Timmons v. Security Savings Bank

264 N.W. 708, 221 Iowa 102
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 21, 1936
DocketNo. 42958.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 264 N.W. 708 (Timmons v. Security Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timmons v. Security Savings Bank, 264 N.W. 708, 221 Iowa 102 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

For some years prior to March 3, 1933, there was operated at Marshalltown, under the laws of the state of Iowa, a bank known as the Security Savings Bank. On the 25th day of May, 1932, .John A. Timmons and Alice M. Timmons deposited $500 in this bank and received a certificate of deposit for that amount. Pursuant to a proclamation issued by the Honorable N. G. Kraschel, Lieutenant Governor of Iowa, acting in the absence from the state of Governor Clyde L. Herring, a temporary banking holiday for all Iowa banks was ordered. In compliance with this order, the Security Savings Bank of Marshalltown ceased operation at the close of business on March 3, 1933, and the bank was thereafter taken over by the superintendent of banking, for operation under the provisions of Senate File No. 111. It was authorized again to open for business on March 13, 1933, under the provisions and conditions of chapter 156 (Senate File No. Ill) of the Laws of the Forty-fifth General Assembly (Code 1935, section 9283-el et seq.). In May of 1933 an examiner of the state banking department made an examination of the bank to determine whether or not it could qualify for reorganization under the provisions of chapter 159 of the laws of the Forty-fifth General Assembly (Code 1935, section 9283-el2 et seq.). A plan of reorganization was thereafter worked out, which was approved by the Banking Department, the Executive Council, and the Governor of the State. The plan provided that the bank had to have sufficient acceptable assets to cover 50 per cent of the deposits to be taken into the reorganized bank, and that the rejected assets be set up in a trust fund to take care of the balance of the deposit liability, that a 50 per cent stock assessment be levied against the stockholders, and that the earnings of the reorganized bank be pledged to this trust fund so that the proceeds from the stock assessment and from the earnings would equal 100 per cent of the capital stock of the bank. Thereafter the 50 per cent assessment of stock was collected in cash and acceptable notes of stockholders, and the plan was presented to the depositors. The number of depositors’ agreements obtained was more than 50 per cent of the total -number of depositors holding direct, unsecured, and unpreferred obligations of the bank and aggregating more than 75 per cent of the *104 total unsecured and unpreferred obligations of the bank. A reexamination was made, and on September 1, 1933, it was released from operating under Senate File No. 111. When the bank opened on September 1, 1933, the depositors whose accounts were in excess of $10 were credited with 50 per cent of their accounts and 50 per cent was set up against the rejected assets which were placed in trust. Ten per- cent of the whole amount was payable at once, forty per cent became an assumed liability of the reorganized bank, payable within three years, and 50 per cent was represented by trust certificate to be paid from the assets placed in trust. The Timmonses did not sign the depositors’ agreement, and presented their certificate of deposit for payment some time after September 1,1933, demanding payment in full, together with interest thereon. This was refused, and shortly thereafter they commenced this action against the bank, praying for judgment in the full amount of their certificate, to wit, $500, plus interest at 3y2 per cent from May 25, 1932, and for costs. A jury was waived, and the case was tried to the court. The court, after listening to the evidence, entered judgment dismissing the case and for costs against the plaintiffs, and from said judgment, they have appealed to this court.

The appellants contend that chapter 159 of the Acts of the Forty-fifth General Assembly is unconstitutional. The case at bar was brought and submitted in the lower court prior to the decision of this court in the case of Priest v. Whitney Loan & Trust Co., 219 Iowa 1281, 261 N. W. 374, in which case the same identical question was raised and this court held that the act was constitutional. Upon this proposition the case at bar is controlled by that opinion. Speaking through Justice Hamilton, this court said, at page 1313: ‘ ‘ In a recent case in the Supreme Court of Mississippi, Dunn v. Love [172 Miss. 342] 155 So. 331, 333, 92 A. L. R. 1323, a similar statute was under investigation, and in that case the Supreme Court of Mississippi, by a divided court, held the law valid. In that case, however, the bank was in receivership, and the liquidation proceedings and plan for reorganization was during the time the bank was in receivership. The court uses the following language:

“ ‘This statute, remedial in its nature and operation, is one among a number of legislative acts devised in the attempt to meet, so far as practicable, the unusual conditions brought about *105 by the present economic depression, the most serious within the present generation, and in the effort to salvage something in the general wreck of things. In considering legislative and administrative efforts at salvage and rehabilitation, in the distressing situation with which the country has been and is yet confronted, we must not permit ourselves to be maneuvered into positions which would view the federal and state constitutions as sculptured idols, frowning with changeless features upon a changing world; for the true view, as was said by this court in City of Jackson v. Deposit Bank, 160 Miss. 752, 768, 133 So. 195, 198, is that “the interpretation of constitutional principles must not be too literal. We must remember that the machinery of government would not work if it were not allowed a little play in its joints,” an expression taken from an opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in Bain Co. v. Pinson, 282 U. S. 499, 51 S. Ct. 228, 75 L. Ed. 482. When examined in the light of this principle of constitutional interpretation, we can find nothing in the general purpose and scope of the statute which is prohibited either by the state or the federal constitution, in which connection we may observe that similar statutes have been under review in other states, and their supreme courts have upheld them in every case which has been brought to our attention. As typical of these cases, we may cite McConville v. Fort Pierce Bank, 101 Fla. 727, 135 So. 392, and Milner v. Gibson, 249 Ky. 594, 61 S. W. (2d) 273.’ ”

And at page 1316: “Summarized, it is the holding of this court that the exigencies of the-occasion were such as to call forth the reserve power of the state at the time of the enactment of Senate File No. Ill (chapter 156) and Senate File No. 483 (chapter 159); that such legislation was remedial in its nature and pertained to a matter vitally affecting the general public interest; that such legislation is ‘addressed to a legitimate end and measures taken were appropriate to that end ’; that the plaintiff and all other depositors were chargeable with notice of the existing laws, and likewise with the sovereign power of the state to enact additional remedial measures such as these, and that depositors became subject to the exercise of that power in making their deposits; and that such laws are not in contravention of article I, section 10, of the Constitution of the United States, nor of article I, section 21, of the Constitution of the state of *106

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Bluebook (online)
264 N.W. 708, 221 Iowa 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timmons-v-security-savings-bank-iowa-1936.