Opinion
In these two mandate proceedings Central Bank, a national bank, invokes section 94 of title 12, United States Code, which provides: “Actions and proceedings against any association under this chapter may be had in any district or Territorial court of the United States held within the district in which such association may be established, or in any State, county, or municipal court in the county or city in which said association is located having jurisdiction in similar cases.”
Having been named as one of a group of defendants in two separate but similar lawsuits in the Superior Court of Sacramento County, the bank moved for changes of venue to Alameda County, the location of its main office and principal place of business. The motions were denied and the bank filed the present actions, requesting us to order the changes of venue. (Code Civ. Proc., § 400.) In this opinion we consolidate the two mandate proceedings for decision.
The venue direction of section 94 is mandatory.
(Mercantile Nat. Bank
v.
Langdeau
(1963)
The briefs debate two questions: first, whether the superior court lawsuits are local or transitory; second, whether the bank waived its venue privilege. In these actions separate groups of plaintiffs allege that they were victims of a fraudulent “investment conspiracy,” resulting in their purchase of overvalued limited partnership interests in separate apartment house developments or in the underlying real estate. The defendants are the project developers, real estate brokers and financing institutions. The litigation files reveal that Central Bank had originally financed construction of the apartment houses and had held first deeds of trust and assignments of rent as security. The bank sold the loans and assigned its security interests to other financial institutions before the lawsuits were filed. The plaintiffs seek receiverships, restraints on the exercise of default privileges, rescission of their purchase of participating interests, adjudication of title to the property, general and punitive damages. These various kinds of relief are sought from Central Bank as well as the other defendants.
The lawsuits are not local, not in rem, but transitory. An in rem action seeks to adjudicate interests in property or in a status; an in personam suit, to establish personal liability.
(Estate of Radovich
(1957) 48 Cal.2d
*966
116, 120 [
A
national bank’s venue privilege, may be waived by lack of timely assertion.
(First Nat. Bank of Charlotte, North Carolina
v.
Morgan
(1889)
We take judicial notice, as a matter of common knowledge in this locality, that Central Bank operates a branch bank in downtown Sacramento through which it conducts a general banking business in the County of Sacramento. (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (g).) As we understand the facts, the Central Bank’s main office in Alameda County, not its Sacramento branch, financed construction of the Sacramento apartment houses involved in the two lawsuits. Although independent of each other, the two kinds of activity—the conduct of a general banking business and financing the construction projects—might be viewed as a waiver of the statutory privilege. We prefer to base our decision on another ground. In our view section 94, properly construed, places the venue of actions against a *967 national bank in any county where it has a branch for the conduct of its general banking business.
Leonardi
v.
Chase Nat. Bank of City of New York, supra,
The federal Supreme Court has not considered the venue problem in the context of a branch banking situation. A number of other courts have uncritically followed the Leonardi doctrine. (See cases cited fns. 1 and 5, ante.) That doctrine denies that a national bank is “established” or “located” wherever it establishes a branch office to conduct general banking business. In our view Leonardi and its progeny read the statute erroneously, ignore the realities of modem commercial practices and violate congressional intent. State courts are bound by the federal Supreme Court’s interpretation of federal statutes, but decisions of lower federal courts are merely persuasive and will not bind the state courts where their reasoning appears erroneous. 6
Section 94 refers to the geographic area within which a bank is “established” or “located.” The Leonardi decision construes the statute as though the quoted words refer to a single place, the bank’s headquarters as conceived by its charter. Used in reference to a geographic locality, the two words denote no more than physical placement, unclouded by conceptualistic exhalations. The Leonardi opinion, we suggest, injects unnecessary *968 ambiguity into a straightforward statute. For the sake of demonstration, one may hypothesize a measure of ambiguity, hence some need for interpretation. At that point statutory history and statutory purpose combine to illumine meaning, producing an interpretation at odds with Leonardi and similar decsions.
After the 1836 demise of the Second Bank of the United States, banking by nationally chartered banks was reinstituted by the National Banking Act of 1863, which in turn was replaced by the National Banking Act of 1864. (Mercantile Nat. Bank v. Langdeau, supra, 371 U.S. at pp. 558-559 [9 L.Ed.2d at pp. 526-527].) The venue provision, now section 94, originated in the 1863-1864 legislation. The venue statute had interstate and intrastate consequences. It protected a national bank from suits in federal or state courts outside the state where it was established or located. Within the state of domicile, it protected the bank from suit in counties where it was not established or located.
The 1863-1864 statutes did not authorize branch banks; both had in view an array of single-office banks. (See
First Nat. Bank
v.
Missouri
(1924)
The general system of single-office national banks persisted for three-quarters of a century.
7
In many states competitive pressures emanated from
*969
branch banking by state banks. (See
Bank of Italy
v.
Johnson
(1926)
Only after the advent of branch banking was there occasion to distinguish between the multiple physical locations of a banking enterprise and the unitary, synthetic concept of domicile, headquarters or “principal” place of business. The statutes, nevertheless, continued to speak in terms of physical location. Before the 1927 amendments the National Banking Act had declared: “The usual business of each national banking association shall be transacted at an office or banking-house located in the place specified in its organization certificate.” (Rev. Stat. § 5190, as added by 13 Stat. 101 (1864).) The McFadden Act amended this declaration to read: “The general business of each national banking association shall be transacted in the place specified in its organization certificate and in the branch or branches, if any, established or maintained by it. . . .” (Rev. Stat. § 5190, as amended by 44 Stat. 1229 (1927); 12 U.S.C. § 81.)
The McFadden Act, moreover, declared: “No branch of any national banking assocation shall be established or moved from one location to another without first obtaining the consent and approval of the Comptroller of the Currency.” (Rev. Stat. § 5155(e), as added by 44 Stat. 1228 (1927); 12 U.S.C. § 36(e).)
A truism of the law admonishes courts to construe statutes in the light of associated legislation. Any uncertainty beclouding the venue statute before 1927 should have been eliminated by that year’s legislation. Viewed in relation to the former single-office system of banking, the venue statute’s concern had been the physical location of the banking business, not the synthetic charter designation. The 1927 legislation now spoke in terms of banks which would be “established” at the “locations” of their authorized branches. The venue statute suffered no change, express or implied. With reference to a multibranch bank, it continued its concern with the physical placement of each bank’s “general business,” that is, the locations of its main banking office and its branch banking offices. 8
*970
Statutory purpose leads to the same interpretation as statutory language. Section 94 recognizes one of the hard realities of adversary litigation—that litigants sometimes use venue tactics as a club. As we have observed, the federal Supreme Court discerned a statutory purpose to prevent disruptions of bank business caused by sending records to distant lawsuits.
(First Nat. Bank of Charlotte, North Carolina
v.
Morgan, supra,
A 1971 report of the California Superintendent of Banks reveals that four leading national banks had 994, 422, 285 and 283 branches, respectively, in California’s 58 counties. 9 Another source shows that these same four banks had 37, 5, 16 and 19 branches, respectively, in Sacramento County alone. 10 The same sources reveal that petitioner Central Bank had 34 branches in California in 1971, including the Sacramento branch. When a bank spreads its general banking business throughout the state, the possibilities of harassment dwindle and disappear. Occasionally, as here, one branch may reach across internally prescribed boundaries and transact business in another branch’s locality. Most lawsuits grow out of local business conducted by a local branch. When local business gets a bank into a lawsuit in a county where it has one or more branches, the bank’s insistence on moving venue to its home office subverts the federal statute into a tactical weapon. 11
There is nothing in section 94 or the accompanying legislation which places venue in one place to the exclusion of all others. The Leonardi case and its progeny (fns. 1 and 5, ante) fail to recognize that location of the *971 banting business, not location of headquarters, is the venue statute’s prime concern; fail to appraise the statute in the light of the associated legislation enacted in 1927; turn, instead, to the dim light of an 1871 decision handed down in the era and formulated in the context of single-office banting. They frustrate congressional intent to allow national banks to be sued where they establish their banking business. 12 We construe section 94 to mean that a national bank is “located” and may bé sued in a county where it has a branch bank. In the case of petitioner Central Bank, Sacramento is such a county.
The petitions for mandate are denied.
Regan, J., and Janes, J., concurred.
Petitioners’ application for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 25, 1973.
Notes
E.g.,
United States National Bank
v.
Hill
(9th Cir. 1970)
Michigan Nat. Bank
v.
Robertson
(1963)
See
Michigan Nat. Bank
v.
Superior Court, supra,
23 Cal.App.3d at pages 10-12, and cases cited; Annotation
Reaves
v.
Bank of America
(S.D.Cal. 1973)
United States National Bank
v.
Hill, supra,
People
v.
Bradley
(1969)
The history of the venue statute in relation to the development of branch banking is narrated in greater detail in Schefflin and Dixon, An Assault on the Venue Sanctuary of National Banks (1966) 34 Geo.Wash.L.Rev. 765. The thesis we pursue here was suggested by that article. See also, Helco, Inc. v. First National City Bank, supra, 333 F.Supp. at pages 1292-1293.
The phrase “general business” is extracted from Revised Statutes section 5190, 12 United States Code section 81, supra.
Superintendent of Banks, State of California, Sixty-second Annual Report (1971) page 44.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Operating Banking Offices, January 1, 1972.
A national bank’s vulnerability to suit where it establishes a branch bank will not expose it to “nuisance” actions outside the state of its domicile because, generally speaking, the National Banking Act restricts branch banking to the state where the bank has its headquarters. (See 12 U.S.C. § 36(c);
Frankford Supply Co.
v.
Matteo, supra,
Several courts have suggested that the Congress has displayed its satisfaction with the
Leonardi
rule by failing to amend section 94; or that any change must emanate from the Congress.
(United States National Bank
v.
Hill, supra,
