192 N.E. 580 | Ill. | 1934
The Auditor of Public Accounts closed the Oregon State Savings Bank on January 24, 1933, and thereafter appointed William L. O'Connell receiver of the bank. Subsequently, the People of the State, on the relation of the Auditor, filed a bill of complaint in the circuit court of Ogle county charging the insolvency of the bank and praying for its dissolution and the settlement of its affairs. John J. Farrell, the treasurer and ex-officio collector of Ogle county, filed an intervening petition in the proceeding by which he sought to have allowed as a preferred claim, the general taxes collected, deposited in the bank and credited *547 to his account as county collector when the bank ceased to do business. The receiver answered the petition denying the right of the county collector to a preference over the other depositors. Harriet F. Garard, a creditor, in her own behalf and in a representative capacity, interposed objections to the allowance of a preference to the county collector. Evidence was introduced and the court, by its decree, allowed the sum to the credit of the county collector, created by the deposits indicated, as a preferred claim having priority over the claims of the bank's general creditors. From that decree, the receiver prosecutes this appeal.
The Oregon State Savings Bank was organized under the banking laws of this State and conducted a general banking business in the city of Oregon, in Ogle county, until it was closed by the Auditor of Public Accounts. On March 3, 1932, John J. Farrell, the county collector of Ogle county, presented a petition to the board of supervisors of that county requesting it to designate a bank or banks in which the moneys collected by him in the payment of taxes might be deposited. In conformity with the requirement of section 153a of the Revenue act (Laws of 1931-32, p. 87; Cahill's Stat. 1933, p. 2325; Smith's Stat. 1933, p. 2374) making it compulsory for the board to comply with such requests, it designated ten banks as such depositories. One of these depositories was the Oregon State Savings Bank, and on the day it closed its doors, Farrell, as county collector, had to his credit on the bank's books, $143,425.17, collected from the general tax levy for the year 1931. The county collector had distributed no part of this sum to the State, to any political subdivision or to any public body or corporation entitled to share in it.
A reversal of the decree is sought by the appellant, the receiver of the Oregon State Savings Bank, upon several grounds. They may be reduced, however, to the contention that the revised Banking act, and, particularly section 11 directing the payment of ratable dividends to creditors *548 of closed State banks, abrogated the common law prerogative of the State to have its claim for undistributed tax moneys preferred over the bank's general creditors.
At common law the crown of Great Britain, by virtue of a prerogative right, had priority over all subjects for the payment out of a debtor's property of all debts owing to it, whether the property was in the possession of the debtor or of a third person or in custodia legis; and the priority could be defeated or postponed only through the passing of the title to the property, absolutely or by way of lien, before the sovereign sought to enforce his right. (1 Coke on Littleton, 131b; 8 Bacon's Abridgment, 91; Marshall v. New York,
To sustain his contention that the common law prerogative of the State has been abrogated by the act entitled "An act to revise the laws with relation to banks and banking," approved June 23, 1919, adopted at an election held November 2, 1920, (Cahill's Stat. 1933, p. 156; Smith's Stat. 1933, p. 195), the appellant invokes the familiar principle of statutory construction that the revision of a subject by a later statute evinces a legislative intention to substitute its provisions for the earlier law upon the same subject. (People v. Gould,
The appellant further argues that there is an irreconcilable repugnancy between the common law prerogative and the provision of section 11 of the Banking act which *551
directs the payment of ratable dividends to creditors; that under the National Banking act no preference in payment may be asserted except for the single purpose specifically provided by the act, and that, by reason of the omission of a specific provision in the Banking act of this State reserving the sovereign's common law right to priority in payment, that right necessarily has been relinquished. The pertinent paragraph of section 11 of the Banking act, approved June 23, 1919, (Cahill's Stat. 1933, p. 161; Smith's Stat. 1933, p. 201) declares that from time to time the Auditor of Public Accounts shall make a ratable dividend of the moneys collected by the receiver on all such claims as may have been proved to his satisfaction or adjudicated in a court of competent jurisdiction, and that, as the proceeds of the assets of the bank are collected, he shall make further dividends on all claims previously proved or adjudicated. The corresponding section of the National Banking act (United States Code Annotated, title 12, Banks and Banking, sec. 194) makes similar provision for the payment of a ratable dividend by the comptroller of the currency "after full provision has first been made for refunding to the United States any deficiency in redeeming the notes of such association." A comparison of the foregoing provisions discloses that while the Banking act of this State is silent upon the subject of preferences, the National Banking act expressly provides for one preference only, namely, to the Federal government for advances made to redeem the insolvent bank's circulating notes. The United States is entitled to no other preference over general creditors in the distribution of the assets of closed national banks. (Cook County Nat. Bank v. United States,
Finally, the appellant argues that section 153a of the Revenue act, approved and in force February 10, 1932, (Laws of 1931-32, p. 87) is indicative of the legislature's knowledge that the sovereign's common law right of priority in payment was non-existent in this State and that it had been repealed by the Banking act. The section invoked provides that in each county having a population of less than 150,000, it shall be the duty of the county board, when requested by the county collector, "to designate a bank or banks or other depository in which funds and moneys received by him in the collection of taxes may be deposited," and that the county collector shall be discharged from responsibility for all funds of the character defined which he deposits in a bank so designated to the extent of seventy-five per cent of its capital and surplus. To this section was appended the recital that, because of numerous bank failures, county collectors were experiencing serious difficulty in obtaining sureties upon their official bonds; that this difficulty should be removed to the extent reasonably possible before the collection of taxes in 1932; that, for these reasons, an emergency existed and that the act should take effect upon its passage and approval. *553 To establish the inference drawn by the appellant from the enactment of section 153a, he asserts that, by its terms moneys received in the collection of taxes may be deposited in national as well as State banks; that the State may neither create nor enforce priority in the payment of its claims for undistributed taxes against the assets of insolvent national banks; that it cannot be presumed the legislature would discriminate in favor of national banks by authorizing deposits of the State's money in them without the common law right of priority in payment in case of their insolvency, and that, as the result, section 153a is a recognition of the repeal or abrogation by the Banking act of the preference asserted in the case at bar. A statute itself affords the best means of its exposition, and if the legislative intent can be ascertained from its provisions, that intent will prevail without resorting to other aids for its construction. (2 Lewis' Sutherland on Stat. Const. (2d ed.) secs. 348, 366). Section 153a was not passed as an amendment to the Banking act but as an addition to the Revenue act. The provision appended to the section discloses the purpose of its enactment. The section manifests no legislative intent, either directly or in conjunction with the Banking act, so far as insolvent State banks are concerned, to deprive the State of its common law right to priority in payment. Without an express provision to that end, a sovereign right is neither abrogated nor even impaired. The wisdom or policy of section 153a is a legislative and not a judicial question; and the validity of that section is not presented for consideration for it is assumed by the appellant.
The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.
Decree affirmed. *554