World Bank v. Lewis
This text of 425 So. 2d 77 (World Bank v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Appellants, a proposed bank and its organizers, appeal a March 26, 1982, order of the Department of Banking and Finance (Department) entered subsequent to this [78]*78Court’s opinion of November 17, 1981, World Bank v. Lewis, 406 So.2d 541 (Fla. 1st DCA 1981).1
The events surrounding appellants’ application are described in our earlier opinion. In essence, appellants, among whom are foreign nationals, applied for a license to organize a bank on July 24, 1980. Section 120.60(4)(c), Florida Statutes (1979), is pertinent and reads as follows:
(c) Notwithstanding subsection (2), every application for license for a new bank, new trust company, new credit union, or new savings and loan association, and every application for acquisition of majority control of a bank, trust company, or savings and loan association involving a foreign national, shall be approved or denied within 180 days after receipt of the original application or receipt of the timely requested additional information or correction of errors or omissions. Any application for such a license or for acquisition of such control not approved or denied within the 180-day period or within 30 days after conclusion of a public hearing on the application, whichever is the latest, shall be deemed approved subject to the satisfactory completion of conditions required by statute as a prerequisite to license and approval of insurance of accounts for a new bank, a new savings and loan association, or a new credit union by the appropriate insurer.
Our November 17 World Bank opinion held that, as a result of the Department’s inaction, the pending application was deemed approved by operation of the statute; the sufficiency of evidence supplied by the applicants was not a consideration. The practical effect of the opinion was to direct the Comptroller to approve World Bank’s application as it existed at the end of the 180-day period.
Our opinion notwithstanding, the Department issued its March 26 order placing certain conditions upon approval of the application,2 the most objectionable of which was the requirement that the assets must be increased from the proposed two million dollars to over eight million dollars. We do [79]*79not question the good faith of the Department in seeking to impose such a requirement, but this is now a moot issue; Departmental discretion in the matter is foreclosed. The application having been approved by default, the imposition of such a condition subsequent to default approval is impermissible. To hold otherwise would eviscerate the 180-day requirement of section 120.60(4)(c).
We recognize that there are cases holding that an agency’s violation of mandatory statutory timeliness provisions does not necessarily require a reversal of the agency action.3 They are not analogous to the present case in that the statutes construed in those cases require action on the part of an agency within a certain period of time, but do not specify the consequences of a violation. In the statute we construe, the legislature has made its intent as to the consequence of a violation abundantly clear: the application “shall be deemed approved .... ” Approval by default has the effect of placing the applicants in the same position they would have enjoyed had the Department granted approval on the merits within the 180-day period.
In support of its March 17 order requiring increased capitalization, the Department argues that international banking is an area of inherently higher risk. The proposed bank would have to compete with internationally expert and highly capitalized financial institutions, and there is an excessively competitive situation for financial institutions generally in appellants’ primary service area. The Department may be correct in this assessment. Nevertheless, the time for taking action based upon these apprehensions is during the 180-day period specified in section 120.60(4)(c). Where the Department fails to take such action, as in this instance, the application is deemed approved. Our November 17 opinion should have made it clear that the approval is of the pending application. The Department may not technically approve an application and subsequently place insurmountable obstacles before the applicants which would keep the technical approval from having any practical relevance.
The order of the Comptroller dated March 26, 1982, is reversed insofar as it attempts to increase the applicants’ capitalization requirement beyond that proposed in the application and insofar as it attempts to change the name of the proposed bank from American International Bank to American Guaranty Bank. The application is deemed approved, and the applicants are now subject to the usual statutory requirements which are imposed between application approval and granting of a charter.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
425 So. 2d 77, 1982 Fla. App. LEXIS 21915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/world-bank-v-lewis-fladistctapp-1982.