INLAND WATERWAYS CORP. ET AL. v. YOUNG, RECEIVER.
No. 6
Supreme Court of the United States
March 25, 1940
Argued October 11, 1939.
309 U.S. 517
Messrs. Swagar Sherley and George B. Springston, with whom Messrs. Charles F. Wilson and George P. Barse were on the brief, for respondent.
The question before us is whether a national bank may pledge assets to secure deposits of funds made by governmental agencies, even though they may not be “public money” within the scope of § 45 of the National Banking Act,
The deposits in question were made with the Commercial National Bank by three separate governmental agencies—by the Inland Waterways Corporation and the
At the threshold we are met by two recent decisions of this Court, Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Pottorff, 291 U. S. 245, and Marion v. Sneeden, 291 U. S. 262. In view of the thorough consideration which these two cases received and the added weight which they derive from the authority, in the field of banking, of Mr. Justice Brandeis, the writer of the opinions, we start with full acceptance of what they decided.
The Pottorff case held that a national bank was without authority to pledge its assets as security for private deposits. In the absence of specific authority to make such pledges, the general policy of the Act and principles of sound banking practice were drawn upon to establish the prohibition. To allow the withdrawal of assets of the bank from general availability would impair the bank‘s liquidity—its ability to meet unexpected demands by depositors—and thereby restrict the national banking system as a reliable instrument of national finance. In the Sneeden case the banking standards relied upon in
But the function of national banks as depositaries of federal funds was not before the Court in the Pottorff and Sneeden cases, and the power of the banks in relation to such funds could not have been decided there. That power is the exact issue here. The solution of this problem, however, must be found by application of those standards for judgment which were decisive in the former cases. In other words, the history and purposes of the statute and the traditional policy of the National Government in utilizing the national banks as fiscal agencies must give meaning to the silence of the Act.
Congress has necessarily been concerned from the beginning to provide appropriate safeguards for government funds. One of the motives in the establishment of the first Bank of the United States was its availability as a safe depositary for such funds. They were kept there until the expiration of that Bank‘s charter in 1811. Thereafter and until the second Bank of the United States was chartered, government monies were kept in state banks. These deposits were without security, and as a consequence severe losses followed the financial dislocation which came with the War of 1812. This experience led the Government to exact security, and losses became negligible. Phillips, Methods of Keeping the
It is against this background that the National Banking Act of 1864 must be projected, intended as it was to provide facilities for the deposit of Government funds. Congress was alive to the Treasury‘s experience with deposits, secured and unsecured, during the preceding decades, together with the policy which had evolved from that experience. Cong. Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd Sess., Pt. I, pp. 843-45. The banking system which Congress thus established embodied a blend of governmental and private purposes. See Mercantile Bank v. New York, 121 U. S. 138, 154; Davis, The Origin of the National Banking System, S. Doc. No. 582, 61st Cong., 2nd Sess.
By § 45 of the Act, Congress specifically commanded the Secretary of the Treasury to exact security for “public monies” deposited by him in national banks. R. S. § 5153 (
So far as the powers of a national bank to pledge its assets are concerned, the form which Government takes—whether it appears as the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of War, or the Inland Waterways Corporation—is wholly immaterial. The motives which lead Government to clothe its activities in corporate form are entirely unrelated to the problem of safeguarding governmental deposits, and therefore irrelevant to the issue of ultra vires. Compare Skinner & Eddy Corp. v. Mc-Carl, 275 U. S. 1, 8.4 The true nature of these modern devices for carrying out governmental functions is recognized in other legal relations when realities become decisive. Compare Clallam County v. United States, 263 U. S. 341; Emergency Fleet Corp. v. Western Union, 275 U. S. 415. The funds of these corporations are, for all practical purposes, Government funds; the losses, if losses there be, are the Government‘s losses. Compare U. S. Grain Corp. v. Phillips, 261 U. S. 106, 113. See Seventeenth Annual Report, U. S. Shipping Board, 1933, pp. 88-89, for summary of losses borne by Treasury on behalf of the Merchant Fleet Corporation, and compare Annual Report, Inland Waterways Corporation, 1936, pp. 16-22.
The policy underlying Congressional legislation and reflected in the history of governmental deposits is confirmed by the explicit recognition of that official in whom is centered oversight of the administration of the National Banking Act. S. Doc. 175, 73rd Cong., 2nd Sess. The Comptroller of the Currency, to be sure, must himself move within the orbit of the National Banking Act. Illegality cannot attain legitimacy through practice. But when legality itself is in dispute—when Congress has spoken at best with ambiguous silence—a long continued practice pursued with the knowledge of the Comptroller of the Currency is more persuasive than considerations of abstract conflict between such a practice and purposes attributed to Congress. More than half a dozen agencies have thought it their duty to safeguard deposits in nearly a hundred banks by transactions similar to those before us. This practice had the approval of the Comptroller because he believed it within the scope of the National
Deeming the challenged pledges to have been validly made, we think petitioners were entitled to judgment. It is therefore unnecessary for us to consider the other arguments here urged in their behalf. The judgments below should be
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE REED and MR. JUSTICE MURPHY took no part in the disposition of this case.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS, dissenting:
The court below followed and applied the decisions of this court in Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Pottorff, 291 U. S. 245, Marion v. Sneeden, 291 U. S. 262, and Lewis v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 292 U. S. 559.
It is true that those cases presented the question whether national banks are authorized to give security for private deposits and those of state agencies. But the basis of each of the decisions was that national banks are without power to pledge assets as security for any deposits, in the absence of express legislative sanction. Paradoxically, the opinion of the court, while recognizing the authority, in the field of banking, of Mr. Justice Brandeis, who announced the opinions in all three cases for a unanimous court, rejects the fundamental principle of the opinions. Whereas in the Lewis case Mr. Justice Brandeis announced in plain terms that, in the absence of express authorization, a national bank has “no power
In the Texas & Pacific and Marion cases the opinions point out that whenever Congress has intended that security should be taken for deposits of government funds specific authority has been granted.1 That what was thus said by Mr. Justice Brandeis was deemed necessary to the decisions and was the deliberate conclusion of the court is evidenced by his statement in Lewis v. Fidelity Co., at p. 564:
“In Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Pottorff, 291 U. S. 245, and Marion v. Sneeden, 291 U. S. 262, . . . we held that a national bank had, prior to the Act of June 25, 1930, no power to make any pledge to secure deposits except the federal deposits specifically provided for by Acts of Congress.”
Now it is said that these cases incorrectly state the governing principle. That principle is now said to be that Congress cannot have intended to limit the authority of banks to give security in cases where administrative officers in charge of government funds have deemed it appropriate that security should be given. In other words, despite the withholding of any grant of power to institutions whose powers are only those granted,2 a power is spelled out.
The attempt to buttress the implication of the power from the fact that federal agencies have heretofore exacted security, and that the Comptroller of the Currency has been of the view that such pledges were not
“comptrollers of the currency knew that this was being done; and they assumed that the banks had power so to do. But the assumption was erroneous.”
I think that as the Court of Appeals followed the principle rightly applied in the decisions of this court its judgment should be affirmed.
The CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE MCREYNOLDS join in this opinion.
