Engel v. O'MALLEY

219 U.S. 128, 31 S. Ct. 190, 55 L. Ed. 128, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1625
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 3, 1911
Docket703
StatusPublished
Cited by140 cases

This text of 219 U.S. 128 (Engel v. O'MALLEY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engel v. O'MALLEY, 219 U.S. 128, 31 S. Ct. 190, 55 L. Ed. 128, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1625 (1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holmes

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill in equity to prevent the carrying out of Chapter 348 of the Laws of New York for 1910, which forbids individuals or partnerships to engage in the business of receiving deposits of money for safe keeping or for the purpose of transmission to another or for any other purpose without a license from the Comptroller. The requirements for obtaining the license, so far as they affect the plaintiff, are that the applicant shall deposit ten thousand dollars with the Comptroller and present a bond with a penalty of not more than fifty.thousand or less than ten thousand dollars, to be fixed by- the Comptroller, conditioned upon the faithful performance of the duties undertaken. After notice shall have been posted for two weeks the Comptroller may approve or disapprove the application in his discretion, and licensees are to pay a fee of fifty dollars. § 25. The licensees revocable at all times by the Comptroller for cause shown. § 26. Carrying on the business specified, or using the word ‘banking’ or ‘banker’ on signs, letterheads or advertisements in connection with any business, without a license, is made a misdemeanor. § 27. The foregoing provisions do not apply to any corporation or ‘individual banker’ authorized to do business under the banking law, or to national banks; to any hotel keeper who shall receive meney for saie-keeping from a *135 guest; to any express or telegraph company receiving money for transmission; to individuals or partnerships where the average, amount of each sum received on deposit or for'transmission in the ordinary course of business shall have been not less than five hundred dollars during the-fiscal year preceding an affidavit to that effect; or, finally, to any individual or partnership filing a bond approved by the Cpmptroller for one hundred thousand dollars when the business is in a city having a million inhabitants, or, if .elsewhere, for fifty thousand dollars; or money, or securities that the Comptroller approves. § 29d.

The plaintiff alleges that he is a citizen of the United States and has been engaged in the business specified in the statute for twenty years; that by good reputation and considerable expenditure he has made his business of great value, and that it chiefly consists in receiving deposits in very small sums from time to time until they reach an amount sufficient to be sent to other States and mainly to foreign countries. The plaintiff further alleges that he has not the means that would enable him to make the deposit and give the bond required, and that the enforcement of the law against him will compel him to close. He avers that the statute is unconstitutional as against him under the Fourteenth Amendment and under the commerce clause of the Constitution of the United States. Article I, § 8. The bill was demurred to and the demurrer was sustained by the Circuit Court.

The first objection urged by the plaintiff in argument is to a requirement that we have hot mentioned, that the applicant must have been continuously for five years immediately preceding his application a resident of the United States. As the plaintiff alleges that he satisfies this requirement, he has nothing to complain of. And therefore, without intimating any doubt as to the validity of the clause, we pass at once to the matters in which he is concerned. Southern Ry. Co. v. King, 217 U. S. 524, *136 534. As a preliminary to his argüment the plaintiff denies that he is in any sense a banker, and even goes so far as to treat the receipt of money for safe keeping or transmission within the meaning of the act as a case of bailment in which the very coins received must be returned or sent on. Of course this is not a true construction of the statute, as is sufficiently indicated by the title “Private Banking.” The receipt of money by a bank, although it only creates a debt, is in a popular sense the receipt of money for safe keeping, since the depositor can draw it out again at such time and in such sums as he chooses. It is safe to assume that the transmission of money contemplated very generally is accomplished by a draft, and practically never by sending on the identical currency received. One form at least of the business aimed at and, on the face of the bill, that carried on by the plaintiff, is a branch of the banking- business. Furthermore, it is a business largely done with poor and ignorant immigrants, especially on their first arrival here.

We presume that the money deposited with the plaintiff is not'drawn upon by checks, so that a part of the argument in Noble State Bank v. Haskell, just decided, ante, p. 104, may not apply. On the other hand, experience has shown that the protection of such depositors against fraud, which is the purpose running through the statute, is especially needed by at least that class of them 'with whom the persons hit by the statute largely deal. The case cited establishes that the.State may regulate that business and may take strong measures to fender it secure. It also establishes that the plaintiff has no such constitutional right to carry it on at will as to raise him above state laws not manifestly unfit to accomplish the supposed end, greatly in excess of the need, or arbitrary and capricious in discrimination. The gwsi-paternal relations shown in argument and by documents to exist between those following the plaintiff’s c'alling and newly-arrived *137 immigrants justifies á supervision more paternal than is needed in ordinary affairs. Whether the court thinks them wise or not such laws are within the scope of. the discretion which belongs to legislatures and which it is usual for them to exert.

This appeal seems to have been taken upon the notion that the plaintiff had a business which, under the Fourteenth Amendment, the State could not touch. But although cut off from that broad proposition, his counsel presents other more specific objections to the act with earnestness and force. It is said that even if the plaintiff could furnish the money and bond required, the Comptroller might refuse; a license upon his arbitrary whim. No guides are given in § 25 for the discretion that he is to exercise, and a provision in § 29e that nothing in the article shall be construed to require the Comptroller to make any inquiry as to the solvency of any applicant is thought to exclude solvency as the test and to leave the matter at sea. We do not so understand the purpose and purport of § 29e, and should suppose that the discretion to be exercised in the refusal to grant the license under § 25 was similar to that exercised under § 26 in revoking one; and that in each case the Comptroller, was expected to act for cause. But the nature and extent of the remedy, if any, for a breach of duty on his part we think it unnecessary to' consider; for the power of the State to make the pursuit of a calling dependent upon obtaining a license is well established, where safety seems to require it, and what we have said before sufficiently indicates that this calling is one to which the requirement may be attached. See Gundling v. Chicago, 177 U. S. 183. Lieberman v. Van de Carr,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 U.S. 128, 31 S. Ct. 190, 55 L. Ed. 128, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engel-v-omalley-scotus-1911.