MacLaren v. State

124 N.W. 667, 141 Wis. 577, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 59
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 124 N.W. 667 (MacLaren v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacLaren v. State, 124 N.W. 667, 141 Wis. 577, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 59 (Wis. 1910).

Opinion

Barnes, J.

Most of tbe questions raised- by tbe plaintiff in error, hereinafter called tbe defendant, are passed upon adversely to bis contention in Weed v. Bergh, ante, p. 569, 124 N. W. 664. In addition to- tbe points there raised and decided, it is urged that G-imbel Brothers, the corporation employing the defendant, was not engaged in tbe banking business, and that the legislature could not declare that tbe mere receipt of deposits constituted such business. Tbe right of tbe legislature to reasonably regulate tbe business of tbe corporation, in so far as it extended to receiving moneys on deposit, is conceded, but it is urged that secs. 2024 — 781, 2024 — 78m, and 2024 — 78% Stats. (Laws of 1909, cb. 285), ■do not constitute valid regulation, but in fact amount to prohibition.

By sec. 2024 — 781 tbe soliciting, receiving, or accepting of money on deposit as a regular business by a person or corporation is declared to be a banking business, whether such deposit is made subject to check or is evidenced by a certificate of deposit, a passbook, a note, a receipt, or other writing. Gim-bel Brothers opened a “deposit purchase department,” received moneys up to $500 from any one desiring to deposit with it, issued passbooks evidencing such deposits, paid interest on the amounts deposited, and paid tbe principal sum deposited, with interest thereon, on demand, in money or goods, at tbe election of tbe depositor. Tbe facts established satisfy ■every call of tbe statute, and the corporation was doing a banking business if the acts done in themselves constituted tbe carrying on of a banking business or if the legislature had tbe-right to say that such acts constituted a banking business.

[580]*580Banking, in its most enlarged sense, includes the business of receiving deposits, paying checks, loaning money, dealing' in bills of exchange, etc., besides that of issuing paper money. Boone, Banking, § 3, and cases cited.

If a bank must transact the various kinds of business enumerated in the above definition in order to be a bank at all, it is apparent that we have no such institutions as state banks in Wisconsin, because such banks are not permitted to issue paper money. But the word is popularly and correctly used in a much more.restricted sense. In modern times we have a variety of institutions that do a banking business in the popular sense, although the functions performed by them may be widely variant, and none of them may be doing all of the kinds of business included in the above definition. The business conducted by national banks differs from that done by state banks, in that the latter are not banks of issue, while the savings banks do not usually perform all of the kinds of business transacted by other banks. Trust companies that receive deposits and malee loans perform two of the most important functions that are performed by banks generally, and for obvious reasons they are subject to regulation to the same extent that banks are. Morse in his work on Banking (vol. 1, § 2, 4th ed.) says that in order to have a bank “it is essential that there should be a place where, as a regular business, the money of others is received on general deposit. There must be a combination of moneys, a joint fund, as a primary condition of the existence of a bank or banker, or the transaction of banking business.”

A bank is defined by Webster as “an establishment for the custody, loan, exchange, or issue, of money, and for facilitating the transmission of funds by drafts or bills of exchange; an institution incorporated for performing one or more of such functions.” The same authority defines a bank of deposit as one “which receives money for safe-keeping.”

[581]*581In. Oulton v. Sevings Inst. 17 Wall. 109, 118, the court said:

“Banks 'in the commercial sense are of three kinds, to wit: (1) Of deposit; (2) of discount; (3) of circulation. Strictly speaking, the term ‘hank’ implies a place for the deposit of money, as that is the most obvious purpose of such an institution. Originally the business of banking consisted only in receiving deposits, such as bullion, plate, and the like, for safe-keeping until the depositor should see fit to draw it out for use, but the business, in the progress of events, was extended, and bankers assumed to discount bills and notes and to loan money upon mortgage, pawn, or other security, and at ■a still later period to issue notes of their own intended as a 'circulating currency and a medium of exchange 'instead of gold and silver. Modern bankers frequently exercise any two or even all three of those functions, but it is still true that an institution prohibited from exercising any more than one of those functions is a bank in the strictest commercial sense.”
“Banks are said to be of three kinds, viz., of deposit, of discount, and of circulation. They generally exercise all of these functions.” 1 Bouv. Dict. 211.

The following additional authorities hold, correctly we think, that any person or corporation engaged in the business carried on by banks of deposit or of discount or of circulation is doing a banking business, although but one of those functions may be exercised: Curtis v. Leavitt, 15 N. Y. 9, 56; Reed v. People, 125 Ill. 592, 596, 18 N. E. 295; People v. Bartow, 6 Cow. 290; Hamilton Nat. Bank v. Am. L. & T. Co. 66 Feb. 67, 92 N. W. 189.

The term “banking” is generally used in 'its enlarged sense, but it may also be used in a more narrow and restricted sense. There is no doubt as to the sense in which the legislature intended to use the term here, because it says that the receiving of deposits as a regular business shall constitute banking. Independent of any constitutional authority, there is no doubt about the right of the legislature to regulate banking, and neither is there any doubt about its right to regulate the busi[582]*582ness carried on by Gimbel Brothers in the way of receiving-deposits, if it should be held not to be banting.

The main purpose of regulating the banking business as the-business is now carried on is to insure the safety of deposits. The calamities that befall individuals and communities as a-result of bant failures are well tnown. The necessity for the-regulation of establishments carrying on the kind of business that Gimbel Brothers carries on is just as apparent as it is in-the case of regular banting institutions. It receives deposits-to the amount of $500 from all persons desiring to leave money with it. The depositors may, if they wish, purchase goods with, the money so deposited, but they are not required to do so. It matters not that a depositor has never purchased a dollaFs worth of goods from the corporation or that he never intends to-. So long as he elects to allow his deposit to remain, he is allowed interest thereon at the rate of four percent. per annum compounded every four months, and he may withdraw his money at any time he wishes on demand and without previous notice of intention to withdraw it. "When the high financial standing of the corporation is considered, the inducement offered to depositors is not only attractive, but alluring. We think it would not be going beyond the domain of common knowledge to- say that no bant or trust company doing business in the city of Milwaukee offers so inviting a contract to the small investor in the matter of interest rates and the privilege of converting the indebtedness to the depositor into cash.

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

Related

(1973)
62 Op. Att'y Gen. 254 (Wisconsin Attorney General Reports, 1973)
(1971)
60 Op. Att'y Gen. 306 (Wisconsin Attorney General Reports, 1971)
First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Zequeira
305 F. Supp. 37 (D. Puerto Rico, 1969)
Rosenblum v. Anglim
43 F. Supp. 889 (N.D. California, 1942)
Shinners v. State ex rel. Laacke
261 N.W. 880 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1935)
Citizens Bank & Trust Co. v. Mabry
136 So. 714 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1931)
State Ex Rel. Davis v. Knight
124 So. 461 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1929)
Marvin v. Kentucky Title Trust Company
291 S.W. 17 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)
First National Bank v. City of Hartford
203 N.W. 721 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1925)
Michigan Trust Co. v. Bronson
221 P. 628 (California Supreme Court, 1923)
Weed v. Bergh, Commissioner of Banking
124 N.W. 664 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 N.W. 667, 141 Wis. 577, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maclaren-v-state-wis-1910.