The legal principles applicable to Action No. 230 against the City of Yonkers are determinative of the issues in the other three cases which need not, therefore, be separately discussed.
This is an action by the receiver of The First National Bank & Trust Company of Yonkers (herein called the Bank) against
On March 4, 1933 the City had funds on deposit in checking accounts in the Bank as follows:
(1) Treasurer of tlie City...................$275,105.53
(2) City of Yonkers.......................... 1,502.84
(3) Nepperham Sewer Fund of City of
Yonkers ................................ 621.88
On March 4, 1933, the Governor of the State of New York proclaimed a hank holiday, and on March 6, 1933, the President of the United States proclaimed a bank holiday which was extended by further proclamation on March 9, 1933, Nos. 2039, 2040, 12 U.S.C.A. § 95 note, and ratified by Congress on the latter date. The Bank never reopened for regular business after March 4, 1933, but operated under restrictions imposed by the Secretary of the Treasury until a Conservator was appointed. On March 20, 1933, the Comptroller of the Currency appointed a Conservator of the Bank and on January 23, 1934, appointed a receiver in liquidation. A dividend of 40% was made available to the general depositors of the Bank on December 16, 1933, and a second dividend of 10% was made available on November 3, 1937.
On March 4, 1933, the City held various bonds having a par value of $535,000 which had been delivered to it by the Bank as security for the above three accounts, among others. These bonds, to the amount at par of $534,000, were later returned in connection with withdrawals from the accounts.
By a series of withdrawals beginning on March 8, 1933, and ending on January 23, 1934, the City withdrew almost all of the balance in each of the three accounts as follows:
1. Account with Treasurer of City........ $275,105.53
Withdrawals:
March 8 to March 19......$ 89,226.06
March 20 to March 27.... 67,735.99
March 28 on............... 118,016.99
Total ............................. $274,979.04
2. Account with City of Yonkers.......... $ 1,502.84
Withdrawals:
May 23 to July 21, 1933.............. 1,502.84
3. Account with Sewer Fund............... $ 621.88
Withdrawals:
May 4, 1933............................ 621.88
The complainant seeks to recover fifty per cent of the above withdrawals on the ground that they constituted an unlawful preference within Sections 91 and 194, 12 U.S.C.A., the National Bank Act.
If the pledge of bonds to secure the deposits was authorized by the National Bank Act, 12 U.S.C.A. § 21 et seq., it is clear that the City had a valid lien on the bonds to the extent of its deposits and this action by the receiver must fail. Lewis v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.
The purpose of the Act of June 25, 1930, was to equalize the positions of national and state banks in competing for deposits, and is in line with a long series of acts, beginning in 1864, designed to apply the policy of equalization. Lewis v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.,
It is conceded that there was no express statutory authority in New York authorizing state banks to give security for these deposits during the times involved. In the absence of express enabling statutes state banks in New York are not authorized to pledge assets to secure either private or public deposits, and it is the duty of the Superintendent of Banks to compel them to recover any assets so pledged upon the re
But the law of New York is that pledges by state banks to secure deposits, even though ultra vires, may not be set aside until the deposits have been repaid in full, whether or not insolvency has intervened. State Bank of Commerce v. Stone,
The City argues, however, that the pledge made by the national bank in this case, even though not authorized and outside the scope of its charter powers, should be given the same effect as State law gives to similar pledges by state banks. Such a result would be contrary to the result reached in Texas & Pac. R. v. Pottorff,
The City says that these decisions are not controlling because in neither did it appear that the law of the State where the transaction occurred gave any different effect to an ultra vires pledge by a bank than that given under the federal law. Nevertheless both decisions make it plain that, unless the right to pledge is expressly granted by a federal statute, a pledge to secure deposits in national banks is wholly unauthorized and, as Justice Brandeis said in Texas & Pacific R. v. Pottorff,
It is true that in spite of the foregoing general policy of the Act, Congress has seen fit to permit national banks to give security to depositors “of the same kind as is authorized by the law of the State”, but it seems unreasonable tó suppose that the' general policy of the National Bank Act to prevent preferences is to be so limited as to permit hypothecations of assets that do not strictly fall within the statutory exceptions to a sound general rule requiring equal distribution of the assets of insolvent banks among all depositors. As we have already said the words “authorized by the law of the State” plainly relate to the authority of state banks under their charters and not to the effect to be given to their ultra vires acts. Under the law of New York, as it existed at the time the Bank became insolvent, there can be no doubt that the pledges were unauthorized. In State Bank of Commerce v. Stone,
The rationale of the two cases cited from the New York Court of Appeals appears to be that a banking corporation organized under the laws of the State has certain actual powers outside the powers authorized by its charter and that its exercise of such ultra vires powers may create an estoppel not only against the corporation itself but also against its general creditors. The measure of the powers of a national bank, on the other hand, is the statutory grant and powers not conferred by Congress are denied. The Act under which national banks are organized constitutes a complete system for their government. Cook County Nat. Bank v. United States,
The holding in Willing v. Binenstock,
While a national bank in some cases may be under a duty to return benefits it has received as the result of an ultra vires transaction (see First National Bank of Aiken v. Mott Iron Works,
The payments made by the conservator were recoverable on still another theory because made out of the assets of an insolvent under a mistake of law. LaParr v. City of Rockford, Ill., 7 Cir.,
