delivered the opinion of the Court.
A real estate broker brought suit in the Circuit Court for Pope County, Arkansas, against petitioner, incorporated under Act of Congress (Federal Farm Loan Act, July 17, 1916, c. 245, 39 Stat. 360), and domiciled in Missouri, to recover a brokerage commission. Pursuant to local law (Crawford & Moses’ Digest, §§ 1159-1163), he began the suit by attachment of real estate of the petitioner in the county, as that of a foreign corporation.
Petitioner appeared specially in the circuit court and moved to vacate the attachment, on the grounds that it is
The ruling of the state Supreme Court, that petitioner is a foreign corporation within the meaning of the Arkansas attachment statute, and that the attachment was authorized by local law, presents only a state question, which is not open for review here. The sole question for our consideration is whether the petitioner is exempt from attachment because it is a federal agency or instrumentality which Congress has not expressly subjected to judicial process.
Without now entering into a detailed examination of the subject, it is sufficient that this Court has already had occasion to consider the organization and functions of federal land banks, and to declare that they are instrumentalities of the federal government, engaged in the performance of an important governmental function.
Smith
v.
Kansas City Title & Trust Co.,
Section 4 of the Federal Farm Loan Act provides that federal land banks “shall have power ... to sue and be sued, complain, interplead, and defend, in any court of law and equity, as fully as natural persons.” This express waiver of immunity from suit narrows the inquiry to the question whether liability to suit includes by implication judicial process of attachment and execution, which are usual incidents of suits against natural persons. For it is conceded that if the liability to suit includes liability to execution, it would equally include liability to process of attachment, by which the property seized is held subject to execution.
In interpreting § 4, it is to be borne in mind that federal land banks, although concededly federal instrumentalities, possess also some of the characteristics of private business corporations.
1
See
Federal Land Bank
v.
Gaines, supra,
254. The statute does not contemplate that their stock is to be wholly, or even chiefly, government owned.
2
Its
The implication finds support also in the fact that the remedies afforded by the Federal Farm Loan Act to creditors of federal land banks are identical with those given to creditors of joint stock land banks. Joint stock land
It is of some significance, also, that Congress thought it necessary, by the terms of § 26, to exempt federal land
In prescribing liability to suit, the qualifying phrase “ as fully as natural persons ” is not customary in acts defining the powers and duties of private corporations, or usual in those creating corporations to perform federal functions.
3
It appears in § 8 of the National Banking
While none of these considerations, taken alone, may be enough to give clear indication of the congressional purpose, their cumulative effect is persuasive that federal land banks, like joint stock land banks, were intended to be subject to the incidents of suit, including attachment
In the present case it does not appear that the attachment would directly interfere with any function performed by petitioner as a federal instrumentality. We reserve the question whether a different result would be required if such an interference were shown.
Affirmed.
Notes
The legislative history of the Federal Farm Loan Act shows that Congress understood that many of the activities of the federal land banks were to be of a private character. See Report, Joint Cong. Comm., H. R. Doc. No. 494, 64th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 6; Report of Senate Comm. on Banking and Currency, No. 144, 64th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 2; Remarks of Senator Hollis, sponsor of the bill, 53 Cong. Rec. 6854. For this reason the Senate gave extended consideration to the constitutionality of exempting federal land banks from state taxation. 53 Cong. Rec. 6961-6970, 7305-7318, 7372-7378.
The original capitalization of the twelve federal land banks was $9,000,000, of which the Treasury subscribed $8,892,130. (Federal Farm Loan Board, Annual Report, 1917, p. 13.) As the national farm loan associations, made up of individual borrowers, were organized and borrowed from the banks, they were required to purchase
See, e. g., the acts creating the Federal Reserve Banks, c. 6, § 4, 38 Stat. 251, 254, 12 U. S. C. 341; the War Finance Corporation, c. 45, § 6, 40 Stat. 506, 507, 15 U. S. C. 336; the Inland Waterways Corporation, c. 243, § 5, 43 Stat. 360, 362, 49 U. S. C. 155; the Fed
