Aquidneck National Bank v. Jennings

117 A. 743, 44 R.I. 435, 1922 R.I. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 6, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 117 A. 743 (Aquidneck National Bank v. Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aquidneck National Bank v. Jennings, 117 A. 743, 44 R.I. 435, 1922 R.I. LEXIS 69 (R.I. 1922).

Opinion

Sweetland, C. J.

This is a petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the respondent as General Treasurer of the State to accept from the petitioner forty-five thousand dollars in United States Fourth Liberty Loan Bonds, which the petitioner has tendered as security for the performance of its duties in a fiduciary capacity in accordance with what it alleges are the provisions of the Federal Reserve Act.

The Attorney General of the State in behalf of the respondent has demurred to the petition. '

The petitioner alleges that it is a banking corporation organized under the National Bank act of Congress, engaged in a general banking business in Newport as authorized by its charter; that under the authority of the act of Congress known as the Federal Reserve act the Federal Reserve Board, granted to the petitioner the right “to act . . . as trustee, executor, administrator and registrar of stocks and bonds in so far as the exercise of such power is not in *437 contravention of state or local law;” that said Federal Reserve act provides as follows: “whenever the laws of a state require corporations acting in a fiduciary capacity to deposit securities with the state authorities for the protection of private or court trusts, national banks so acting shall be required to make similar deposits and securities so deposited shall be held for the protection of private or court trusts as provided by the state law;” that under the provisions of Section 7, Chapter 231, General Laws of Rhode Island, 1909, every trust company is required to deposit with the General Treasurer of the State in certain securities therein specified, which include the bonds of the United States, “an amount that shall be at all times equal in value to twenty per centum of the entire capital stock of said corporation which bonds shall be held by said treasurer as an additional security for the faithful performance by said corporation of its duties as trustee, executor, custodian, conservator, guardian, assignee or receiver;” that the entire capital stock of the petitioner is two hundred thousand dollars and that it tendered forty-five thousand dollars in said Liberty Loan Bonds to the General Treasurer to be held by him as additional security for the faithful performance by the petitioner of those duties in a fiduciary capacity which it is empowered to assume by the grant of the Federal Reserve Board; that the respondent as General Treasurer has refused to receive said bonds of the petitioner.

The respondent’s demurrer sets forth several grounds which in substance are (1) that the exercise by the petitioner of the fiduciary powers enumerated in the permission of the Federal Reserve Board is in contravention of the laws of this state; (2) that the acceptance of the proposed deposit by the General Treasurer would be in contravention of the laws of the state; and (3) that, upon said petition this court should not by a writ of mandamus compel the respondent to perform acts which do not fall within the respondent’s powers or duties under the laws of this state.

*438 (1 ) The provisions of the Federal Reserve act giving to the Federal Reserve Board power to authorize a national bank to act as an executor or trustee was looked upon by some as a further step by Congress in what has been regarded as its tendency to legislate in matters of purely local and state concern. The legislature of New Hampshire met the situation by providing that no trust company, bank or banking company or similar corporation, should thereafter be appointed administrator of an estate, executor under a will, guardian or conservator of the person or property of another; and the Supreme Court of that state has held that national banks as well as state corporations were included within the prohibition of that legislative act. Appeal of Woodbury, 96 Atl. 299. The provision in question came before the Supreme Court of Illinois, in People v. Brady, 271 Ill. 100. That court held that the implied power of Congress under the constitution to create national banks as governmental agencies, declared in McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, and Osborn v. United States Bank, 9 Wheat. 738, did not extend to the power of authorizing such banks to act as trustees, or the personal representatives of decedents. The court further held that such permission to a national bank was in contravention of the laws of Illinois, which had designated the corporations which could act in a fiduciary capacity and had especially provided for state examination as to their financial stability and for their control. In Attorney General v. National Bank, 192 Mich. 640, it appeared that the First National Bank of Bay City had been granted by the Federal Reserve Board the power to act in a fiduciary capacity. The proceeding was in the nature of quo warranto questioning the right of said national bank so to act. One member of the court was of the opinion that the exercise of the granted powers was in contravention of the laws of Michigan, relative to the settlement of the estates of deceased persons. A majority of the court, howevér, held that the authority given by the Federal Reserve Board to the respondent national bank did not *439 contravene the Michigan law, but that the grant of authority to a national bank to act in a fiduciary capacity in accordance with the provisions of the Federal Reserve act' was beyond the express or implied powers of Congress, was repugnant to the Federal Constitution; and that the respondent bank was without legal authority so to act within the state of Michigan. This case was reviewed by the United States Supreme Court upon writ of error to the Supreme Court of Michigan in First National Bank v. Union Trust Company, 244 U. S. 416. It was there held that the authority of Congress to give to national banks power to act as trustees, etc., was within the doctrine stated by Chief Justice Marshall in McCulloch v. Maryland, supra, and Osborn v. Bank, supra, and the grant of such power was not in violation of the United States Constitution; that as a majority of the Supreme Court of Michigan to whom was’ given the power to construe the laws of Michigan, had decided that the exercise of the power conferred upon the national bank was not in contravention of the state law, the court reversed the judgment of the Supreme Court of Michigan.

The final determination as to the constitutionality of an act of Congress rests in the United States Supreme Court and no question can now be raised before us as to the constitutional validity of the provisions of the Federal Reserve act under consideration. There is left to' us to consider whether the exercise of the powers which the permission of said board purports to give to the petitioner is in contravention of the laws of this state.

The first corporation empowered to act as trustee, executor, administrator or guardian in this state was chartered in 1867.

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Related

In Re Estate of McElfresh
254 N.W. 84 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1934)
State Ex Rel. Burnes National Bank v. Duncan
257 S.W. 784 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 A. 743, 44 R.I. 435, 1922 R.I. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aquidneck-national-bank-v-jennings-ri-1922.