Fergus County v. Federal Reserve Bank

244 P. 883, 75 Mont. 582, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 53
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1926
DocketNo. 5,873.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 244 P. 883 (Fergus County v. Federal Reserve Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fergus County v. Federal Reserve Bank, 244 P. 883, 75 Mont. 582, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 53 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

ME. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the times mentioned herein, the First State Bank of Coffee Creek (called the Coffee Creek bank) was a state bank which was not affiliated with the Federal Eeserve System in any manner, so far as disclosed by the record. The Empire & State Bank of Lewistown (called the Lewistown bank) was also a state bank, but it was a component part of the Federal Eeserve System ■ — a member bank of the Federal Eeserve Bank of Minneapolis (herein called the defendant). About December 1, 1923, certain persons who were indebted to Fergus county delivered to the county treasurer checks drawn on the Coffee Creek bank. These checks, for sums aggregating $999.64, were indorsed by the treasurer and were delivered to the Lewistown bank for collection. The Lewistown bank indorsed and delivered them to the defendant’s Helena branch bank for collection, and the Helena branch bank transmitted the cheeks to the Coffee Creek bank for payment. The Coffee Creek bank charged the checks to the respective drawers and remitted its drafts for the amount of the checks. These drafts, drawn upon the Coffee Creek bank’s correspondents, were received by the defendant, but before they could be collected the Coffee Creek bank failed *585 in business, and tbe drafts were dishonored. This action -was then instituted by the county to recover the amount of the cheeks, together with the interest which the county would have received on that amount if the checks had been collected. It is the plaintiff’s theory that the defendant rendered itself liable for the resulting loss by accepting drafts for the checks instead of demanding and collecting the money.

Every material allegation of the complaint was admitted, and the defendant then undertook to justify its act in accepting the drafts. It alleged that about October 6, 1920, the Federal Reserve Board adopted and promulgated certain rules designated in the entirety, “Regulation J, Series of 1920”; that about September 1, 1922, this defendant, with the consent and approval of the Federal Reserve Board, adopted certain other rules and promulgated them in their entirety as “Circular No. 286”; that the Lewistown bank had full notice and knowledge of the contents of these documents at and for a long period prior to the time the checks in question were delivered to the defendant, and that defendant accepted the checks for collection under the terms and conditions imposed by Regulation J and Circular 286, and not otherwise. Each of these documents is attached to and made a part of the answer. The portions of Regulation J material here read as follows:

“Each federal reserve bank shall exercise the functions of a clearing-house under the following general terms and conditions :

“ (1) Each federal reserve bank will receive at par from its member banks and from nonmember clearing banks in its district, checks drawn on all member and nonmember clearing banks and on all other nonmember banks which agree to remit at par through the federal reserve bank of their district. * * *

“(8) In handling items for member and nonmember clearing banks, a federal reserve bank will act as agent only. * * * Any further requirements that the board may deem necessary will be set forth by the federal reserve banks in their *586 letters of instruction to their member and nonmember clearing banks. Each federal reserve bank will also promulgate rules and regulations governing the details of its operations as a clearing-house, such rules and regulations to be binding upon all member and nonmember banks which are clearing through the federal reserve bank.”

The only provision of Circular No. 286 with which we are concerned at present reads as follows:

“Every bank sending checks to this [defendant] bank * # * w[i[ ]3e understood to have agreed to the terms and conditions of this circular, and to have agreed that in receiving such items this bank will act only as the collecting agent of the sending bank, and as such, authorized to send such items for payment in cash or bank draft direct to the bank on which they are drawn.”

A general demurrer to the answer was sustained, and the defendant, declining to plead further, suffered judgment to be rendered and entered against it and appealed.

The ultimate question for solution is, Does the answer state a defense to plaintiff’s cause of action? or, stating the same proposition in different terms: Do the provisions of Regulation J and Circular 286 bind the plaintiff and relieve the defendant of liability for the loss which resulted from its act in accepting the drafts of the Coffee Creek bank in payment for the checks it undertook to collect? If they do, the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer; if they do not, then this case is controlled by the decision in Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond v. Malloy, 264 U. S. 160, 68 L. Ed. 617, 31 A. L. R. 1261, 44 Sup. Ct. Rep. 296, and the decision in Jensen v. Laurel Meat Co., 71 Mont. 582, 230 Pac. 1081.

The Federal Reserve Act (38 Stat. 251 [secs. 9785-9805, U. S. Comp. Stats. 1916]), and the Acts amendatory thereof and supplementary thereto, constitute the charter of the Federal Reserve System. The general supervision and control of the system is lodged in the federal reserve board, consisting of sis members appointed by the President of the United *587 States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and the Secretary of the Treasury and the Comptroller of the Currency, members ex officio. (Amendment of June 3, 1922, 42 Stats. 620; sec. 9793, U. S. Comp. Stats. 1923 Supplement.) It was this board which promulgated Regulation J and authorized the defendant to issue Circular No. 286.

The opening paragraph of Regulation J, quoted above, is an order of the federal reserve board constituting each federal reserve bank a clearing-house for its member banks and nonmember clearing banks. By the provisions of that Regulation, member banks were informed that, in handling checks and drafts for collection, each federal reserve bank would act as agent only, and would exercise the functions of a clearinghouse under such rules and regulations as it might adopt. Regulation J assumed to confer upon this defendant the authority to adopt and promulgate the rules and regulations contained in Circular 286. However, it is alleged in the answer, and admitted to be true for the purposes of this appeal, that Circular 286 was issued with the consent and approval of the federal reserve board, so that in effect it emanated from that board, and its validity depends upon the power of that board to prescribe the conditions contained in the circular. If the federal reserve board had authority to impose those conditions, then this defendant had authority to say that it would act as a clearing-house and collect checks for member banks on the terms and conditions prescribed in the circular and not otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 883, 75 Mont. 582, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fergus-county-v-federal-reserve-bank-mont-1926.