Dearborn v. Northwestern Savings Bank

42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 617
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 617 (Dearborn v. Northwestern Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dearborn v. Northwestern Savings Bank, 42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 617 (Ohio 1885).

Opinion

McIlvaine, C. J.

The main question in this ease relates to the constitutionality of the act of Feb. 26, 1873, entitled, “ An act to incorporate savings and loan associations,” under which defendant in error was incorporated and assumed to exercise “ banking powers,” exclusive of the power to make and issue bills and notes to circulate as money. This enactment was duly passed by the general assembly, but was not submitted to the people at the succeeding general election for their approval.

Section 7, article 13, of the constitution reads as follows: “No act of the general assembly, authorizing associations with banking powers, shall take effect until it shall be submitted to the people, at the general election next succeeding the passage thereof, and be approved by a majority of all the electors voting at such election.”

The statute in question does not assume to authorize the making and issuing of bills or notes to circulate as money, and the question is now submitted for our determination whether it is within the meaning of the provision of the constitution above quoted.

That the statute authorizes the exercise of other powers, to wit, the receiving of deposits, loaning of money, &e., usually exercised by banking associations, is not disputed ; and that the terms of the constitutional provision, “ associations with banking powers,” are broad enough to include the powe2's usually enjoyed by banking associations, is too plain to be doubted. It is not denied, and cannot be, that at the date of [619]*619the adoption of the constitution, and for a long time prior thereto, the commercial world was familiar with banks of deposit and of discount, as well as banks of issue, of which the last named only made and issued bills and notes to circulate as money; nevertheless the powers exercised by either class of banks, were properly denominated “ banking powers ” by the commercial world.

At the same time it is equally certain that the phrase “ banking powers ” was susceptible of another and restricted meaning, which related only to the powers employed in the making and issuing of paper money, or at most, to powers exercised by associations organized to deal in money, including the making and issuing of bills and notes to circulate as money.

When the use of this phrase, in its restricted meaning, was first introduced, we cannot say, but as early as 1815, the general assembly of this state passed an act, providing, among other things, that it should not be lawful for any individual or company of individuals to issue and put in circulation any note or order for the payment of money and calculated to circulate as a bank-bill or note, unless such individual shall be specially authorized by law to do so; or unless such company of individuals shall be by law “ incorporated for that purpose.” 2 Chase, p. 865, § 5. In the following year, January 27, 1816, an act was passed defining banking in this state (2 Chase, 904), the second section of which reads as follows : “ That every company or association that shall lend money, and shall issue by their officer or officers, or by any person or persons, bonds, notes or bills payable to bearer or payable to order, and indorsed in blank, or use other shift or device whereby the bonds, notes or bills given by such company or association, or on their behalf, pass or circulate by delivery, shall be taken and deemed a bank within this act.” The fourth section of this act prohibited the making and issuing of bills or notes to circulate as money, unless authorized by statute. In speaking of this statute, Judge Hitchcock, in State v. Granville Alexandrian Society, 11 Ohio Reports, 1, says, “This act prohibits the exercise of banking powers except by banks incorporated by the law of the state.”

[620]*620Whatever may have been the rights ■ at common law of natural persons, it is quite clear that by this legislation the state assumed, as a prerogative right, the control of the business of making and issuing bills and notes to circulate as money, and denominated such business banking. And though the state could not engage in the business by reason of the provision of the constitution of the United States, which prohibited states, as such, from emitting bills of credit, it thus assumed the exclusive right, in this state, of granting the franchise to make paper money to others.

It must be observed, however, that while these restrictions were placed on the making and issuing of bills and notes to circulate as money, the right to receive deposits, discount paper and deal in exchange was not restricted, but was left free to all. The result was that individuals of every class, especially merchants and farmers, having the confidence of the people, received money on deposit and loaned the same at interest, in connection with other business, without being denominated or known as bankers. Other persons, either as individuals or associations, engaged exclusively in dealing in money, and in any mode required by the commerce and trade of the country, except only the making and issuing of bills and notes to circulate as money, without any license or authority from the government. Such dealers in money were denominated and known as brokers or private bankers, but were always designated by some name, which distinguished their business from that involving the power to make or issue bills and notes to circulate as money.

The policy of the state thus inaugurated in 1815 and 1816, as well as the practice of the people under it, was continued for more than a generation, and until the constitution of 1851 was submitted to the people of the state for adoption. Hence, it seems evident, from what has been said, that the phrase, “ banking powers,” may have been used at the adoption of the constitution, in the restricted sense above stated, with propriety, and without violence to the words.

, The sense or understanding of the people upon this subject, before the adoption of the constitution is brought to our [621]*621attention in a very forcible manner. True, the witnesses have not been examined orally before us, but the testimony, for that reason, is not entitled to less weight. In the case of the Bank of the U. S. v. William D. Primrose, in the Supreme Court of the United States in 1839, where the meaning of the word bank was involved, Daniel Webster, in his argument, as published in volume 6 of his works, p. 106, after great consideration, said, “ What constitutes banking must be something peculiar. There are various acts of legislation by different states in this country, for granting or preventing the exercise of banking privileges. But has any law ever been passed to authorize or to prevent the buying by an individual of a bill of exchange ? No one has ever heard of such a thing. The laws to restrain banking have all been directed to one end ; that is, to repress the unauthorized eirculation of paper money. There are various other functions performed by banks; but, in discharging all these, they only do what unincorporated individuals do.

What is that, then, without which any institution is not a bank, and with which it is a bank? It is a power to.issue promissory notes with a view to their circulation as money.”

Further on in his argument he says, When our state / legislatures have undertaken to restrain banking, the great end in view has been to prevent the circulation of notes.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ohio St. (N.S.) 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dearborn-v-northwestern-savings-bank-ohio-1885.