Application of Southern Hills Bank of Edgemont

339 N.W.2d 310, 1983 S.D. LEXIS 419
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1983
Docket13738, 13743
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 339 N.W.2d 310 (Application of Southern Hills Bank of Edgemont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Southern Hills Bank of Edgemont, 339 N.W.2d 310, 1983 S.D. LEXIS 419 (S.D. 1983).

Opinions

HENDERSON, Justice (on reassignment).

Appellee Southern Hills Bank of Edgem-ont (Southern Hills Bank) filed an application with the South Dakota Banking Commission (Commission) seeking permission to move its main office from Edgemont, South Dakota, to Custer, South Dakota. Appellants Custer County Bank and First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Rapid City (First Federal Savings) intervened to oppose the application. Following a two-day hearing, the Commission approved appellee Southern Hills Bank’s application, whereupon appellants appealed to the circuit court. On February 3, 1982, the circuit court entered an order affirming the Commission’s action. Appellants filed a notice of appeal to this Court. We affirm.

Appellants’ issues on appeal include: (1) Was the Commission’s decision clearly erroneous or beyond statutory authority? (2) Did Southern Hills Bank’s application attempt to establish a branch bank in Custer in violation of SDCL 51-20-4? (3) Were appellants’ due process rights violated by the Commission’s failure to require identification of the new bank’s directors and admitting into evidence the Director of the Division of Banking and Finance’s report which contained deletions?

A bank is an important member of a community. As Justice Story wrote during the inceptual years of the United States Supreme Court: “[A] bank, whose stock is owned by private persons, is a private corporation, although ... its objects and operations partake of a public nature.” Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 518, 669, 4 L.Ed. 629, 667 (1819) (Story, J., concurring). See also, Wall v. Fenner, 76 S.D. 252, 76 N.W.2d 722 (1956); State v. Scougal, 3 S.D. 55, 75, 51 N.W. 858, 865 (1892) (for South Dakota decisions recognizing that banking is “affected with a public interest”).

During the Commission hearing, Gordon Dretsch, executive vice president of Custer County Bank, acknowledged that Custer County was one of the fastest growing counties in South Dakota. Finding of Fact four of the Commission states in part: “The 1980 census figures show that Custer County is one of the fastest growing counties in the State of South Dakota.” Mr. Dretsch also admitted that business in Custer County had not been bad during the five years prior to the hearing. Finding of Fact three of the Commission provides in part: “Custer, South Dakota, is an important shopping and business center for Custer County, and other surrounding counties and communities and other adjacent areas in all directions, and has and continues to have an excellent business development and growth.” An expanding population and solid business base were both factors in favor of Southern Hills Bank’s application before the Commission. These factors were critical in In re Am. State Bank, Pierre, 254 N.W.2d 151 (S.D.1977) and Valley State Bank of Canton v. Farmers State Bank, 87 S.D. 614, 213 N.W.2d 459 (1973).

Evidence at the hearing convincingly established that Custer County Bank made handsome returns on the assets it garnered from the public in Custer County. Rather than invest most of its nonloaned Custer County capital back into the Custer County area, this bank chose to primarily invest in government securities, federal funds, and highly rated municipal bonds. In loaned money, South Dakota banks from 1976-1980 had an average loan-to-deposit ratio of 49 to 57%. Custer County Bank had a below average loan-to-deposit ratio of 34.5% in 1976; 40.6% in 1977; 40.3% in 1978; close to 45% in 1979; and 38% in 1980. In contrast, during the same time period, South[313]*313ern Hills Bank, the applicant, had a loan-to-deposit ratio of 55 to 64%.

Custer County Bank did not make Federal Housing Administration loans to help local people get housing. Nor did Custer County Bank make Veteran’s Administration loans for housing to aid returning veterans from the armed forces. Custer County Bank did not offer loans designed to help rural-oriented families get started in life. All applications for loans of this type were referred directly to Farmers Home Administration. Custer County Bank did not participate in State Housing Authority loans to aid local people in securing low-interest loans to build homes. Perhaps most dramatically, Custer County Bank did not cultivate the future of the youth of Custer County, as the Bank failed to offer student loans.

It was established that Custer County Bank failed to offer consistent overdraft protection for its customers. Mr. Dretsch, of Custer County Bank, candidly admitted Custer County Bank had not made any significant improvements to its physical plant over the ten-year period prior to the hearing. Examples: no drive-in or walk-up facilities to service the people. Finding of Fact twelve of the Commission expresses in part: “The evidence shows that the present financial institutions, and primarily the Custer County Bank, is not competitive in all respects of the banking industry, and in fact does not perform some of the services ordinarily performed by a full service bank.”

Mr. Robert Cullum, a twenty-year resident of Custer and president of one of Custer County’s larger employers, Pacer Corporation, testified that he encountered numerous difficulties with Custer County Bank over Pacer’s impress payroll account. Although Mr. Cullum had a $10,000.00 guarantee for his payroll, his employees, members of Custer County’s public, had difficulties cashing their payroll checks at Custer County Bank. Mr. Mike Carter, who runs the Coast-to-Coast Hardware Store across the street from Custer County Bank testified: ,

Well, whenever somebody comes to town and doesn’t have a checking account here, I know on Friday afternoons, I spend most of my time as a banking facility, trying to cash those checks for those people, and if they’ve got to go out of town to do their banking, it seems to me like they’re also going to do their shopping in the same place.

Mr. Eugene A. Erickson, of Southern Hills Bank, testified: “Our research indicates that somewhere around half of the people— half of the people in Custer bank other than at Custer County Bank.” This is expressly found in Finding of Fact thirteen by the Banking Commission: “The Commission finds that approximately one-half of the banking in Custer now goes elsewhere and that the loan to deposit ratio of the Custer County Bank is low as compared to the loan to deposit ratio of the State of South Dakota as a whole, and it has historically been lower than the South Dakota average.”

As we held in Valley State Bank, 213 N.W.2d at 465-66:

The legislature has recognized that the expertise required in some fields of legislative authority is better left to qualified administrators who have refined abilities in narrow areas, controlled only'by general guidelines established by the legislature. Affiliated Distillers Brands Corp. v. Gillis, 1964, 81 S.D. 44, 130 N.W.2d 597. The administrative agency must, however, lend credence to the guidelines established in the statutes which give rise to its existence.

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Application of Southern Hills Bank of Edgemont
339 N.W.2d 310 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1983)

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339 N.W.2d 310, 1983 S.D. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-southern-hills-bank-of-edgemont-sd-1983.