American Bank & Trust Co. v. Saxon

249 F. Supp. 962, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10607
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedFebruary 3, 1966
DocketCiv. A. No. 4833
StatusPublished

This text of 249 F. Supp. 962 (American Bank & Trust Co. v. Saxon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bank & Trust Co. v. Saxon, 249 F. Supp. 962, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10607 (W.D. Mich. 1966).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge.

This action was commenced by the plaintiff, American Bank and Trust Company, a Michigan banking corporation, for the purpose of enjoining the Comptroller of the Currency of the United States from authorizing the establishment of a branch bank, approval of the defendant Comptroller having issued on April 14, 1964, for the establishment of the Dart National Bank, Mason.Branch, in what the plaintiff claims is the unincorporated village of Holt, Michigan.

Plaintiff invokes the provisions of C.L. 1948, Section 487.34 (Michigan Statutes Annotated, Section 23.762), permitting a bank to establish and operate a branch “within a village or city other than that within which it was originally chartered: * * * Provided, further, That no such branch shall be established in a city or village in which a state or national bank or branch thereof is then in operation * * and Title 12 U.S. C.A. Section 36(c), which provides:

“(c) A national banking association may, with the approval of the Comptroller of the Currency, establish and operate new branches:
“ * * * and (2) at any point within the State in which said association is situated, if such establishment and operation are at the time authorized to State banks by the statute law of the State in question by language specifically granting such authority affirmatively and not merely by implication or recognition, and subject to the restrictions as to location imposed by the law of the State on State banks.”

Plaintiff claims the defendant Comptroller illegally authorized the questioned branch in the “unincorporated village” of Holt, Delhi Township, Ingham County, Michigan, long after plaintiff had established and operated its branch within this unincorporated village.

Plaintiff further invokes Section 10(e) (B) of the Federal Administrative Procedure Act, Title 5 U.S.C.A. § 1009(e) (B).

In Paragraph 10 of its first amended complaint, plaintiff avers: “10. The word ‘village’ employed by the Michigan legislature in Section 34, supra, as judicially defined by the highest court of the state, includes unincorporated villages of the kind, nature and character of the village of Holt, and the site on which defendant Dart National Bank of Mason proposes to erect a branch bank building, is within the village of Holt.”

The Comptroller in his answer denied the allegations of Paragraph 10, and defendant Dart National Bank states that such allegations are conclusions of law, and denies that the Comptroller has violated the law.

After the issues were drawn, the court conducted a hearing which commenced on December 22, 1965, and concluded on December 28, 1965.

On December 30, 1965, the court traveled to Delhi Township, and joined by plaintiff’s attorneys, Richard B. Foster and Richard B. Foster, Jr., John P. O’Brien, attorney for Dart National Bank, and Harold D. Beaton, attorney for the Comptroller of the Currency, inspected the entire area of Delhi Township in issue in this case.

On March 20, 1964, the Dart National Bank of Mason, applied to the Comptroller of the Currency for a branch bank to be located in Delhi Township, Ingham County, Michigan, 450 feet north of the northeast corner of West Delhi and Aurelius Road, in the community of Holt.

The National Bank Examiner, Mr. Arthur K. Veldey, in his original report [964]*964to the Comptroller, concluded that the original core of the community was bound by Keller Road on the north, the Michigan Central Railroad tracks on the east, Dallas Avenue and Sycamore Street on the south, and Aurelius Road on the west.

During an exchange of communications between the Comptroller and Dart National Bank, the latter at a special meeting of its Board of Directors on May 22, 1964, authorized an amendment to its application for the location of a branch on the west side of Aurelius Road, situated immediately adjacent to the south property line of the Holt Professional Building. The application, as amended, reads as follows:

“On the north of the intersection of Delhi Avenue and Aurelius Road, on the west side of Aurelius Road, immediately south of the Holt Professional Building, Delhi Township, Ingham County, Michigan.”

The application as amended requested the establishment of a branch bank at this location. The Comptroller found a village to exist in the area bordered on the north by Willoughby Road, which is the boundary between Delhi Township and the City of Lansing; on the east by Aurelius Road; on the south by Harper Road; and on the west by Eifert Road.

This area, containing three square miles, is a “village” within the meaning of Section 23.762 Michigan Statutes Annotated (Section 34 of the Financial Institutions Act), and Title 12 U.S.C.A. § 36(c) of the National Banking Act.

Included in this area are approximately eight hundred houses, thirty-two hundred residents, and thirty-five sundry business establishments, such as grocery stores, gas stations, beauty parlors, professional building, churches and an elementary school.

There are nearly four times as many business establishments east of Aurelius Road as in the village found by the Comptroller. However, the total value of the thirty-five-odd business establishments west of Aurelius Road equals the dollar value of all the business establishments east of Aurelius Road.

The authorized branch of the Dart National Bank is approximately six miles north of its main office in Mason County, Michigan, and six-tenths of a mile away from American Bank and Trust Company’s Holt branch, at 4308 West Delhi Avenue, on the northwest corner of Delhi Avenue and Cedar Street, in Delhi Township, which latter branch is in the unincorporated village of Holt.

Thus, the Comptroller in fact found Aurelius Road the dividing line between the “village” considered by him, and the settled area to the east, sometimes referred to as the “unincorporated village of Holt.” There are cement walks on the west side of Aurelius Road, but none on the east side. This road is a four-lane arterial highway, a main thoroughfare running north and south through Delhi Township, with a speed limit of thirty-five miles an hour through the main portion of the village found by the Comptroller, and with a legal speed of fifty miles per hour to the north and to the south of this same area. Aurelius Road has a traffic count of nearly two thousand vehicles per twenty-four hour period. A red blinker, with four-way stop signs, controls the intersection of Aurelius Road, West Holt Road and Delhi Avenue.

Aurelius Road now runs directly north to the city limits of Lansing. The City of Lansing and the Michigan State Highway Department have announced immediate plans to extend this highway as a continuing main four-lane artery of traffic all the way through the City of Lansing to its northern corporate limit.

The main thoroughfare crossing Delhi Township is known as West Holt Road from Aurelius Road to the west. This same thoroughfare is known as East Holt Road east of Summit Avenue, but from Summit Avenue west to Aurelius Road, it is known as Delhi Avenue, and at Summit Avenue, Delhi Avenue turns from an east-west direction to a northeasterly direction.

[965]*965Some distance south of the intersection of Aurelius Road and Delhi Avenue is a highway sign, with an arrow pointing to the east, which reads: “Holt, 1 mile.”

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Related

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192 F. Supp. 514 (E.D. Michigan, 1961)
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114 N.W.2d 210 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
249 F. Supp. 962, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bank-trust-co-v-saxon-miwd-1966.