American Guaranty & Trust Company v. Green

282 A.2d 16, 1971 Del. Super. LEXIS 130
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 2, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 282 A.2d 16 (American Guaranty & Trust Company v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Guaranty & Trust Company v. Green, 282 A.2d 16, 1971 Del. Super. LEXIS 130 (Del. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

McNEILLY, Judge.

American Guaranty & Trust Co. (American) appeals to this Court from a decision of the State Bank Commissioner on October 26, 1970. Appellant objects to the Commissioner’s alleged authority under 5 Del.C. § 903 to issue a conditional certificate of authority to transact business. The appeal is brought pursuant to recently enacted 29 Del.C. § 8809(g), i. e.

57 Del.L., Ch. 581, § 8809(g), which amended Title 29 of the Delaware Code, provides for the following statutory appeal :

“(g) The Superior Court shall hear all appeals from the decisions or rulings of the State Bank Commissioner respecting the issuance, extension, renewal, suspension and revocation of licenses and certificates to transact business; applications to open a branch office or place of business; applications for a certificate of public convenience and advantage; mergers, consolidations and conversions; and amending of charters or certificates of incorporation.
“(1) Any person whose interest is substantially affected by any of the decisions or rulings, specified in § 8809(g) of the Commissioner may appeal from any decision or ruling by filing with the Commissioner a notice of appeal. The notice shall be filed within 20 days from the date of notification of the decision or ruling of the Commissioner and shall *17 be signed by the appellant or his attorney. The decision or ruling of the Commissioner shall be stayed pending disposition of the appeal.
“(2) Within 30 days from the filing of the notice of appeal with the Commissioner, the appellant shall file with the Superior Court a copy of the notice of appeal, a copy of the decision or ruling of the Commissioner and any record of prior proceedings or other matters relating to the appeal. The Court shall thereafter have complete jurisdiction of the matter.
“(3) For the purposes of this section, ‘person’ means any bank, building and loan association, trust company, lending institution, savings institution, individual or organization conducting a banking business of any kind or plan which comes within the provisions of Title 5, Delaware.”

American was incorporated on January 6, 1914. Its certificate of incorporation states that the nature of the business for which the corporation was established is, inter alia, “to transact a general trust company business, that is to say, * * The company had been actively engaged in business in Delaware since its establishment, having been engaged, among other things, in the business of securing charters and acting as a registrar and transfer agent; but had not actively engaged in the trust company business at anytime prior to the proceedings sub judice.

With respect to the transaction of business as a trust company, the Banking Act treats corporations in three separate classifications :

(a) Corporations whose charters were directly granted or passed by the General Assembly before July 1, 1933 and are deemed revoked for non-use of the legislative franchise (5 Del.C. § 705);
(b) Corporations with trust powers under the General Corporation Law actively engaged in non-trust business in Delaware prior to January 1, 1933 (5 Del.C. §§ 902, 903); and
(c)New corporations intended to be formed with trust powers under the General Corporation Law (5 Del.C. §§ 701-735).

All parties acknowledge that American is in the classification designated (b) above, i. e., those corporations which may begin the transaction of trusts business upon obtaining the certificate required by 5 Del.C. § 902, and that the issuance of the certificate is subject to the requirements of 5 Del.C. § 903.

On July 1, 1970 the Company submitted its letter application to the Commissioner for a certificate to begin the transaction of business as a trust company. The application was pursuant to 5 Del.C. §§ 902 and 903 which reads as follows:

§ 902
“No bank or trust company not actively engaged in business in this State prior to January 1, 1933, shall transact any business in this State or open a place of business in this State without having first secured from the State Bank Commissioner a certificate authorizing it to begin the transaction of business and to open a place of business in this State.”
§ 903
“(a) The Commissioner shall not give any certificate required by section 902 of this title until satisfied by proper evidence that all the requirements of the charter of the corporation applying for the certificate and all the requirements of this Code and any other laws of this State applicable to such a case have been complied with and that the whole capital stock has been fully paid in cash, unless the charter shall expressly provide otherwise.
(b) No certificate shall be issued until the corporation has filed with the Commissioner a duly certified copy of its *18 charter and all amendments thereof, and a copy of its by-laws; and thereafter the corporation shall file with the Commissioner a duly certified copy of every subsequent amendment of its charter and of every subsequent amendment of its by-laws and a failure to file within 30 days after any amendment of its charter or by-laws has been effected, shall render the corporation liable to a penalty of $50 to be sued for by the Commissioner in the name of the State of Delaware if he considers such failure to have been wilful.
(c) A fee of $50 for every certificate shall be required by the Commissioner before issuing the same.”

In the instant proceedings the Commissioner, as a pre-condition of issuing a certificate of authority required the Company and its stockholders to subscribe to certain stipulations and conditions set forth by him. By letter in the record dated July 31, 1970 the Company returned the conditions to the Commissioner with its objections noted as follows:

“We did not seek the limited certificate, which you now contemplate issuing. We continue to believe that the corporation has broad trust powers, that these powers were not revoked in 1933, that the trust company has complied with 5 Del.C. § 903 and that the company is entitled to an unlimited certificate authorizing it to begin the transaction of business in Delaware. Indeed we find no authority in the banking laws for limiting the company’s trust powers.”

The Commissioner, nevertheless, insisted upon the conditions and made them part of the certificate of authority issued to the Company on July 31, 1970.

At the time the certificate of authority was issued, the Commissioner asked American to operate under the limited certificate for a while to ascertain whether it would meet the company’s needs; and the company acknowledged it would so comply and would renew the matter of an unlimited certificate of authority upon the Commissioner’s return from a vacation.

When American sought the Commissioner’s further consideration for an unlimited certificate, the Commissioner refused.

The company thereupon filed another letter application for an unlimited certificate pursuant to 5 Del.C. § 903.

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Related

St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Pemberton
494 S.W.2d 408 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 A.2d 16, 1971 Del. Super. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-guaranty-trust-company-v-green-delsuperct-1971.