90 Wis. 166 | Wis. | 1895
'John B. Koetting was on the 21st day of July, 1893, the cashier and part owner of the South Side Savings Bank, a state banking corporation then doing a banking business in Milwaukee. ITe is held in custody by the sheriff of Milwaukee county upon an information charging him with having on said last-named day received for deposit in said bank a certain sum of money, the said bank then being unsafe and insolvent, and he then knoAving and having good reason to know that such bank Avas unsafe and insolvent, contrary to the provisions of sec. 4541, R. S.
The constitution of the state reserves to the people the power to grant bank charters or enact a general banking law. Secs. 4 and 5 of art. XI of the constitution are as follows :
“ Section 4.. The legislature shall not have power to create, authorize or incorporate, by any general or special law, any bank or banking power or privilege, or any institution or corporation having any banking power or privilege whatever, except as provided in this article.
“ Section 5. The legislature may submit to the voters, at any general election, the question of ‘bank,’ or ‘no bank,’ and if at any such election a number of votes equal to a majority of all the votes cast at such election on that subject shall be in favor of banks, then the legislature shall have power to grant bank charters, or to pass a general banking law, with such restrictions and under such regulations as they may deem expedient and proper for the security of the bill holders. Provided, that no such grant or law shall have any force or effect until the same shall have been submitted to a vote of the electors of the state, at some general election, and been approved by a majority of the votes cast on that subject at such election.”
Pursuant to the provisions of ch. 143, Laws of 1851, the question of bank or no bank was submitted to the people at the general election in that year, and decided in the affirma
This court has had occasion in a number of cases to pass upon questions arising under this act and its amendments. State ex rel. Reedsburg Bank v. Hastings, 12 Wis. 47; Van Steenwyck v. Sackett, 17 Wis. 645; Brower v. Haight, 18 Wis. 102; Rusk v. Van Norstrand, 21 Wis. 161; Rock River Bank v. Sherwood, 10 Wis. 230; Porter v. State, 46 Wis. 315. The result of these decisions, so far as necessary to the present discussion, seems to be the establishment of two-general propositions, which may be briefly stated as follows: First, the general banking act cannot be materially amended except by a law submitted to and approved by the people; second, banks organized under that law are subject to general statutes and rules of law which ajiply to them alike with other corporations and persons, provided there be no impairment of the powers and privileges given them by the banking law.
This was the condition of the law when ch. 213, Laws of 1816, entitled “An act to prevent fraudulent banking,” was passed by the legislature. This act provides, in substance, that no banking firm or corporation, or person engaged in
It has been decided by this court that this law is a valid law, and applies to a private banker who receives money for deposit, but the question here argued was not suggested or considered in that case. Baker v. State, 54 Wis. 368.
It will be readily noticed that the wording of the act of 1876 was somewhat altered in the revision, but it is clear that the revisers did not contemplate that any material change had been made in the law. This appears from the
This being the offense created by the statute, the question simply is whether the statute materially amends the general banking law or takes from banks any rights or privileges which the banking law conferred upon them. Stated in another way, the question is whether the banking law authorized banking by an insolvent bank. Did the people so carefully reserve to themselves the right to establish banks, only to enact a law authorizing insolvent banks to prey upon them? This is the ultimate question. Certainly, there is nothing in the banking law which authorizes the idea that such a right is expressly or impliedly conferred. Furthermore, there were in existence, at the time of the enactment of the banking law, plain and clear provisions for the sum-
The fact is, then, that the banking law did not either expressly or impliedly authorize the receiving of deposits by an insolvent bank, and the general laws which were in existence at the time of the enactment of the banking law, and ever since that time, provide for the immediate closing up of an insolvent bank as soon as the fact is known. Clearly, it must result that an insolvent bank has no franchise to do business. If it has no such franchise or privilege, then it is deprived of no right or privilege by the passage of a law punishing an officer thereof for receiving a deposit when it is insolvent to his knowledge. This law deprives the bank of nothing which it had before, and affects no right guarantied to it by the general banking law. It is not, therefore, an amendment to the banking law, but a general law, applying alike to banks and to natural persons, which, affects no banking right or privilege, but simply punishes an act fraudulent in its nature, for which the banking law provided no punishment. Such a law is clearly within the power of the legislature to enact. Brower v. Haight, 18 Wis. 102.
Our conclusion is that the demurrer to the return must be overruled.
By the Court.— The demurrer to the sheriff’s return is overruled, and the said John B. Koetting is remanded to the custody of the sheriff of Milwaukee county.