SPRINGFIELD INSTITUTION FOR SAVINGS & others
vs.
WORCESTER FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION & another.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Suffolk.
Present: QUA, C.J., LUMMUS, RONAN, WILKINS, & SPALDING, JJ.
Rutherford E. Smith & Richard Wait, (John F. Carr with them,) for the plaintiffs.
Henry P. Fielding, Assistant Attorney General, for the Attorney General, intervener.
Charles B. Rugg, (John I. Robinson, Kleber A. Campbell, Jr., & Donald R. Grant with him,) for the defendants.
T. Gregory Sullivan; John P. Clair; Fred N. Oliver, Michael F. McCarthy, & Joseph W. Keena of New York; and Holmes Baldridge, Assistant Attorney General of the United States, Edward H. Hickey & Donald B. MacGuineas, Attorneys, Department of Justice, by leave of court, submitted briefs as amici curiae.
WILKINS, J.
Twelve savings banks in various parts of the Commonwealth bring this bill in equity for a declaratory judgment under G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231A. The defendants are Worcester Federal Savings and Loan Association, which maintains its principal or home office in Worcester, and Union Federal Savings and Loan Association, which maintains its principal or home office in Pittsfield. The defendants, formerly Massachusetts banking corporations, are now corporations organized and operating under the home owners' loan act for the purposes of acting as local mutual thrift institutions and of financing homes. U.S.C. (1946 ed.) Title 12, §§ 1461-1468, as amended. The business of each is similar to that of savings banks and cooperative banks incorporated in this Commonwealth. See Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation v. Flaherty,
The establishment of each branch had the written approval of the Home Loan Bank Board, but was contrary to the apparent prohibition of G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 167, § 37A, inserted by St. 1949, c. 640, which reads: "No association, corporation, partnership, or person organized or operating under laws other than the laws of this commonwealth and doing a business similar to any business referred to in section one, shall establish or maintain any branch or depot in this commonwealth unless expressly authorized to operate and maintain a branch or depot by the laws under which it was organized or operates and except in accordance with the same restrictions and limitations as to branches and depots applicable to similar institutions organized or operating under the laws of this commonwealth." Section 1 contains a definition of "bank," which includes savings banks and cooperative banks. G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 167, § 1, as amended by St. 1935, c. 452, § 1. Both in 1950 and down to the present time savings banks and cooperative banks incorporated in this Commonwealth have not been allowed to establish branches in a municipality more than fifteen miles distant from that in which the main banking office is located. G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 168, § 25, as amended by St. 1949, c. 270, and St. 1951, c. 100; c. 170, § 12, as appearing in St. 1950, c. 371, § 1.
The point at issue is whether the limitation on branch banking imposed by § 37A is applicable to Federal savings and loan associations doing business in this Commonwealth. *187 The answer depends upon the effect to be given to the Federal legislation and administrative acts done pursuant to it.
Beyond question, the home loan board has been validly and generally empowered by the home owners' loan act to make rules for the organization and regulation of savings and loan associations. Fahey v. Mallonee,
While not self authorizing, Addison v. Holly Hill Fruit Products, Inc.
It does not ensue because formerly under the national bank law the power to establish branches was withheld, First National Bank v. Missouri,
Once the conclusion is reached that the Home Loan Bank Board has been clothed with Congressional sanction to allow the establishment of branches, the rest of the reasoning follows almost automatically. It then would become inconsistent to assert that there is no conflict between § 37A and the power of the board to approve the establishment of a branch and at the same time to insist that that power is so circumscribed by § 37A as to render nugatory the approval of a branch in a municipality which is not within fifteen miles of the city or town where the principal banking office is located. In our opinion, the conflict already exists, and it is a conflict which is "direct and positive." Kelly v. Washington,
If it be thought that the result reached is not in accord with the most approved principles of economics, the remedy must lie with Congress.
A decree is to be entered, with costs to the defendants, declaring that G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 167, § 37A, inserted by St. 1949, c. 640, does not render invalid the branches which have been established by the defendants with the approval of the Home Loan Bank Board.
So ordered.
NOTES
Notes
[1] "Branch office. No Federal association may establish or maintain a branch office without the prior written approval of the Board. Each application by a Federal association for permission to establish or maintain a branch office shall state the need for such branch office; the functions to be performed; the personnel and office facilities to be provided; the estimated annual volume of business, income, and expenses of such branch office; and shall be accompanied by a proposed annual budget of such association. Any business of a Federal association, except the approval of loans, may be transacted at a branch office, as authorized by its board of directors. A detailed record of all transactions of any branch office of a Federal association shall be maintained at such office and such control records as may be necessary for the proper conduct of such association's business shall be furnished by such branch office to its home office." 24 C.F.R. § 145.14. See id. § 145.13.
[1a] See § 1464 (g) for another reference to "the community to be served."
