First National Bank of Logan v. Walker Bank & Trust Co.

425 P.2d 414, 19 Utah 2d 18, 23 A.L.R. 3d 673, 1967 Utah LEXIS 558
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1967
Docket10621
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 425 P.2d 414 (First National Bank of Logan v. Walker Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Logan v. Walker Bank & Trust Co., 425 P.2d 414, 19 Utah 2d 18, 23 A.L.R. 3d 673, 1967 Utah LEXIS 558 (Utah 1967).

Opinion

CROFT, District Judge:

This is an appeal by plaintiff below from a judgment rendered in favor of defendant and against the plaintiff dismissing the action with prejudice and on the merits.

Appellant First National Bank of Logan commenced this action against respondent, Walker Bank and Trust Company, in the District Court in and for Cache County, State of Utah, seeking:

(1) A declaratory judgment that the com struction of certain new banking facilities by respondent in Logan, Utah, was in violation of Section 7-3-6, UCA 1953, as amended, and (2) an injunction restraining respondent from operating these new banking facilities. By its complaint, appellant contended that the construction and operation of the new banking facilities by respondent constituted the establishment of a “branch bank” within the meaning of that term as used in said Section 7-3-6, and that such construction and operation is in violation of, and prohibited by, the said statute. The case was tried by the court, and the court concluded that the construction and operation of the banking facilities in ques-. tion did not constitute the establishment of a “branch bank” within the meaning of Section 7-3-6, and so dismissed the action.

The pertinent facts as contained in the record may be summarized as follows:

Appellant is a National Banking Association with its main office located at the southwest corner of the intersection of First North and Main Streets in Logan, Utah. Respondent is a state bank with its main office located in Salt Lake City, Utah, and a branch bank in Logan, known as the Cache Valley Branch, which branch bank is located on the northwest corner of the same intersection. The appellant’s bank is the only unit bank in Logan. The respondent acquired its Cache Valley Branch bank on December 18, 1956, by a statutory merger whereby the Cache Valley Banking *20 Company was merged with, and into, the respondent bank.

At the time of the merger, respondent did not acquire the ownership of the real property on which the banking business of the Cache Valley Branch was then conducted, and at that time the banking facilities occupied the west ninety feet of the building. The east thirty feet of the building was then occupied by the Utah Mortgage Loan Company.

A twelve foot right of way extends northward from First North Street along the east wall of the building and is contiguous thereto, over which business properties to the north of the bank building hold long established easements.

In December, 1964, respondent purchased the entire bank building property. It also acquired the fee simple title in and to the twelve foot right of way, subject to the easements therein, and to the parcel of land along First North Street lying to the east of, and contiguous to, the right of way. Upon acquiring the property, respondent undertook to remodel the bank building and Utah Mortgage and Loan Company, although still a tenant of the east thirty feet of the building at the time appellant commenced its action, has now vacated the premises and respondent bank now occupies the entire ground floor of the building.

Upon acquiring the land east of the building, respondent constructed two small buildings (each approximately 8' X 22') for use as drive-in and walk-up facilities for banking purposes. Each of the two buildings is a separate structure and neither is physically attached to the bank building, except for pneumatic tubes which run underground from the two buildings to the first teller’s cage in the main building. A single canopy was constructed over both of the small buildings. The buildings were erected in such a manner as to accommodate both drive-in and walk-up customers. The most westerly of these two structures is 14i/£ feet east of the east wall of the main building and the two new structures are themselves about 15 feet apart. The street address of the new facilities is 35 East First North Street, and the address of the main banking facility is 102 North Main Street.

Each of the two separate buildings is used for the receiving and withdrawal of deposits and for cashing checks for respondent’s customers. Deposits made in either facility, together with the deposit slips, are transmitted through the pneumatic tubes to the first teller’s cage in the main building. Funds needed and used in either facility for paying withdrawals and cashing checks are sent from the first teller’s cage through the tubes to such facility.

Under the statutes of Utah, Logan is a city of the second class. Neither the Utah State Banking Commissioner nor the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System has granted any authority to respondent *21 to erect or to operate the new drive-in, walk-up facilities.

Appellant contends that these facilities constitute a “branch bank,” as that term is defined by Section 7-3-6, UCA 1953, as amended, and that their establishment and operation are contrary to, and prohibited by, that statute. Respondent contends that the new facilities are merely an extension or enlargement of its already existing branch bank.

The pertinent parts of Section 7-3-6 read as follows:

The business of every hank shall be conducted only at its banking house and every bank shall receive deposits and pay checks only at its banking house except as hereinafter provided.
******
Except in cities of the first class, * * no branch bank shall be established in any city or town in which is located a bank or banks, state or national, regularly transacting a customary banking business, unless the bank seeking to establish such bank shall take over an existing bank. * * * term “branch” as used in this act shall be held to include any branch bank, branch office, branch agency, additional office, or any branch place of business at which deposits are received or checks paid or money lent. The question for our determination is

whether the construction and operation by respondent of the new drive-in, walk-up facilities in question constitute the establishment of a branch bank.

In 1953, our Legislature enacted legislation that legalized all existing unit banks and all branch banks then existing, the legality of whose prior establishment apparently was then open to question. However, in doing so, the Legislature reaffirmed the statutory limitations for, and the prohibitions against, the establishment of branch banks as contained in Section 7-3-6 1 This legislative reaffirmance of Section 7-3-6 by a separate statute leaves no doubt that the Legislature intended that branch banks in cities of the second class, of which Logan is one, be established only in the the manner set forth in the statute.

The statutory definition of the term “branch” includes any place of business at which deposits are received, or at which checks are paid, or at which money is lent. Clearly, then, to constitute a place of business as a “branch bank” it is not necessary that a complete hanking operation he conducted. It is sufficient if only such limited banking functions are performed. The respondent’s drive-in, walk-up facilities were constructed for the purpose of receiving deposits and paying checks for banking customers and are so operated today.

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Bluebook (online)
425 P.2d 414, 19 Utah 2d 18, 23 A.L.R. 3d 673, 1967 Utah LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-logan-v-walker-bank-trust-co-utah-1967.