Mutual Trust Co. v. Stern
Mutual Trust Co. v. Stern
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This is an action of assumpsit brought on a promissory note made by the defendant, payable to himself, and by him endorsed and delivered to the plaintiff company. The defendant filed an affidavit in which he sets up two defenses: (a) the plaintiff company violated a contemporaneous parol agreement for the further discounting of his paper, and (b) it was acting beyond its corporate powers in discounting the note in suit.
The learned court below held the affidavit insufficient and entered judgment against the defendant for
The defense of ultra vires to the note in suit cannot be sustained. It is rather singular that it should be interposed under the facts of this case to defeat a recovery on the note. The defendant received the money and has applied it to his own use. He now alleges that the plaintiff company had no authority to make the loan in suit, and avers the wholly inconsistent defense that in pursuance of its agreement the company must
The matter of the protest fees is de minimis. The plaintiff having withdrawn in the court below the small item from its claim, it was eliminated from the claim and, hence, the rule was properly taken for judgmen for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense. The averment of damages sustained by the defendant by reason of the alleged misconduct of the plaintiff is too general and indefinite to require consideration.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
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- Mutual Trust Company v. Stern
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- Syllabus
- Promissory notes — Agreement as to extension — Affidavit of defense — Banks and banking. 1. In an action upon a promissory note, an affidavit of defense is insufficient which sets up a violation by the plaintiff, a trust company, of an agreement to renew the note, without any averment that the plaintiff’s executive officer, who was alleged to have made the agreement had any authority to do so. 2. The discounting of commercial paper is a function of the directors of the bank and cannot be delegated to a single officer. 3. In an action by a trust company on a promissory note, which the company had discounted, and the proceeds of which discount the defendant had received, the defendant cannot set up as a defense that the plaintiff had exceeded its corporate powers in doing a banking business, and discounting the note in suit. 4. In an action on a promissory note where the affidavit of defense sets up that the defendant was not liable for protest fees as there was no endorser on the note, and the plaintiff then withdraws this item, the matter is de minimis the court may enter judgment against the defendant, if it finds that the affidavit of defense is otherwise insufficient.