Case Name: SOPHIA D. TAYLOR, Plaintiff, v. THE EMPIRE STATE SAVINGS BANK OF BUFFALO, Defendant
Court: New York Supreme Court, General Term
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1893-01
Citations: 73 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 538
Docket Number: 
Parties: SOPHIA D. TAYLOR, Plaintiff, v. THE EMPIRE STATE SAVINGS BANK OF BUFFALO, Defendant.
Judges: Dwight, P. J., and Lewis, J., concurred.
Reporter: Supreme Court Reports (Hun)
Volume: 73
Pages: 538–543

Head Matter:
SOPHIA D. TAYLOR, Plaintiff, v. THE EMPIRE STATE SAVINGS BANK OF BUFFALO, Defendant.
Savings banks — individual deposit in excess of the limit of $3,000 preswñbedby statute — interest on the excess not recoverable — banking act tf/1882 {chap. 409) — the banking law of 1892 {chap. 689; chap. 37 of the general laws'*
By force of section 31 of chapter 677 of the Laws of 1892 (the statutory construction law), which declares that the repeal of a statute shall not affect any act done or right accrued prior to the time of such repeal; and section 32 of the same chapter, which declares that the provisions of any chapter of the revision of the general laws, so far as substantially the same as those of laws existing at the time such chapter takes effect, shall be construed as a continuation of such laws, modified or amended according to the language employed in such provision, and not as new enactments, sections 256, 257, 267 and 290 of the banking act of 1882 (chap. 409), repealed by section 215 of the general banking law of 1892 (chap. 689), passed May, 1892, declared to take effect on the thirtieth day after its final passage, were in force until June 17, 1892, and since that time sections 113 and 123 of the general banking law of 1892 (chap. 689), which contain substantially the same provisions, have been in force in place of said sections of the act of 1882.
Section 290 of the banking act of 1882 (chap, 409), which declares it unlawful for any savings bank to receive from any individual a deposit or deposits, in excess, of $3,000, does not make the act of leaving, at a savings bank, money, in excess of that sum, unlawful; and the depositor of such excess is not thereby prevented from recovering the full amount of his deposits from the bank.
Section 290 o’f the banking act of 1882 was not intended to render void a contract entered into between a depositor and a savings bank in contravention thereof.
Section 290 of the banking act of 1882, was amended in 1885 (chap. 477) by adding to it a clause to the effect that the limitation on deposit should not be construed .as “.prohibiting the crediting of interest on individual accounts which may have reached the maximum limit, provided that thereafter no interest shall be allowed on such increase.”
field, that, notwithstanding the provisions of sections 257 and 267 of the banking act of 1882, and of sections 113 and 123 of the general banking law of 1892, in relation to crediting interest on deposits, to be repaid to depositors, and the fact that said chapter 477 of the Laws of 1885 had been repealed by the general banking laws of 1892, a depositor was not entitled to receive any increase of his deposit over $3,000 by way of interest.
While, on the one hand, a savings bank cannot avail itself of its own violation of the law against receiving deposits in excess of $3,000, so as to deprive an innocent depositor of his money ; yet, on the other hand, the depositor himself under this provision of the law is not placed in a position in which he can benefit-himself by receiving any increase on his deposits by way of interest.
Submission of a controversy between Sophia D. Taylor, plaintiff, and the Empire State Savings Bank of Buffalo, defendant, without' action, under section 1279 et seq. of the Code of Civil Procedure.
John G. Milburn, for the plaintiff.
Charles Daniels, for the defendant.

Opinion:
Macomber, J.:
The facts contained in the submission of this case are, that the defendant is a savings bank, located and doing business under the laws of the State of New York, at the city of Buffalo, and was originally incorporated under chapter 777 of the Laws of 1867 by the name of the National Savings Bank of Buffalo, and, under that name, continued to exist and do business until the 1st day of September, 1892, when, by proceedings taken under chapter 409 of the Laws of 1882, its name was changed to " The Empire State Savings Bank of Buffalo," the present defendant.
The plaintiff deposited money in this bank from September 15, 1880, to and including June 16, 1892, and at the last-named date a balance existed in her favor, and now remains unpaid, over the amounts from time to time paid to her, in the sum of $24,272.75. Depositors, whose deposits are under the sum of three thousand dollars, object that the defendant is not liable to pay to her any part of her deposit exceeding in amount the sum of three thousand dollars, under section 290 of chapter 409 of the Laws of 1882. On the other hand, the plaintiff claims the further amount of her deposits, less twenty-two per cent ordered to be deducted by an order of the Special Term in an action brought by the attorney-general. The defendant, acting at the suggestion and in the interest of small depositors, declines to pay to the plaintiff more than three thousand dollars. The further claim is made by the plaintiff of four per cent interest on her balance from time to time over three thousand dollars, that being the rate of interest paid by the bank on deposits of three thousand dollars or less, but the defendant denies her right to such interest. Such are the two questions submitted.
Section 290 of chapter 409 of the Laws of 1882, declares that: " It shall be unlawful for any savings bank, directly or indirectly, to receive from any individual a deposit or deposits in excess of three thousand dollars, but this limitation shall not apply to deposits arising from judicial sales or trust funds."
It is not claimed in behalf of the plaintiff that the money deposited by her was trust funds, or was produced at any judicial sale. But this chapter (chap. 409 of the Laws of 1882), except sections 68 and 69, and sections 312 to and including 327, was repealed by section 215 of chapter 689 of the Laws of 1892. Section 113 of the last-named act contains the following provision: u The aggregate amount of deposits to the credit of any individual at any time shall not exceed three thousand dollars, exclusive of all deposits arising from judicial sales or trust funds or interest."
Section 256 of the Laws of 1882 contains a provision making it lawful for savings banks to receive any sum or sums on dejiosit and pay the dividends thereon. By section 257 of that act the sum so deposited, with any dividends or interest credited thereto, is directed to be repaid to the depositors, and, by section 267, the rate of interest payable on deposits was to be regulated by the trustees •according to the principles there laid down, but not to exceed five per cent. The provisions of sections 256, 257, 267 and 290 are substantially retained in sections 113 and 123 of the act of 1892.
Section 32 of chapter 677 of the Laws of 1892 has the following enactment: " The provisions of any chapter of the revision of the general laws, of which this chapter is a part, so far as they are substantially the same as those of laws existing at the time such •chapter takes effect, shall be construed as a continuation of such laws, modified or amended according to the language employed in such provisions, and not as new enactments."
Section 31 declares: " The repeal of a statute, or a part thereof, shall not affect or impair any act done or right accruing, .accrued or acquired, or liability, penalty, forfeiture or punishment incurred prior to the time such repeal takes effect, but the same may be asserted, enforced, prosecuted or inflicted, as fully and to the same extent as if such repeal had not been effected."
Chapter 677 of the Laws of 1892, took effect May 18, 1892, the date of its enactment. The general banking law of 1892, passed May 18, 1892 (chapter 689), took effect on the thirtieth day after its final passage. Hence it appears that sections 256, 257, 267 and 290 of the banking act of 1882 (chapter 409) were in force until June 17, 1892, and since that time sections 113 and 123 of the general banking act of 1892 (chapter 689) have been in force in place of the former provisions.
It will be observed that by the banking act of 1882, no penalty or forfeiture was imposed upon the depositor in respect to deposits of over three thousand dollars. It was made unlawful by that act for any savings bank, directly or indirectly, to receive from any individual a deposit or deposits in excess of three thousand dollars. But this submission does not concern any question arising upon an effort made to impose a penalty or punishment upon the savings bank for violation of that provision of the statute. The act of leaving the money at the bank is not declared to be unlawful, and, consequently, the plaintiff may recover the full amount of' her deposits. "We are guided, to a great extent, to this conclusion by the case of Sackett's Harbor Bank v. Codd (18 N. Y., 240), where the court, per Comstock, J., says: " The receiving bank, I assume, violates the statute, because it exacts a greater discount than it is allowed to take. But is the customer also guilty ? The answer to the question is plain. The statute declares it to be unlawful for a bank or banker to receive foreign notes at a greater rate, etc., and it prescribes a penalty of $1,000 for each offense. (Stat. of 1853, chap. 223, § 4; Stat. of 1839, chap. 355, § 4.) The language in which the offense is defined, and the penalty declared, evidently does not include the customer making the deposit or delivering the notes. No degree of guilt, therefore, attaches, in such a case, to anyone except the corporation and its agents, or the individual banker, receiving the notes at the prohibited rate of discount. The act, it must be borne in mind, involves, in itself, no moral turpitude. It is an offense, because the statute declares it to be so, and for that reason alone. It is an offense, therefore, which has precisely the proportions the statute gives to it, and it can have no other or greater." (See, also, the reasoning of the court in Pratt v. Short, 79 N. Y., 437; Rome Savings Bank v. Kramer, 32 Hun, 270, affirmed sub. nom. Rome Savings Bank v. Krug, 102 N. Y., 331; Fifth Avenue Bank v. R. R. Co., 44 N. Y. St. Rep., 379; Cogswell v. Bank, 59 N. H., 43). There are several Federal decisions bearing quite directly upon the question, namely, National Bank v. Whitney (103 U. S., 99); Fortier v. New Orleans National Bank (112 id., 439); National Bank v. Matthews (98 id., 621); Gold Mining Co. v. National Bank (96 id., 640).
On the whole, we think that section 290 of chapter 409 of the Laws of 1882 was not intended to render a contract void which was entered into between the depositors and the bank m contravention of such statute.
But the alleged right of the plaintiff to recover interest on her deposits over the sum of three thousand dollars of principal involves different considerations.
Section 290 of chapter 409 of the Laws of 1882 was amended by chapter 477 of the Laws of 1S85 by adding thereto the following clause : " Nor shall it be construed as prohibiting the crediting of interest on individual accounts which may have reached the maximum limit, provided that thereafter no interest shall be allowed on such increase." If we understand correctly, this statute, as amended, it was palpably a modification of the original law so as to permit an actual increase of deposits over three thousand dollars to the extent of the sum which should be credited under the rules of the bank as interest to the deposit. But it was something more. It contained the affirmative provision that no interest should be allowed thereafter on such increase of deposits over and above three thousand dollars. But it is argued by the learned counsel for the plaintiff that,-inasmuch as this act (chap. 477 of the Laws of 1886) was repealed by the act of 1892, that, therefore, there was no prohibition against the payment of interest on deposits in excess of three thousand dollars. Attention is also called to that part of the statute which provides that deposits shall be repaid, with interest "credited thereto ; " and to section 123, in relation to crediting interest; and it is contended that they contain nothing preventing the crediting of interest to deposits which exceed three thousand dollars ; and, further, that, if interest, were credited, say to an actual deposit of $3,000, the aggregate amount of such deposit, with the increase of interest, would exceed three thousand dollars, and hence be in violation of section 113 of chapter 689 of the Laws of 1892. But, as we held on the other branch of the case, that the bank cannot be permitted to avail itself of its own violation of the law in receiving deposits so as to deprive an innocent depositor of his money, so, on the other hand, the depositor himself cannot, under this provision of the law, be deemed to be in a position where he could benefit himself by receiving any increase of his deposits by way of interest. Not to permit the plaintiff to recover the amount actually deposited by her would be to work an unconscionable forfeiture and spoliation in a case where the deposit has not been by law declared to be void; but to permit her to receive any benefit by such deposit, when the same is declared to be unlawful, would be equally unjust to the small depositors.
¥e think, therefore, that judgment should be ordered for the plaintiff in respect to the principal; and for the defendant in respect to the interest on deposits over and above three thousand dollars, principal.
Dwight, P. J., and Lewis, J., concurred.
Judgment ordered on the submission for the plaintiff as to the principal of her deposits; and for the defendant as to interest on sums in excess of three thousand dollars.