The plaintiffs seek to recover of the defendants the amount of the two drafts declared upon ; the plaintiffs being indorsees for value, the defendants by their cashier being the drawers, and the drafts having been protested for nonpayment. The defendants say that the drafts, being payable on time, were drawn by their cashier in violation of the Rev. Sts. c. 36, § 57, and are therefore void, and that even a holder for value cannot enforce their payment. This section is in the following words : “ No bank shall make or issue any note, bill, check, draft, acceptance, certificate, or contract, in any form whatever, for the payment of money, at any future day certain, or with interest, excepting for money that may be borrowed of the Commonwealth, or of any institution for savings incorporated under the authority of the Commonwealth, and excepting also, that all debts due to any bank from any other bank, including bills of the bank so indebted, may lawfully draw interest.” This section does not attach any penalty to the offence; and if
Proceeding then to section 58, we find a restriction on bank loans, and in the same section a penalty on the bank of five hundred dollars for violating the restriction. But in section 59, the taking of a greater rate of interest than six per cent, is forbidden, yet the section contains no penalty for the offence. The penalty is contained in section 60. We perceive therefore that the legislature did not adopt any uniform rule as to the insertion of the penalty in the same section that declared the offence.
We then come to section 61, which is as follows: “ Every
Section 62 relates to the same subject, and its exclusive object is to modify and limit section 61. It provides that section 61 shall not extend to any check or draft drawn by the president or cashier of any bank within this state, on any other bank, within or without the State, for any sum exceeding one hundred dollars; but these two classes of paper, namely, checks and drafts for more than one hundred dollars, drawn by one bank upon another, and redeemable in some other manner than
Now the drafts in suit were drawn upon another bank, the Fulton Bank of New York, and were for more than one hundred dollars. It was necessary, therefore, to present them at the Fulton Bank, and, as they were not paid there, the 62d section expressly makes the defendants liable to pay them with two per cent, a month damages from the time when the defendants, after the protest, refused to pay the same on presentment at their banking-house.
The construction thus given to the 61st and 62d sections operates as an important modification of section 57. It will be seen that sections 61 and 62 do not touch the subject of notes, &c., payable with interest — which is one of the classes mentioned in section 57 — and the whole legislation on this subject lacks clearness and accuracy. But the drafts in suit are not made payable with interest, and thus they come within the provisions of all the three sections.
It is impossible thus to give this matter proper consideration, without adverting to section 63, which is as follows: “ Nothing contained in this chapter shall restrain any bank from drawing any check or draft for any balance due to said bank.”
Therefore section 57 does not restrain the defendants from drawing drafts upon the Fulton Bank for any balance that may be due them. But a holder of a draft for value is not bound to know that the draft is not for a balance due, and payable at the time when the draft is made payable. If section 57 was designed to prohibit the making of such drafts on time, it does not clearly express the prohibition; for one of its exceptions is that all debts due to any bank from any other bank, including bills of the bank so indebted, may lawfully draw interest. But if such indebtedness with interest may exist, if
The views which the court have taken of the statute are not free from difficulty; for the statute is in some degree obscure, partly because the phraseology relating to the same matters differs in different sections, and partly because the legislature do not appear to have had in view, in prescribing penalties, all the various cases that would arise under the prohibitions of the statute.
There can be no doubt that the defendants are responsible for the act of their cashier, it being within the scope of his authority to make their drafts, and if he defrauded them, they must bear the loss.
Judgment must be rendered for the plaintiffs, with interest at the rate of two per cent, a month from the time when the drafts
Judgment for the plaintiffs accordingly,
