Ervin v. Conn

225 N.C. 267
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 6, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 225 N.C. 267 (Ervin v. Conn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ervin v. Conn, 225 N.C. 267 (N.C. 1945).

Opinion

Seawell, J.

If nothing else appeared, the conception of the Federal Government as creating a species of property, intended to have a situs within the State, and investing it with qualities and incidents of succession at variance with the State laws of descent and distribution, would make a disturbing picture. It would, indeed, be cause for challenge if the Congress undertook to legislate on the subject by general regulation of property rights within the field of State control. But there is no such general invasion of State governmental power or function involved in the controversy submitted to the Court. We are dealing with a special situation — the authority of the Federal Government, under its constitutional grant of power to borrow money, to regulate and adjust its contracts within the compass of that power, so that property in them may be subject to succession by survivorship, according to the terms of the contract, irrespective of the succession laws of the State generally applicable to that subject. It is the contention of the appellee in each case that the authority to make a contract with that provision and with that result .is within the reasonable and necessary exercise of the constitutional power to borrow money and pledge the faith and credit of the Government for its repayment, and within the scope of the Acts of Congress, implementing the constitutional provision.

Clause 2 of sec. 8, Art. I, of the Federal Constitution, empowers Congress to borrow money on the credit of the United States; Clause 18 empowers Congress to make necessary laws -for the execution of powers vested by the Constitution in the United States Government. Pursuant thereto the Congress enacted the Second Liberty Bond Act, sec. 22 of which, as amended, reads as follows:

“The Secretary of the Treasury, with the approval of the President, is authorized to issue, from time to time, through the Postal Service, or otherwise, bonds of the United States to be known as ‘United States Savings Bonds! The .proceeds of the Savings Bonds shall be available to meet any public expenditures authorized by law and to retire any [271]*271outstanding obligations of tbe United States bearing interest or issued on a discount basis. Tbe various issues and series of tbe Savings Bonds shall be in sucb forms, shall be offered in sucb amounts within the limits of section 752 of this title, and shall be issued in sucb manner and subject to sucb terms and conditions consistent with subsections (b) and (c) hereof, and including any restriction on their transfer, as the Secretary of tbe Treasury may from time to time prescribe.” Act of Sept. 24, 1917, ch. 56, Sec. 22, as added by Act of Feb. 4, 1935, ch. 5, sec. 6, 49 Stat. 21, 31 U. S. C. A., sec. 757c.

Looking at the Constitutional grant of power and the implementing-act alone, in their independent setting, it can hardly be denied that there is a clear and indisputable line of authority from tbe Constitution to Congress, and a delegable power in the Congress with respect to tbe Treasury Regulations involved, so long as they have a reasonable relation to tbe ends sought to be attained by tbe Constitution, and are fairly within the powers actually delegated to the Secretary of the Treasury. Assuming that tbe Regulations are of that character conflict with State law is immaterial. But as one of the recurring conflicts of authority, real or assumed, in our dual form of government, tbe appellants raise tbe question whether the Congress, in tbe details of its attempted exercise of power, has not transgressed on tbe reserved powers of tbe State.

Primarily, tbe possibility of conflict with State law has nothing to do with the question whether tbe transactions under review (referring to tbe contested feature of survivorship), are within the proper exercise of the constitutional power, and necessary or expedient to its exercise. Independently considered, they seem to have that logical and reasonable relation to the constitutional grant of power and the ends sought to be reached that would make tbe transaction impeccable.

The borrowing of money by tbe Government on the scale it has been carried on and is yet to be done, reaching incomprehensible billions in figures, is not a simple matter of getting a loan here and there and issuing a note of band as an obligation to repay it. Under the Constitution, the Government might borrow from foreign governments or money lenders, if any might be found able to lend, or it might seek sucb loans in this country exclusively from big industry, banking institutions, private syndicates, or, intermediately, from government-created agencies; or it might, as it has undertaken to do, and with gratifying success, borrow directly from all its citizens and all other legitimate sources in tbe country. It would be well nigh criminal if the Government, in the placing of sucb vast loans, did not consider the political, economic, and •social phases and consequences of its intended action, since, in all these aspects, tbe people are, necessarily, profoundly affected. These consid[272]*272erations must be read into the constitutional grant of power which has been made to the Government.

None can question that it is a sound policy for the Government to borrow of its own people. The extension of these loans to as much of the citizenry of the country as might be possible tends to promote the stability of the Government, to strengthen its financial structure, to promote the prosperity of the people, and to establish relations of confidence and mutual understanding between the people and their Government. Moreover, in the scheme of financing the enormous national debt, so rapidly accumulating, it -was necessary, and is necessary, for the Government to draw upon every resource the country affords; and to offer a form of investment loan which would appeal to persons of medium or low income, or to purchasers in small amounts, who constitute the great majority of the country’s inhabitants.

There is no doubt that the survivorship feature in the form of investment offered by these bonds has been, and is, peculiarly attractive to millions of purchasers throughout the nation, and has been strongly influential in their widespread distribution. A recent statement from "Washington estimates that at least eighty-five million persons in this country are holders of E type bonds. The security acquired by the simple act of purchase can hardly be overestimated as a factor in their sales and the satisfaction with which they continue to be held. $7,000,-000,000 of the $24,000,000,000 bond offer now being made is expected to be bought by private individuals. To question their ' validity, or deprive them of their most attractive feature, would seriously embarrass the Government in its attempt to make good its promises, cripple its bond sales, and no doubt have a serious effect on the permanence of these individually small, but in the aggregate large, investments.

This is, briefly, the background of policy and necessity behind the bond issues we are considering. We would not overstress the evident necessity which arises from the emergency of war and the immediacy of its demands, since the principles and policies we have tried to outline are as soundly observed in peace-time borrowings. We are simply stating the considerations which lead us to the conclusion that there is no feature of the bonds concerned in this controversy so extraordinary as would make them unfit subjects to be included, as necessary or expedient to the exercise of the borrowing power granted by the Constitution and implemented by the pertinent Act of Congress.

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Bluebook (online)
225 N.C. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ervin-v-conn-nc-1945.