270 N.W. 178 | Mich. | 1936
Plaintiff on appeal denies the applicability of Act No. 98, Pub. Acts 1933, as amended *670
(the moratorium act), to proceedings brought to foreclose a mortgage given to and owned by a joint stock land bank organized under the Federal farm loan act.* Plaintiff claims that it is a Federal instrumentality organized under a law designed to relieve the financial distress of farmers and that additional relief may not be extended to them by moratorium legislation. We accept plaintiff's contention that the State has no power to obstruct or interfere with the proper functions and legitimate operations of a bank organized under a national banking act. Davis v. Elmira Savings Bank,
Our attention is called to the cases of Leuthold v. DesMoines Joint Stock Land Bank of Des Moines, Iowa,
In McClellan v. Chipman,
"National banks '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 and construed by State laws. Their acquisition and transfer of property, their right to collect their debts, and their liability to be sued for debts, are all based on State law. It is only when the State law incapacitates the banks from discharging their duties to the government that it becomes unconstitutional.' * * *
"No function of such banks is destroyed or hampered by allowing the banks to exercise the power to take real estate, provided only they do so under the same conditions and restrictions to which all the other citizens of the State are subjected, one of which limitations arises from the provisions of the State law which in case of insolvency seeks to forbid preferences between creditors."
Again in First National Bank in St. Louis v. State ofMissouri,
"Clearly, the State statute, by prohibiting branches, does not frustrate the purpose for which the bank was created or interfere with the discharge of its duties to the government or impair its efficiency as a Federal agency."
The decree of the lower court is affirmed, but without costs, the question being a public one.
NORTH, C.J., and FEAD, WIEST, BUSHNELL, SHARPE and TOY, JJ., concurred. POTTER, J., did not sit.