State v. Waterville Savings Bank

68 Me. 515, 1878 Me. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 30, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 68 Me. 515 (State v. Waterville Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Waterville Savings Bank, 68 Me. 515, 1878 Me. LEXIS 147 (Me. 1878).

Opinion

Appleton, C. J.

This is an action of debt, to recover the assessment the defendants were required to pay the state treasurer under the provisions of c. 17, § 1, of the acts of 1875.

The organization of the bank was admitted. The trustees of the bank, finding it insolvent, temporarily closed it, and then, under the advice and direction of the state bank examiner, entered into negotiations with the depositors, the result of which was that the deposits were reduced twelve and one-half per cent, and the depositors exchanged their books for new ones crediting them with eighty seven and one-half per cent of their origiiial deposits. These arrangements were consummated so that, on November 11, 1876, the depositors’ accounts were reduced twelve and one-half per cent, as of April 29, preceding.

The bank treasurer returned the reduced amount to the state treasurer, in November, 1876, upon which the assessment provided by statute was duly made, which being duly demanded and payment refused, this action, authorized by c. 115, § 1, of the acts of 1876, was commenced.

No proceedings had been instituted by the bank examiner for the purpose of sequestrating the assets of the bank. For a brief term, the directors were arranging with the depositors for the reduction of the deposits; but they were acting as officers of the bank. There was no interference with the chartered rights and privileges of the bank. Its investments were untouched. The interest on its loans was continuing. The value of its assets remained unimpaired. They should equitably bear their proportion of the expenses of the government which protects them.

The treasurer of the defendants returning “ the average amount [518]*518of its gross deposits ” in accordance with the statute, it became their duty “ to pay the state treasurer.” In case the “ bank neglects to pay said tax when due,” the treasurer is authorized to issue his “ warrant of distress to enforce payment out of its estate and effects.” The bank is to pay to the state treasurer. It is in default if not done.

Here, then, there was an existing, vested right in the state, enforceable by warrant of distress or by action at law. Here was a sum of money due the state, which the defendants were legally bound to pay. It is not denied that this right on the part of the state, and this duty on the part of the defendants, continued in force to the passage of the act of 1877, c. 218, by which the preceding acts relating to savings banks were condensed into the last named statute. It is, however, claimed that by the repeal of prior legislation on this subject, the state has released, discharged, or in some way lost its right to the sum the defendant corporation was previously bound to pay. Is such the case ?

The act of 1877, c. 218, is entirely prospective in its operation. It repeals existing law, but it does not repeal or annihilate existing and vested rights. In Steamship Co. v. Joliffe, 2 Wall. 450, which was a suit to enforce a claim arising under a statute, which had been repealed, Field, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, says : “The claim of the plaintiff below for half pilot-age fees, resting upon a transaction regarded by the law as a quasi contract, there is no just ground for the position that it fell with the repeal of the statute under which the transaction was had. Where a right has arisen upon" a contract, or a transaction in the nature of a contract, authorized by statute,, and has been so far perfected that nothing remains to be done by the party asserting it, the repeal of the statute does not affect it, or an action for its enforcement. It becomes a vested right, which stands independent of the statute.” In that case pilotage services had been tendered but not rendered, but the claim for compensation arose upon the tender, and it was not lost by reason of the repeal of the statute.

It was'held in Belvidere v. Warren R. R. Co., 34 N. J. 193, that when a statute authorizing the laying of a tax was repealed, [519]*519after an assessment of such tax, that the repeal did not prevent the collection of such tax, such collection being regulated by the general tax law which remained unrepealed. In the case before us, the act of 1876, e. 115, under which this suit is brought, remains in full force. The remarks of Beasley, C. J., in the case last cited, are l'nlly applicable to the one at bar. When therefore, this assessment was made, the force of the act of 1862 with respect to it was wholly spent and exhausted; the thing authorized to be done was completely done; and,” he adds, “ the consequence is that, even on the most stringent application of the rule as claimed, a repeal of the statute cannot invalidate a proceeding that was fully perfected while such statute remained in force.”

The act of 1877 is a consolidation of previous laws relating to savings banks. Such a law, being prospective in its operation, cannot affect acquired rights. It cannot be imagined that it was the intention of the legislature to surrender uncollected dues. Pacific & Atlantic Telegraph Co. v. Commonwealth, 66 Penn. St. 70. It cannot be for a moment supposed that the legislature intended to discriminate against those who paid in accordance with the law and in favor of those who neglected to discharge their statutory obligations. A right acquired under a statute while in force — as a settlement — does not cease by a repeal of the statute. Starksboro v. Hiramsburg, 13 Vt. 215.

The act of 1877, c. 218, § 15, imposes the same assessment upon savings banks as was provided by the act of 1875, c. 47, § 1. There was no time iii which the savings banks were exempt from the precise statute liability sought to be enforced in this action. There was no moment in which the repealing act stood in force without being replaced by the corresponding provisions of the revised statutes,” observes Shaw, C. J., in Wright v. Oakley, 5 Met. 400, 406. It matters not whether it be a revision of statutes or a condensation of statutes on a particular subject. As a question of intention, it cannot be supposed that the legislature intended to annul existing assessments by the very act by which the same assessments were continued.

The cases cited by counsel for the defendant are not adverse to the maintenance of this action. In Com. v. Hampden, 6 Pick. [520]*520501, where a special tribunal was created by an act of the legislature, and the act was repealed without any saving of proceedings commenced and pending before, it was held that the whole'power of such tribunal ceased on such repeal, and that it could not proceed and finish what it had commenced. But Parker, C. J., in his opinion, says: The position that everything done under a statute while in force remains valid, though the statute may after-wards be repealed, is undoubtedly true, but goes no further than to render valid things actually done; \but when those things themselves are merely preliminary, the principle does not authorize a further proceeding in order to render them effectual.” But in the cáse before us, the liability had accrued. Nothing remained to be done except to discharge an existing liability. In Com. v. Kimball, 21 Pick. 373, the defendant was indicted under an act which was repealed pending the indictment, and judgment was arrested, but in delivering the opinion of the court, Shaw, C.

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68 Me. 515, 1878 Me. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-waterville-savings-bank-me-1878.