Lincoln Sav. Bank v. Brown

137 F.2d 228, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2787
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 7, 1943
DocketNo. 12
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 137 F.2d 228 (Lincoln Sav. Bank v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Emergency Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lincoln Sav. Bank v. Brown, 137 F.2d 228, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2787 (eca 1943).

Opinion

VINSON, Chief Judge.

This complaint, filed after the denial of a protest by the Price Administrator, involves a dual inquiry. Complainant maintains that the Emergency Price Control Act of 19421 (the Price Act) does not authorize the regulation of its safe deposit box rentals, or, if it does, that the regulations promulgated thereunder do not subject these rentals to regulation.

Complainant is a banking corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of New York. It maintains safe deposit departments in four of its five offices in Brooklyn, renting safe deposit facilities only to its savings account depositors, and limiting, in its written contract for the service, the articles which may be stored therein to “securities, jewelry and valuable papers only”, in accordance with the provisions of Section 234 of the Banking Law of the State of New York. Consol.Laws, N.Y.C. 2.2

The Price Act is a breath-taking legislative departure from our peacetime economic policy. In Section 1(a) Congress embodied, at length, the broad scope and purposes of this wartime expedient.3 Section 2(a), as partially set out below, vests authority in the Price Administrator to effect those enumerated purposes : “Whenever in the judgment of the Price Administrator (provided for in section 201) the price or prices of a commodity or commodities have risen or threaten to rise to an extent or in a manner inconsistent with the purposes of this Act, he may by regulation or order establish such maximum price or maximum prices as in his judgment will be generally fair and equitable * * * ”

Section 302(c) is definitive: “The term ‘commodity’ means commodities, articles, products, and materials * * *, and it also includes services rendered * * * in connection with the processing, distribution, storage, installation, repair, or negotiation of purchases or sales of a commodity, or in connection with the operation of any service establishment for the servicing of a commodity: [exclusions not relevant here].” [Italics supplied.]

We believe the pertinent language in Section 302(c) is commendably precise. Congress not only indicated af[230]*230firmatively the wide area subject to price control, but it also detailed by specific exceptions those areas to which the authority of the Price Administrator could not extend.4 Congress did not interject the term “commodity” in naked form, leaving it to be clothed with its customary connotation by those charged with construing the Price Act. The garb of “commodity” in its present role is definitely prescribed, and a number of new and unusual garments are included. “Commodity” is defined to mean, inter alia, “commodities, articles, products, and materials * * This is an extremely broad definition encompassing, we believe, all things possessing the attribute of tangible existence, i. e., all space-displacing objects, which are the subject of barter, transfer, sale, or other transactions involving the exchange of money or other value. But Congress did not stop here; it stated that the term as used in the Price Act should also include “services rendered * * * in connection with the * * * storage * * * of a commodity, or in connection with the operation of any service establishment for the servicing of a commodity * * *.” Section 302(c) thus expresses an unequivocal Congressional intent that storage services rendered in connection with any articles, products, or materials not specifically exempted were intended to be subject to the Price Administrator’s control. With this comprehensive statutory concept of “commodity” in mind, we will proceed to determine whether it applies to the services available to complainant’s customers in connection with the storage of the three types of articles described.

It is conceded by the complainant that jewelry is a commodity. Securities and valuable papers must be considered commodities within the meaning of the Price Act as well as in general usage. They have heretofore been so designated by the courts.5 Generally these articles have a substantial intrinsic value in addition to the valuable intangible interest which they represent. With such instruments as bonds payable to bearer, or other types of negotiable paper, intrinsic value may represent total value. In other securities and valuable papers there is, at the least, an intrinsic value representing difficulties of identification, cost and inconvenience of duplication, notary and registry fees, etc. The use of safe deposit facilities to preserve and protect securities is common knowledge. A valuable service is rendered to depositors by the arrangement of facilities for the safekeeping of these commodities.

The remaining aspect of the inquiry relating to Congressional authorization is whether the storing of these three commodities in safe deposit vaults is “storage” as that term is used in the Price Act. We feel that both in its natural significance and its use by the courts, “storage” must be taken to include services of the character involved in this controversy. Certainly the complainant may be said to be engaged in “the safekeeping of goods in a warehouse or other depository,” [Italics supplied] which, according to Webster, constitutes “storage”.6 In a New Jersey case,7 the court was concerned with a statute which defined a warehouseman to mean a person lawfully engaged in the [231]*231business of storing goods for profit. It held that a Title Guarantee and Trust Company “conducting the business of running safe deposit vaults, and warehousing valuable goods and chattels for hire” was a warehouseman within the terms of the Act. We feel, therefore, that we are dealing here with storage services as that term was employed by Congress.

In its brief, complainant has relied heavily upon the argument that the Price Act contemplated regulation only of those commodities the prices of which substantially affect the cost of living. Urging that the rentals received for its services do not bear the requisite proximity to this standard, the complainant contends that its prices were not subjected to the control of the Price Administrator. We do not believe that this contention is sound, either upon elementary economic principle, or upon the more relevant criterion of a fair construction of the Congressional language.

A substantial price increase of any commodity will not, in itself, add appreciably to the living costs of the general public. Its weight is milligramic. But the combined effect of millions of these minute quanta, which singly would not shake the scales, could be catastrophic.

It is true that an increase in complainant’s prices, in and of itself, does not substantially affect living costs. Complainant’s statement is correct, so far as it goes, but it is deceptive in its intended inference that, for that reason, no purpose is served by the regulation of safe deposit rental rates. Accession to this type of reasoning would virtually destroy the effectiveness of the Act. Complainant’s argument is applicable to thousands of commodities besides its own. Clearly, however, the collective effect of so many increased prices coüld create the very chaotic condition that the Act was designed to prevent. It is plain to us that there is compelling reason to restrain the complainant and others in its class from making their individually inappreciable contributions to what would result in a very appreciable total.

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Bluebook (online)
137 F.2d 228, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-sav-bank-v-brown-eca-1943.