Leuhrs v. Spaulding

328 P.2d 582, 80 Idaho 326, 1958 Ida. LEXIS 217
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1958
Docket8616
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 328 P.2d 582 (Leuhrs v. Spaulding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leuhrs v. Spaulding, 328 P.2d 582, 80 Idaho 326, 1958 Ida. LEXIS 217 (Idaho 1958).

Opinion

*329 BAKER, District Judge.

The defendant, Commissioner of Finance, appealed from judgment of the trial court, in mandamus proceedings, that he approve as to form and content and return to the plaintiffs the articles of incorporation of the Bank of Central Idaho, and issue to it certificate or charter authorizing it to engage in the banking business at Grangeville in this state. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

Grangeville, a city of the second class, county seat of Idaho County, has a population of 3,300, is within the highly fertile and prosperous grain-growing area of the state known as Camas Prairie. The record does not establish the value of the crops annually produced in that area, but it is made to appear that the farmers are very prosperous. The forests in the vicinity produce substantial quantities of forest products of undisclosed value and furnish employment for many men. The trial court found, upon evidence the sufficiency of which is not questioned, that the annual payroll of the men employed in the mills and forests is in excess of $3,000,000 and that the merchants transact retail business in volume greater than $12,000,000 per year. The First Security Bank of Idaho has a branch bank at Grangeville with deposits in excess of $7,500,000. The deposits in other banks in that vicinity are greater than that sum.

On March 13, 1956, the five plaintiffs executed articles of incorporation for the organization of a banking corporation to do business at Grangeville under the name of “Bank of Central Idaho”. The authorized capital stock had a par value of $150,000. The articles recited that all stock had been subscribed.

On March 19, 1956, plaintiffs filed with the defendant, as Commissioner of Finance, their application for approval as to form and content and return to them of the articles of incorporation and for the issuance by him of charter for the proposed bank. The defendant submitted the articles of incorporation to the office of the attorney general for approval as to form and content. While the articles were approved by that office the defendant did not by endorsement on the articles formally approve. Without such approval the articles could not be and, of course, were not filed in the offices of the county recorder and the secretary of state. Section 26-203, I.C., requires such approval before filing. With the application for charter plaintiffs submitted the supporting data and information required by Section 26-207, I.C.

On December 3, 1956, after the application for charter had remained in the defendant’s office for eight and one-half *330 months without formal action, the plaintiffs instituted this suit to obtain decree requiring defendant to approve the articles of incorporation and to issue the charter.

The position of the plaintiffs was that the defendant had in fact found favorably to the plaintiffs on all questions essential to the issuance of charter, including an opinion that conditions were such as to warrant a new and additional bank at Grangeville, that issuance of charter was then a ministerial act especially enjoined by law which he had failed to perform and that plaintiffs were entitled to enforce performance by mandamus.

The trial court expressly found that plaintiffs had filed all instruments required by law, that the bank “had complied with all provisions of law required to entitle it to engage in the banking business except such as by their nature could not be accomplished while the defendant withheld the articles of incorporation”; also “that the Commissioner also ascertained from the best sources of information, to-wit, from a personal examination made in the vicinity of Grangeville and an investigation of the financial resources of the stockholders of said proposed bank, and this court hereby finds that the character and general fitness of said stockholders and officers of said bank are such as to command the confidence of the community in which said bank is proposed to be located; that said defendant in his capacity as such commissioner upon such examination ascertained, and this court hereby finds, that said bank is lawfully entitled to commence business and the officers and directors thereof were and are competent to engage in the banking or banking and trust business and that its stockholders were and are such as to command the confidence of the community”; and “that said defendant in his capacity as Commissioner of Finance after making such investigation and ascertaining the facts, as aforesaid, formed the opinion based upon such facts that the organization of said bank was, and is, justified and expressed said opinion to the officers of said bank”.

The conclusions which naturally followed the foregoing Findings of Fact were, among others, that it was the positive duty of the defendant, Commissioner, to issue the charter and that no authority or discretion existed under the facts established to deny it. Decree in conformity was made.

The chief contentions of the defendant are, first, that the Findings of Fact above quoted are not sustained by competent evidence; and, second, stated with greater variety than is usually encountered, that the issuance of a bank charter is a matter wholly committed to the discretion of the Commissioner, not subject to review by the courts unless found to be clearly unreasonable, capricious or arbitrary. Other questions regarded as minor and not controlling, are urged and will later be noticed.

*331 Counsel appear to be in agreement as to the major principles of law involved in this case. These principles are, as to the first question, that if there is substantial, although conflicting, evidence to sustain the Findings of Fact, this court may not avoid, and as to the second, that the court may not review a discretionary act supported by same facts or substitute its judgment unless the conclusion reached and the judgment rendered by the officer are clearly unreasonable, capricious or arbitrary.

Section 26-207, I.C., provides in part:

“Upon filing the foregoing, it shall be the duty of the department of finance to immediately examine into the condition of said bank, ascertaining whether or not the capital has been paid in and whether such bank has complied with all the provisions of the law required to entitled it to engage in the business of banking. It shall also ascertain from the best sources of information at its command whether the character and general fitness of the persons named as stockholders and officers are such as to command the confidence of the community in which such a bank is proposed to be located. If, upon such examination, it appears that said bank is lawfully entitled to commence business, and the directors and officers are competent to engage in the banking or banking and trust business, and its stockholders are such as to command the confidence of the community, and if, in the opinion of the commissioner of finance the organization of the bank is justified, the department of finance shall forthwith issue to such bank a certificate, under its official seal, as provided in this section.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Felton v. Prather
506 P.2d 1353 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1973)
Allen v. Smylie
452 P.2d 343 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1969)
Young v. Roberts
112 S.E.2d 758 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1960)
Freeman v. McQuade
331 P.2d 263 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
328 P.2d 582, 80 Idaho 326, 1958 Ida. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leuhrs-v-spaulding-idaho-1958.