Federal Deposit Ins. v. Winton

41 F. Supp. 141, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2625
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedJuly 8, 1941
DocketNos. 24, 8
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 F. Supp. 141 (Federal Deposit Ins. v. Winton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Deposit Ins. v. Winton, 41 F. Supp. 141, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2625 (E.D. Tenn. 1941).

Opinion

DARR, District Judge.

The facts and the procedure justify a compliance with the request that the court declare a construction of a portion of the Banking Act of 1935, 49 Stat. 684, Section 12B of the Federal Reserve Act, as amended, 12 U.S.C.A. § 264, being that portion which is commonly known as the Federal Deposit Insurance Law.

The Home Bank and Trust Company of Winchester, Tennessee, prior to April 1, 1938, was an insured bank under provisions of said Act. By proper procedure this insured status was terminated on March 31, 1938. The Bank was closed on August 18, 1938, and its affairs wound up by insolvency proceedings.

At the time the insurance status of the Bank terminated the defendants and others were depositors of said Bank, having various types of deposits. After the insurance status terminated, the defendants and others continued to do business with said Bank making many additional deposits, and perhaps new deposits, and many withdrawals, which continued on up until the Bank was closed.

The question to be determined is where additional deposits, or new deposits, were made and withdrawals were had are all withdrawals to be charged against the insured deposit or only such withdrawals as encroach upon the amount of the deposit at the time of the termination of the insured status.

The particular portion of said Sec. 12B that will determine the question is to be found under (i) (1), as follows:

“After the termination of the insured status of any bank under the provisions of this paragraph, the insured deposits of each depositor in the bank on the date of such termination, less all subsequent withdrawals from any deposits of such depositor, shall continue for a period of two years to be insured, and the bank shall continue to pay to the Corporation assessments as in the case of an insured bank during such period. No additions to any such deposits and no new deposits in such bank made after the date of such termination shall be insured by the Corporation, and the bank shall not advertise or hold itself out as having insured deposits unless in the same connection it shall also state with equal prominence that such additions to deposits and new deposits made after such date are not so insured.”

The plaintiff insists that the words “any deposits” appearing in the first sentence above quoted intends and includes deposits at the time of the termination of the insured status and deposits made after the termination of this status. The defendants insist that this term “any deposits” refers to deposits at the time of the termination of the insured status with no reference to any deposits made thereafter.

Attention is called to the fact that the word “deposits” does not appear in the lengthy paragraph of said subsection (i) (1), except in the sentences quoted. Therefore, when the words “such deposits” appear in the second sentence above quoted the word “such” refers to some preceding announcement of the same type or character of deposit either expressly or contextually. It plainly appears that there is no contextual inference to which the word “such” could refer. The result is that the words “such deposits” must necessarily refer to the words “any deposits” or the words “insured deposits” as appears in the preceding sentence.

It is noted that the beginning of the second sentence is “No additions to any such deposits * * * ”, which would eliminate the idea that the words “such deposits” could refer to the words “insured deposits” for the reason that there can be no additions to insured deposits. Insured deposits are fixed by operation of the law and the depositor cannot add to or take from by his action. A depositor may increase his deposit and by operation of law increase his insured deposit but when the maximum of insured deposits is reached, there can be no addition thereto by other deposits.

[143]*143It necessarily results that the words “such deposits” refer back to the words “any deposits” which would mean that the words “any deposits” and the words “such deposits” mean one and the same thing.

The words “any deposits”, therefore, could not include all deposits until the Bank failed for the reason that it would thereby be impossible to make additions thereto.

Therefore, the words “No additions to any such deposits” necessarily mean that there can be no additions to the deposits on hand at the time of the termination of the insured status which will be insured. Thus “such deposits” would be the deposits as they were at the time of the termination of the insured status.

Then the inevitable conclusion is that the words “any deposits” mean the deposits as they stood at the time of the termination of the insured status.

The word “any” in this connection is evidently put in as a matter of precaution just as it was put in in that part of the second sentence where it says “any” such deposits. The word “deposits” as defined in the Act includes all character and types of deposits and it is the judgment of the court that the word “any” was added to keep down confusion where a depositor might make withdrawals from only one type of deposit and claim insurance on the other type.

This construction of this particular portion of the Act seems to be in full accord with the intention and spirit of the whole section of this Act. It has been said that this chapter was intended to prevent runs on banks by depositors, to preserve solvency of insured banks, and thus to keep open the channels of trade and the commercial exchange.

The particular portion of the section under consideration here is evidently intended to extend the insurance in a limited way after a bank was in a precarious condition and thus to give such bank an opportunity to rehabilitate.

If it should be the law that withdrawals from new business in a bank would be charged against the insured deposit of a depositor, there would be little probability of new business.

The strong probability is that there would be a run on a bank and a change by the depositors to an insured bank. Whereas, if there is an insurance upon the amount the depositor has in the bank at the time of the termination of the insured status for a period of two years and only such withdrawals from this deposit to be charged against the insured deposit, there is some chance for a bank to persuade its depositors to continue business. Thus, it would appear that if the plaintiff’s contention is a proper construction of this law, the very purpose of this whole section would be largely defeated.

There is also significance to sustain this construction of this portion of the chapter wherein it is provided in the second sentence above quoted that the bank shall not advertise that it has insured deposits unless it states with equal prominence that there is no insurance on additions to deposits and new deposits made after such date. If it had been intended that a withdrawal from all new business would be charged against the insured deposit, it would seem that the Congress would have provided that the public be also advised of this important situation.

Another question that might bring up differences of opinion is where a depositor makes additions to a deposit, whether it be a checking account, a savings account, or a certificate of deposit, as to whether there can be an identification of the insured deposit.

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Bluebook (online)
41 F. Supp. 141, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-deposit-ins-v-winton-tned-1941.