Honorable Robert E. Stewart Commissioner Department of Banking 2601 North Lamar Austin, Texas 78705
Re: Whether financial institutions including banks, may participate on a fee basis in a cash dispensing machine network operated by a corporate vendor without violating branch banking prohibitions.
Dear Commissioner Stewart:
You have requested our opinion as to whether financial institutions, including banks, may participate in a cash dispensing machine network on a fee basis, without violating article
As we understand the network, as described in a proposal submitted to you, a corporate vendor desires to contract with financial institutions such as banks, savings and loan associations and credit unions, to provide a cash dispensing machine network to the customers of such institutions. The corporate vendor proposes to own, maintain and control the network, to provide all money used and to assume all risks of loss. The machines will be located in retail stores, shopping centers and other convenient locations. Customers will gain access to the machines through use of magnetically encoded cards, including major credit cards. The sole function of the machines will be to dispense cash. The corporate vendor proposes to assess both the customer and the financial institution a fee for use of the network.
In Attorney General Opinion H-277 (1974), we said that banks which participated in a cash dispensing machine network operated by retail stores did not thereby violate the constitutional prohibition against branch banking, since the stores provided the cash and assumed all risk of loss. Except for the fee element, the relationship between the banks and the corporate vendor in the present instance is identical to the relationship between the banks and the retail merchants in Opinion H-277. It has been suggested that the payment of such fees may give rise to an agency relationship between the bank and the corporate vendor, thus converting each cash dispensing machine into an unlawful branch bank; however, Texas courts have held that the mere payment of money does not automatically create an agency relationship. Carruth v. Valley Ready-Mix Concrete Co.,
In Attorney General Opinion H-277, we were also asked to determine whether a store which operated a cash dispensing machine was unlawfully engaged in banking. Although you have not posed that question, in our opinion its resolution is essential to this inquiry.
The retail stores in Opinion H-277 were merely making use of sophisticated electronic equipment to assist them in performing a traditional function of many retail establishments, that of cashing checks for customers. The substitution of a computerized machine, connected by telephone lines to a customer's bank, for a merchant's telephone call to the bank for the purpose of verifying a customer's account before cashing his check, was not deemed a controlling distinction, nor do we believe it to be in the present instance. The only real difference in the two situations arises with regard to the primary activity of the two entities which dispense cash to their customers. To the retail merchant, check cashing is ordinarily incidental to his primary business activity. To the corporate vendor operating a cash dispensing machine, the dispensing of cash is not only its primary, but its only business activity.
In Brenham Production Credit Ass'n v. Zeiss,
Historically a bank served merely as a place for the safekeeping of the depositors' money and even now that is a primary function of a bank. 9 C.J.S., Banks and Banking, § 3, page 31. The term `bank' now by reason of the development and expansion of the banking business does not lend itself to an exact definition. 7 Am. Jur., Banks, § 2.
In Kaliski v. Gossett, Tex. Civ. App.
In Warren v. Shook,
While, of course, the lending of money is one of the principal functions of a bank, nevertheless there are many agencies authorized by both state and federal governments to lend money, which are not banks nor considered as such. . . .
Very truly yours,
John L. Hill Attorney General of Texas
Approved:
David M. Kendall First Assistant
C. Robert Heath Chairman Opinion Committee
