, over which its officers have no control, suspend until these causes can be overcome; but they must be causes for which prudence and foresight cannot provide, or over which the bank or its officers have no control, or could have none.” The court afterwards added: “I pass to this branch of the case with the declaration that a bank is solvent,
Defendant asked some three instructions bearing on this particular branch of the case, some of which are the opposite of the rule we have approved. If one of them may be said to be in harmony with the rule, the ground is equally well covered by the instruction given.
VIII. Appellants asked instructions bearing on impeaching testimony, and complain of their refusal; but the court gave such as to properly guide the jury in that respect, and we will not consider them further.
IX. Appellants’ last claim is that, under the testimony, the conviction cannot be sustained. That view of the case rests on a rule of law as to solvency at variance with that given by the court, and which we have approved. Under the rule given, and the testimony, there is little room for doubt that this firm was insolvent in May, 1888, and from that time forward was protracting its existence as a banking firm in violation of the laws, of the state. It may be truthfully said that if the condition of the firm had been known for some years before its collapse no person would have ventured a deposit in its hands. Its deposits were received as a result of fraudulent concealments. It must be admitted that the defendants received deposits, and that of Mrs. Oliver among the rest, when they knew they could not meet the demands against them in the ordinary course of