Adams v. Atlantic National Bank

155 So. 648, 115 Fla. 399
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 13, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 155 So. 648 (Adams v. Atlantic National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Atlantic National Bank, 155 So. 648, 115 Fla. 399 (Fla. 1934).

Opinion

Davis, C. J.

By his last will and testament one Herbert Adams nominated and appointed his wife, Ella B. Adams, and The American Trust Company, a corporation under the banking and trust company laws of the State of Florida, and the survivor of them, as executors of his said will. Letters testamentary on the probate of said will were issued in due course by the County Judge of Duval County. *400 Thereafter the widow, Ella B. Adams, resigned as executor. Subsequently, letters testamentary were issued by the County Judge to the said The American Trust Company, as sole executor of the will and thereafter the said trust company acted as such for a long period of time. This suit, instituted as a proceeding in equity in the Circuit Court of Duval County, involves the status of the Atlantic National Bank of Jacksonville as a corporate executor and trustee under the last will and testament of said Herbert Adams after the said The American Trust Company, the only judicially approved corporate executor and trustee under the will, had been merged with the Atlantic National Bank of Jacksonville under an Act of Congress so providing.

This appeal is from an interlocutory order of the Chancerjr Court holding that by virtue of the 1933 Act of Congress and a resultant merger accomplished pursuant to the Federal law and approved by the Comptroller, as the representative of the State of Florida, the Atlantic National Bank of Jacksonville is now the lawfully authorized executor and trustee under the Herbert Adams will by virtue of the merger and consolidation with said Atlantic National Bank of Jacksonville of the American Trust Company, despite the fact that there has been no order of approval thereof entered by the probate court that made the original appointment, nor any consent thereto given by the other interested parties under the will.

So the question we are called upon to decide is whether or not it was competent for an Act of Congress (Section 34a, title 12, U. S. Code, as amended by Section 24 (b) of the 1933 Banking Act—Pub. No. 66, 73rd Congress, approved June 16, 1933) to provide that a Florida trust company as a corporate executor and trustee duly acting as such under appointment by order of a County Judge in the *401 State of Florida, may be succeeded as such corporate executor and trustee by a national bank as a result of a private contract whereby such corporate executor and trustee is merged and consolidated with the national bank, without the approval or other order of the court making the original appointment, or the consent of other interested parties ?

The appellee, as complainant below, filed its bill in equity, and sought to maintain the bill, upon the theory that the Act of Congress above referred to was controlling as to the effect of a consolidation of a Florida trust company with a national banking association enjoying the right to do a trust company business in the State of Florida, to the extent of continuing the corporate existence of the constituent trust company in the consolidated national bank, so that the latter is to be deemed in law to be the same corporation as each of the constituent corporations.

Incidental to its main proposition, appellees set up the contention that all rights, franchises and interests of the Florida trust company in and to every species of property, real, personal and mixed, and choses in action thereunto belonging, are to be deemed in law to have been by virtue of such merger and consolidation, transferred to and vested in such consolidated national bank without any deed or other transfer, so that “by virtue of such consolidation and without any order or other action on the part of any court or otherwise” under the Federal statute of 1933, the national bank holds and enjoys the same and all rights of property, franchises and interests, including appointments, designations and nominations and all other rights and interests as trustee and executor, in the same manner and to such extent as such rights, interests and franchises were held or enjoyed by such Florida trust company.

On the other hand, appellants, as defendants below, took *402 the position that the exercise of any such power with reference to State corporate functions is beyond the scope of the constitutional prerogative of the United States Congress. And so it is that the view of this case which we have presented to us by appellants on this appeal is that the chancellor below erred in entering his interlocutory order refusing to dismiss the bill of complaint filed by the Atlantic National Bank of Jacksonville purporting to be executor and trustee' of the Adams will solely by virtue of its consolidation with the American Trust Company as authorized by the Federal statutes.

The Federal statute required to be considered is as follows :

Section 34a, Title 12, U. S. Code Annotated (Nov. 7, 1918, c. 209, Sec. 3, as added Feb. 25, 1927, c. 191, Sec. 1, 44 Stat. 1225; June 16, 1933, c. 88, Sec. 24, 48 Stat. 190) :

“Consolidation of State Bank, etc., with National Bank; Capital Stock; Dissenting Shareholders.—

“Any bank incorporated under the laws of any State, or any bank incorporated in the District of Columbia, may be consolidated with a national banking association located in the same State, county, city, town, or village under the charter of such national banking association on such terms and conditions as may be lawfully agreed upon by a majority of the board of directors of each association or bank proposing to consolidate, and which agreement shall be ratified and confirmed by the affirmative vote of the shareholders of each such association or bank owning at least two-thirds of its capital stock outstanding or by a greater proportion of such capital stock in the case of such State bank if the laws of the State where the same is organized so require, at a meeting to be held on the call of the directors after publishing notice of the time, place and object *403 of the meeting etc. * * *. The capital stock of such consoldiated association shall not he less than that required under existing law for the organization of a national banking association in the place in which such consolidated association is located. Upon such a consolidation, or upon a consolidation of two or more national banking associations under Section 33 of this Title, the corporate existence of each of the constituent banks and national banking associations participating in such consolidation shall be merged into and continued in the consolidated national banking association and the consolidated association shall be deemed to be the same corporation as each of the constituent institutions.

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Bluebook (online)
155 So. 648, 115 Fla. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-atlantic-national-bank-fla-1934.