State ex rel. Sparks v. State Bank & Trust Co.

31 Nev. 456
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1909
DocketNo. 1812
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 31 Nev. 456 (State ex rel. Sparks v. State Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Sparks v. State Bank & Trust Co., 31 Nev. 456 (Neb. 1909).

Opinions

Per Cxtriam:

The appeal is from a judgment of the district court declaring that it was unsafe for the defendant The State Bank and Trust Company to continue business, ordering the bank into liquidation, enjoining its directors from transacting any of its business, appointing a receiver, and directing the bank examiner to deliver to the receiver all property of the bank. We have presented for consideration the constitutionality of an [464]*464act entitled "An act creating a board of bank commissioners, defining their duties, providing for the appointment of a bank examiner, prescribing his duties, fixing his compensation, providing penalties for the violation of the provisions of this act, and other matters relating thereto? approved March 26, 1907 (Stats. 1907, p. 229, c. 119).

Among other things this statute provides that the governor, secretary of state, and state treasurer shall constitute a board of bank commissioners, and this board shall appoint a thoroughly expert bank examiner, and it shall be his duty to examine the accounts and report the condition of all banks throughout the state; to prepare and furnish to every bank, banking firm, corporation, and company doing a banking business a license in the form prescribed by him, authorizing the transaction of a banking business; to furnish on demand to all banks blank forms of statements as may by law be required of them, twice in each year, and as much of tener as in his judgment it may be deemed necessary, and without previous notice to visit and make full examination of all banking corporations. Section 7 provides a penalty for the failure of the bank examiner to report to the bank commissioners the insolvency or unsafe condition of any banking corporation. Section 8 provides that no corporation, firm, or individual shall transact a banking business without the requisite license, and section 9 directs that banking corporations, including banks in liquidation or insolvency, whenever required by the bank examiner, shall make a report showing their exact financial condition.

The principal attacks made by the imposing array of counsel are directed against the title, as designated above, and section 10, which provides: "* * * If it shall appear to said examiner that it is unsafe for any such corporation to continue to transact business, it shall be the duty of such examiner to immediately report the condition of such corporation to the bank commissioners; and if the bank commissioners, either from the report of the bank examiner, or from their own knowledge, decide that it is unsafe for any such corporation to continue to transact business they shall authorize the bank examiner to take such control of such corporation, and [465]*465of the property and effects thereof, as may be by them deemed necessary to prevent waste, or diversion of the assets, and to hold possession of the same until the order of court hereinafter mentioned, and it is hereby made the duty of the attorney-general, upon being notified by the bank commissioners, to immediately commence suit in the proper court against such corporation and the directors and trustees thereof to enjoin and prohibit them from the transaction of any further business. If upon the hearing of the case the court shall find that such corporation is solvent, and may safely continue business, it may dismiss the action, and order that the corporation be restored to the possession of the property. But if the court shall find that it is unsafe for such corporation to continue business, or that such corporation is insolvent, said court shall by its decree order such corporation into involuntary liquidation, and shall issue the injunction prayed for, and shall cause the same to be served according to law, and shall order the bank examiner to surrender the property of the corporation in his possession to a receiver appointed by the court for the purpose of liquidation. * * *”

It is claimed that this act is in violation of section 17, article IV, of our State Constitution, in that the subject of the act is not expressed in the title; that the statute is invalid because it embraces more than one subject; that the provisions of section 10 are .in violation of section 20, article TV, of the Constitution, which forbids the passage by the legislature of local or special laws regulating the practice of courts of justice; that because the action is brought in the name of the state, on the relation of the bank commissioners, there is no- proper party plaintiff; that section 10 of the statute is voidj in that it attempts to delegate to an executive board judicial functions, in violation of section 1, article III, of the Constitution; and that this section of the act denies appellants equal protection of the laws, and is therefore in conflict with section 1 of the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

The main principles controlling these questions have been well-nigh settled by this and other courts. That section 17, article IV, of the Constitution, providing that "each law [466]*466enacted by the legislature shall embrace but one subject and matters properly connected therewith” is mandatory must be conceded. In regard to this objection we need only determine whether this action and the decree of the district court relate to matters germane to the subject expressed in the title of the act, or to what is properly connected therewith. It appears to be admitted that if the title had simply specified that the act was one regulating or relating to banking, the statute might be sustained, although it is urged, in another division of the brief, that the act is void because it relates to more than one subject. If it does so relate, the part properly connected with the title would not be void, while the remainder might be open to rejection. If the different provisions of this statute could be deemed sufficiently connected under a title simply designating it as "An act relating to banking” we see no reason why they may not be considered so with a title which designates one or more of the matters to which the others are properly connected. Under the language of the Constitution no necessity appears for requiring separate acts, or even separate designations in the title, for all the different provisions in this statute.

The creation and specification of the duties of the board of bank commissioners, and the definition of their powers, is properly connected with the appointment and duties of the bank examiner, who is appointed by, and reports .to, this board, and the same may be deemed true of the suit which the board is authorized to have brought through the attorney-general against any bank which is not solvent or in a safe condition to do business, and of the appointment of the receiver to whom the bank examiner is directed to surrender the property. We are unable to see that the suit and the appointment of a receiver are not connected with the duties of the board and the bank examiner and their duties in instituting the suit and surrendering the property to the receiver. Under the argument presented it could be claimed that, if the title of the act further provided that it was for the bringing of actions, and of the appointment of receivers against insolvent or unsafe banks, the title related to three or more matters not properly connected; or, if the title simply stated that [467]*467it was an act providing for the regulation and liquidation of insolvent or unsafe banks, the creation of the bank commission and the appointment of the bank examiner were matters relating to officers, and not germane to any provisions authorizing suit against the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Nev. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-sparks-v-state-bank-trust-co-nev-1909.