123 P. 712 | Or. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
The situs of the property sought to be escheated is within the State; the defendant is within the State; and the published notice of the proceeding, with the names of the depositors, is sufficient to give notice to them, or other persons interested, that such a proceeding has been instituted. It is difficult to see how any other method, so likely to attract the attention of absentee depositors or their heirs, could possibly be devised.
It is common knowledge that banks sometimes become insolvent or go out of business, while the State never does either; and the law may well step in and hold safe for the owner a deposit which, from its long standing it may well be assumed that he has forgotten, or, by reason of some disability, is. not able to claim; and the bank, having paid it to the State in obedience to a judgment of the court, could not be compelled to respond to the depositor. Nelson v. Blinn, 197 Mass. 279 (83 N. E. 889: 15 L. R. A. [N. S.] 651: 125 Am. St. Rep. 364: 14 Ann. Cas. 147) ; Attorney General v. Provident Institution for Savings, 201 Mass. 23 (86 N. E. 912) ; Cunnius v. Reading School Dist., 206 Pa. 469 (56 Atl. 16: 98 Am. St. Rep. 790) ; Cunnius v. Reading School Dist., 198 U. S. 458 (25 Sup. Ct. 721: 49 L. Ed. 1125: 3 Ann. Cas. 1121).
In Attorney General v. Provident Institution for Savings, the court uses this language: “The contract between the corporation and each depositor, by an implied condition, was to be subject to termination by the commonwealth, whenever conditions should arise that would justify the state in exercising this power to take the property into its care for the benefit of the persons entitled to it, and when the commonwealth, in view of these conditions, should assert this power.”
In Cunnius v. Reading School District, it was held that the right to regulate concerning the estate or property of absentee is an attribute which, from its very essence, must belong to all governments, and that legislation to that end was not violative of the due process of law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
The government, as founder of the National Banking Association, possesses the same visitorial powers with respect to it as a private institution. The visitoral power over any civil corporation resides in the authority creating it; and when we seek for a definition of the term “visitorial power,” as used in the National Banking. Act, we must assume that it means the power, to paraphrase
The term should also be interpreted in the light of the visitoral powers enumerated in the National Banking Act. These in brief are set out in U. S. Rev. St. § 5240 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3516), which provides for the appointment of bank examiners, authorized to make a thorough examination of the affairs of every banking association, examine its officers and agents, under oath, and make a report of the condition of the bank to the controller. These, we take, are the visitorial powers referred to, and which no authority but congress can authorize. The holding of the federal courts is in accordance with this view.
The case of First Nat. Bank of Youngstown v. Hughes (C. C.) 6 Fed. 737, is a case in point. Hughes was an assessor, and, in conformity with the laws of Ohio, served a notice upon the president of the plaintiff bank, requiring him to appear at a date specified and bring with him the books of account of the bank, showing the deposits up to a certain date and the names of the depositors and the amount deposited. The president refused to produce the books or give the list of depositors, and, upon threat of Hughes to press the investigation before the grand jury, brought a suit to enjoin him from proceeding further, on the ground that the investigation was an exercise of the “visitorial powers” prohibited by Section 5241, U. S. Rev. St. The suit was dismissed; the court saying: “But do the defendants, or either of them, propose the exercise of visitorial authority? We think not. Visitation, in law, is the act of a superior or superintending officer, who visits a corporation to examine into its manner of conducting business, and enforce an observance of its laws and regu
In National Bank v. Commonwealth, the court observes: “The principle we are discussing has its limitation — a limitation growing out of the necessity on which the principle itself is founded. That limitation is that the agencies of the federal government are only exempted from state legislation, so far as that legislation may interfere with or impair their efficiency in performing the functions by which they are designed to serve that government. Any other rule would convert a principle, founded alone in the necessity of securing to the government of the United States the means of exercising its legitimate powers, into an unauthorized and unjustifiable invasion of the rights of the states. The salary of a federal officer may not be taxed; he may be exempted from any personal service which interferes with the discharge of his official duties, because those exemptions are essential to enable him to perform those duties. But he is subject to all the laws of the state which affect his family or social relations or his property; and he is liable to punishment for crime, though that punishment be imprisonment or death. So of the banks. They are subject to the laws of the state, and are governed in their daily course of business far more by the laws of the state than of the nation. All their contracts are governed
We conclude, therefore, that national banks are only exempted from state legislation to the extent that such legislation impairs their efficiency to perform the functions which they were designed to serve, and that the legislation here proposed does not have this effect.
It is true that it is urged that defendant’s assets will be depleted pro tanto by requiring it to pay this money over to the State; but it is also true that its liabilities will be extinguished to the same extent, and the objection is without merit.
The judgment is affirmed. Affirm:ed.