Federal Land Bank v. Crookston Trust Co.

230 N.W. 797, 180 Minn. 319, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1231
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 9, 1930
DocketNo. 27,746.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 230 N.W. 797 (Federal Land Bank v. Crookston Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Land Bank v. Crookston Trust Co., 230 N.W. 797, 180 Minn. 319, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1231 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Wilson, C. J.

Plaintiff appealed from a judgment dismissing its action against defendant Crookston Trust Company herein mentioned as defendant. It recovered judgment as against the other defendants.

Defendant is a trust company organized in 1916 and existing under the laws of Minnesota for the sole purpose of doing business at Crookston, Minnesota, as a trust company. It was created under 2 Mason, 1927, §§ 7726 and 7728-7744. In July, 1918, it became plaintiff’s agent under the federal farm loan act. Plaintiff made a farm loan through said agent to defendant Lundberg. Defendant ■guaranteed the loan. Plaintiff sued upon the guaranty, which defendant pleaded was ultra vires.

On December 15, 1917, defendant made application for an agency under the federal farm loan act, which became a law July 17, 1916. The application was approved by plaintiff and the federal farm loan board. A formal agency contract was made on July 2, 1918, and defendant therein agreed to guarantee all loans. Lundberg’s application to defendant for a farm loan from plaintiff in the sum of $10,000 was approved, and on April 23, 1919, he and his wife executed to plaintiff their note for that amount payable in 68 semiannual payments of $325 each. Defendant guaranteed the note, which was secured by mortgage on a 360-acre farm. The title having been found satisfactory, the mortgage was recorded immediately after it and the note were delivered to defendant.

The farm was subject to a mortgage to Joseph Lariviere amounting with interest to $9,500. On the day plaintiff’s mortgage was recorded defendant temporarily advanced that amount to pay Lari- *321 viere. Defendant’s president testified the money was advanced for plaintiff. Lnndberg signed and delivered a written order directing plaintiff to pay the $10,000, less the amount required for the purchase of stock in the Federal Land Bank National Farm Loan Association and expenses, to defendant, “whom I appoint my agent, to receive for me said sum.” The net amount was $9,400, and plaintiff paid this to defendant as agent of Lundberg, and by his authority defendant applied the money in payment of the money advanced as aforesaid.

On September 2, 1922, defendant General Mortgage Securities Corporation acquired some interest in the farm, and it gave plaintiff a writing wherein it assumed the payment of plaintiff’s mortgage.

This action was brought to recover certain mortgage payments which were in default, defendant’s alleged liability resting on the guaranty.

The court found as a fa'ct that by virtue of the laws of this state defendant was without authority to guarantee the note and mortgage and that defendant’s efforts so to do were ultra vires; that said defendant conducts an extensive trust business, receiving, having and holding in trust for others, on the faith and credit of its capital and surplus and on the faith and credit of the law, large deposits of trust funds and trust estates, including a department of savings.

While defendant so acted as plaintiff’s agent it negotiated and in form guaranteed loans made by plaintiff aggregating approximately $580,000. It realized therefrom about $30,000 income in the way of authorized commissions.

The federal farm loan act provides, 12 USCA, § 807:

“Any agent negotiating any such loan shall indorse the same and become liable for the payment thereof, and for any default by the mortgagor, on the same terms and under the same penalties as if the loan had been originally made by said agent as principal and sold by said agent to said land bank, but the aggregate of the unpaid principal of mortgage loans received from any such agent shall not exceed ten times its capital and surplus.”

*322 The foregoing statutory provision doubtless prompted the insertion of the guaranty provision in the agency contract. The act, § 803, provides that no agent other than a duly incorporated bank, trust company, mortgage company or savings institution, chartered by the state in which it has its principal place of business, shall be employed.

It is the declared law in this state that guaranties of promissory notes by such corporations wherein they have no beneficial interest are ultra vires. Farmers & M. Sav. Bank v. Crookston State Bank, 169 Minn. 249, 210 N. W. 998; Farmers & M. State Bank v. Mellum, 173 Minn. 325, 217 N. W. 381. See also In re Bankers Tr. Co. (D. C.) 27 F. (2d) 912; Ward v. Joslin, 186 U. S. 142, 22 S. Ct. 807, 46 L. ed. 1093. This is based upon our statutes, the authority and power invested in such corporations, and upon public policy. It is the intention of the state to control such corporations in so far as reasonably possible, especially for the protection of their depositors and stockholders and generally for the public welfare. The public is vitally concerned.

Such financial state institutions may guarantee paper which they own and sell and which is essential to the transaction of their usual business. Hence, plaintiff asserts that defendant had a beneficial interest in this transaction because it received the proceeds of the loan as indicated to reimburse it for money advanced to pay the Lariviere mortgage. But plaintiff is met with the court’s finding, sustained by the evidence, that the advancement was made for plaintiff. We are unable to see how this particular guaranty may come within the general authority as a part of the purposes of defendant’s creation. We think it does not.

So we come directly to the inquiry as to whether the congress has intentionally, undertaken to bestow upon state institutions added authority qualifying them to act as plaintiff’s agent under the federal farm loan act. This would mean authorizing them to do that which under the law of their creation and existence was theretofore ultra vires. When congress enacted the federal farm loan act it was in a field wherein it presumably had jurisdiction and constitutional authority. The power to create state banks and trust *323 companies lias not been delegated by the United States constitution and hence under the terms of the tenth amendment thereto is reserved to the states. This state has enacted laws under which such institutions have been created and are. existing. They have been surrounded by protective measures and restrictions and subjected to state supervision. As hereinbefore stated, such institutions are not authorized to guarantee notes in which they have no interest. Our state laws intended to protect the depositors and stockholders from the peril of large contingent liabilities. The instant case is a concrete example of the danger which the state has jealously sought to avoid. Defendant in form has subjected itself to a liability of $580,000. It has a capital of only $50,000' and a surplus of $4,000. It holds deposits of nearly $100,000 and some trust funds. No one can call it safe and conservative banking for a trust company with such resources to incur such liability wholly uncommensurable with the incidental earnings. It also involves a risk never contemplated in defendant’s creation. It jeopardizes the security and safety of the depositors whose welfare, from the state viewpoint, is paramount.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 N.W. 797, 180 Minn. 319, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-land-bank-v-crookston-trust-co-minn-1930.