The decision of state tribunals in regard thereto is an
important element to be considered in determining the interest
which the state has in a fund administered by a state board.
The state courts of Oklahoma having held that the statute
creating the State Banking Board intended to give the state a
definite title to the Depositors' Guaranty Fund, the fact that the
fund is to be used to satisfy claims of beneficiaries does not take
its administration from the officers of the state or subject them
to judicial control. This Court will not assume that the fund will
not be faithfully managed and applied.
Murray v. Wilson
Distilling Co., 213 U. S. 151. A
suit by a depositor in a bank in Oklahoma against members of the
State Banking Board and the Bank Commissioner of Oklahoma to compel
payments from, distribution of, and assessments for the Depositors
Guaranty Fund is a suit against the state, and, under the Eleventh
Amendment, cannot be maintained in the federal court.
The facts, which involve the application of the Eleventh
Amendment to suits brought in the federal courts against the
members of the State Banking Board of Oklahoma to compel payments
from, and distribution of, the Depositors' Guaranty Fund of that
state, are stated in the opinion.
Page 235 U. S. 468
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Suit in equity brought by appellee against appellants,
constituting the Oklahoma State Banking Board. The Platte Iron
Works Company, appellee, is a Maine corporation and a citizen of
that state, and became the holder of two certain time certificates
of deposit issued by the Farmers' & Merchants' Bank of Sapulpa.
Appellants are members of the State Banking Board, and the
appellant J. D. Lankford is the State Bank Commissioner.
On September 10, 1912, the Bank Commissioner took charge of the
Farmers' & Merchants' Bank and of all its assets, and proceeded
to wind up its affairs. Demand for the payment of the certificates
was made upon the Banking Board and the commissioner out of the
Depositors' Guaranty Fund of the state, but payment was
refused.
A decree was prayed adjudging appellee owner of the deposits and
certificates of deposit, and that it was entitled to have the same
paid out of the Depositors' Guaranty Fund created under and by
virtue of the laws of the state. If there should be not sufficient
funds available therefor, that the Banking Board be required to
issue to appellee certificates of indebtedness for the amount of
the deposit, to be known as "Depositors' Guaranty Fund warrants of
the State of Oklahoma," bearing 6% interest as provided by §
3, Article 2, chapter 31, Session Laws of Oklahoma, 1911, as
amended by Senate Bill No. 231, passed at the last session of the
state legislature, and that the Banking Board be required to levy
an assessment against the capital stock of each and every bank and
trust company organized and existing under the laws of Oklahoma for
the purpose of increasing such Depositors' Guaranty Fund, and pay
the deposits and the "Depositors' Guaranty Fund warrants of the
State of Oklahoma." General relief was also prayed.
Page 235 U. S. 469
Defendants in the suit, appellants here, moved to dismiss the
bill on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction of the action
or of the persons of the defendants, the suit being one against the
State of Oklahoma without its consent, in violation of the
provisions of the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution of the
United States.
The motion was denied and defendants were given thirty days to
answer. No answer appears in the record, but the decree recites
that one was filed. The court entered a decree as prayed for in the
bill, and this appeal was then prosecuted.
The assignments of error in this Court are: (1) the suit is an
original action in mandamus, and the district court had no
jurisdiction, the same not being ancillary to any judgment
theretofore obtained; (2) the suit is one against the state, "the
defendants [appellants] having no personal interest therein and
being sued in their official capacity as agents" of the state; (3)
the amended bill upon its face states no cause of action for
relief.
Is the suit one against the state? The appellee earnestly
contends that the answer should be in the negative. "An action,"
counsel say,
"against a state officer to compel him to perform duties
prescribed by law is not an action against the state. An officer
who refuses to obey the laws does not stand for the state within
the meaning of the federal Constitution."
These contentions depend upon the meaning of the law; they
assume its commands are disobeyed by the officers of the state --
in other words, that the default of the officers is personal, in
opposition, not in conformity, to the law of the state. But another
and seemingly broader contention is made. It is asserted that the
Depositors' Guaranty Fund is not under the executive and
legislative control of the state, and cannot be used by either for
any purpose whatever, but "can be used solely for the purpose of
paying depositors of failed banks." Two questions,
Page 235 U. S. 470
therefore, are presented, one of power and one of
interpretation.
This Court, in
Noble State Bank v. Haskell,
219 U. S. 104,
sustained the constitutionality of the act as an exercise of the
police power of the state. The law, in its general purpose, was
there presented and passed on. The relation of the state to the
fund did not come up for consideration, but necessarily this is but
a detail in administration, not one affecting legality of the law.
The creation of the fund was said to be justified by its purpose,
and the power of the state was declared adequate to accomplish it.
"The purpose of the fund," it was said, "is shown by its name. It
is to secure the full repayment of deposits."
Where the state should vest the title to the fund for the
purpose of its administration was immaterial to the essence of the
power to create the fund. Whether the state should commit it to the
mere ministerial administration of the Bank Commissioner and
Banking Board, and subject them to controversies with depositors,
or draw around them the circle of its immunity, was a matter within
its competency to determine, and we are brought to the question of
interpretation -- which has the state done?
By the statute, the Banking Board is composed of the Bank
Commissioner and three other persons, to be appointed by the
governor, and it is provided that the
"board shall have supervision and control of the Depositors'
Guaranty Fund, and shall have power to adopt all necessary rules
and regulations not inconsistent with law for the management and
administration of said fund."
The fund is created by levying "against the capital stock of
each and every bank organized and existing under the laws" of
the
"state an annual assessment equal to one-fifth of one percent,
and no more, of its average daily deposits during its continuance
as a banking corporation,"
the fund to be "used solely for the purpose
Page 235 U. S. 471
of liquidating deposits of failed banks and retiring warrants
provided for" in the act. If at any time the fund be insufficient
for such purpose or to pay
"other indebtedness properly chargeable against the same, the
Banking Board shall have authority to issue certificates of
indebtedness to be known as 'Depositors' Guaranty Fund warrants of
the State of Oklahoma,' in order to liquidate the deposits"
or such other indebtedness. It is provided that the depositors
shall be paid in full, and when the cash available, or that can be
made immediately available, is not sufficient to discharge the
obligations of the bank or trust company,
"the Banking Board shall draw from the Depositors' Guaranty Fund
and from additional assessments, if required, as provided in §
300, the amount necessary to make up the deficiency, and the state
shall have, for the benefit of the Depositors' Guaranty Fund, a
first lien upon the assets of said bank or trust company, and all
liabilities against the stockholders, officers, and directors of
said bank or trust company, and against all other persons,
corporations, or firms. Such liabilities may be enforced by the
state for the benefit of the Depositors' Guaranty Fund."
The contention of appellee is that the law has created a fund
for the payment of depositors, and directs that they shall be paid
in full from the fund or "from additional assessments." If the fund
be insufficient for such purpose, it is further contended, the
Board is required to issue guaranty fund warrants in order to
liquidate the deposits. Such, it is insisted, are the plain
commands of the statute to which obedience is imposed and is
necessary to fulfil the purpose of the law, which is to secure the
full repayment to depositors. And therefore a suit by depositors is
not a suit against the state, but a suit to compel submission by
the officers of the state to the laws of the state, accomplishing
at once the policy of the law and its specific purpose.
Page 235 U. S. 472
There is strength in the contentions, and we are not insensible
to it, but there may be more complexity in fulfilling the scheme of
the statute than the language of counsel exhibits, and it may be
embarrassed, if not defeated, by subjecting the Banking Board to
incessant judicial inquiries of its administration. We certainly
cannot assume that it will not do its duty and provide the ultimate
payment of all depositors. To this result the state makes itself an
active agent. It is given a lien upon the assets of insolvent banks
and upon all liabilities against their stockholders, officers,
directors, and against other persons, which may be enforced by the
state for the benefit of the fund which its law has created.
In
Murray v. Wilson Distilling Co., 213 U.
S. 151, there is analogy to the case at bar. The State
of South Carolina in the year 1892 assumed the exclusive management
of all traffic in liquor. It subsequently abandoned the scheme and
passed an act called "the state dispensary act" to provide for the
disposition of all property of the instrumentality it had created
and to wind up its affairs. A commission was appointed for that
purpose. A part of the duties of the commission was to dispose of
the property, collect all debts due, and pay "from the proceeds
thereof all just liabilities at the earliest date practicable." Any
surplus was to be paid to the state treasury. A duty therefore was
imposed upon the commission to collect the assets of the dispensary
and pay its debts, and it was as directly expressed as was the duty
imposed upon the Banking Board in the pending case.
The Wilson Distilling Company contended that the winding-up act
of the state created a trust, and the funds in the hands of the
commission were a trust fund held for the benefit of the creditors
of the state dispensary, and the suit a plain suit in equity
brought by a
cestui que trust to compel a trustee holding
property for his benefit
Page 235 U. S. 473
to perform the duties imposed upon him. The suit, therefore, it
was contended, was not to require the commissioners to do that
which the law of the state forbade, but to do what the law of the
state commanded, and the state was not a necessary nor an
indispensable party. The contentions received the approval of the
circuit court of appeals, but this Court took a different view of
them, and decided that there was
"no just ground for the conclusion that the state, in providing
. . . for the liquidation of the affairs of the state dispensary,
intended to divest itself of its right of property in the assets of
that governmental agency, and to endow the commissioners with a
right and title to the property which placed it so beyond the
control of the state as to authorize a judicial tribunal to take
the assets of the state out of the hands of those selected to
manage the same, and by means of a receiver to administer such
assets as property affected by a trust, irrevocable in its nature,
and thus to dispose of the same without the presence of the
state."
The case, it is true, has some differences from that at bar.
There, the state was the owner of the property committed to the
commissioners for disposition, and was also the original debtor.
Here, the property is that of the contributing banks, and is
accumulated in a fund for the security of their respective
depositors. These are differences, but there are substantial
resemblances. In that case, officers were appointed to administer
the property and liquidate and pay the demands against it, and this
was the specific direction of the law, marking the beneficiaries,
and apparently making them the exclusive parties in any proceedings
to enforce the law. In this case, officers are appointed having
even a greater power. They are not only empowered to liquidate the
deposits or other indebtedness of failed banks, but to levy
assessments on other banks to make up any deficiency. Therefore, as
the
Page 235 U. S. 474
state was said to be a necessary party in the cited case, the
state can be said to be a necessary party in the pending case
because of its interest that the fund which it has caused to be
created in pursuance of its policy shall be administered by the
officers it has appointed, rather than by judicial tribunals.
Certainly this construction can be given to the Oklahoma statute;
and, granting that it may admit of dispute, an important element to
be considered is the decision of the state tribunals.
In
State v. Cockrell, 27 Okl. 630, the Supreme Court of
Oklahoma had occasion to define the duties of state examiner and
inspector. It decided that the office was constituted by the
constitution of the state and was independent of the control of the
governor, and, passing upon the authority of the examiner and
inspector over the accounts of the Bank Commissioner, it decided
that "the funds and assets" of an insolvent bank are "under the
management of the state," and
"that the Depositors' Guaranty Fund and the funds of a failed
bank in the hands of a Bank Commissioner for the purpose of
reimbursing the Depositors' Guaranty Fund is as much a fund of the
state as the common school fund."
It was further decided that the act creating the fund was
sustained as an exercise of the police power for the public welfare
of the people of the state, and, having been so exercised, the
assessment levied by it upon deposits for the purpose of protecting
the depositors of the banks is the exertion of the same power
"which levies or causes to be levied, a tax upon the property
within the state for the maintenance and support of the common
schools and educational institutions."
And it was said:
"The title of such Depositors' Guaranty Fund vests in the state
just as much so as the common school lands or the proceeds of the
sale of the same, and the taxes levied and collected for the
maintenance and support of said schools, all of which are held in
trust by the state for
Page 235 U. S. 475
a specific purpose. Even if it were not a state fund, it would
at least be a fund under the management of the state."
From this decision, it appears that the law intended to give to
the state as definite a title to the Depositors' Guaranty Fund as
to the common school fund; as definite therefore as the title of
South Carolina to the assets of the state dispensary, which was the
subject of decision in
Murray v. Wilson Distilling Co. In
both cases, there were ultimate beneficiaries -- in the pending
case, the bank depositors; in the other case, the creditors of the
dispensary. And the purpose of the law -- or, if you will, the
command of the law -- in each case was or is the satisfaction of
the claims of those beneficiaries. The fund, having this ultimate
destination, does not take its administration from the officers of
the state, or subject them to judicial control. We cannot assume
that it will not be faithfully managed and applied.
In
Lovett et al., County Commissioners of Creek County v
Lankford, et al. composing the Banking Board of the State of
Oklahoma, 145 P. 767, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma decided, citing
the
Cockrell case, that the defendants in error in the
case composing the Banking Board were
"executive officers of the state, and in performing their duties
in administering the law under consideration [the guaranty fund
act] do so as such officers, and the property entrusted to their
control and management by the law is property owned by the state,
or property in which the state has an interest,"
and that therefore a suit against them to compel their
administration of the Depositors' Guaranty Fund "is, in fact a suit
against the state, and in the absence of the consent of the state,
the same cannot be maintained." The court further said that
"the law has specifically confided to the Banking Board and the
Bank Commissioner the duty and authority to determine the validity
of claims against the depositors'
Page 235 U. S. 476
guaranty fund,"
and also that
"it is not only their duty to determine when a claim is valid
against the bank, but they must further determine whether such
claim is protected and required to be paid from the Depositors'
Guaranty Fund.
Lankford v. Oklahoma Engraving & Printing
Co., 35 Okl. 404."
Any other view, the court in effect said, would not only
substitute the judgment of a court for that of the officials, "but
would harass and create confusion, the effect of which would
destroy the efficiency of such board." The case and
Columbia
Bank and Trust Company v. United States Fidelity and Guaranty
Company, 33 Okl. 535, give special emphasis to the principle
announced. Both were suits to recover deposits respectively of
county and state moneys deposited as general or special
deposits.
It will serve no purpose to review the cases cited by appellee
in which state officers were enjoined from doing unlawful acts,
prescribed, it may be, by unconstitutional laws, or commanded by
valid laws to perform specific duties. Examples of such cases are
reviewed and distinguished in
Murray v. Wilson, and there
is a later example in
Hopkins v. Clemson College,
221 U. S. 636.
The foundation of appellee's argument is, as we have said, that
the Oklahoma statute imposed the duty upon the Bank Commissioner of
paying depositors of insolvent banks, and that
"this suit, therefore, instead of being against the state, is
against its servants, to compel the performance of duties which, by
their acceptance of the office, they obligated themselves to
perform."
A duty being prescribed, it is further contended, the officers
"cannot seek shelter behind the state for the abuse of their
discretion in office." But these contentions and the arguments
based upon them all depend upon an incorrect version of the
statute, as we have seen.
Decree reversed.
Page 235 U. S. 477
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE DAY, MR.
JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER, and MR. JUSTICE LAMAR, dissenting:
The question upon which we are divided is whether this action
brought by a depositor in an insolvent state bank of Oklahoma,
asserting the right to compel payment of his deposit by the State
Banking Board out of the Depositors' Guaranty Fund, or, if this be
insufficient, then by the issuance of a certificate of indebtedness
of the kind known as Depositors' Guaranty Fund warrants, is in
effect a suit against the state, and therefore within the
inhibition of the Eleventh Amendment to the federal Constitution,
or whether it is merely an action against state officers to compel
the performance of duties of a nonpolitical nature clearly
prescribed by a statute of the state, so that the officers, in
refusing to obey that law, do not represent the state. I agree that
the question depends upon the true intent and meaning of the law,
and that, in determining it, we are to assume that the commands of
the law are disobeyed by the defendants appellants; so much,
indeed, having been adjudged, upon their confession, in the present
case.
There is, I think, no controlling decision.
Murray v. Wilson Distilling Co., 213 U.
S. 151, seems plainly distinguishable. That case dealt
with transactions in which the State of South Carolina had a direct
property interest and a direct responsibility as a contracting
party, and it was upon this ground that the court held the action
brought against the agents of the state was in effect a suit
against the state. This will appear by a reference to the opinion,
pp. 168, 170, etc. It will be my endeavor to show that, under the
Oklahoma statute, there is no such interest or responsibility on
the part of the state.
We are referred to certain cases in the state court of last
resort, one of which, and a very recent one, bears
Page 235 U. S. 478
directly upon the question, and it is frankly conceded that
proper deference should be paid to them. At the same time, it is
not to be forgotten that this action was brought in the district
court of the United States because of the diverse citizenship of
the parties -- a ground of jurisdiction especially provided for in
the Constitution (Art. III, § 2). And, however desirable it
may be to preserve harmony of decision between the federal and the
state courts, we cannot, with due regard to our duty, fail to
exercise an independent judgment respecting the true intent and
meaning of the statute, in the absence of an authoritative
adjudication to the contrary previous to the time that the cause of
action arose. For this, plaintiff appellee is entitled to the
enforcement of its contract as it was made, and it invokes a
federal jurisdiction that was established for the very purpose of
avoiding the influence of local opinion.
Burgess v.
Seligman, 107 U. S. 20,
107 U. S. 33-34;
East Alabama Ry. v. Doe, 114 U. S. 340,
114 U. S. 353;
Gibson v. Lyon, 115 U. S. 439,
115 U. S. 446;
Anderson v. Santa Anna, 116 U. S. 356,
116 U. S. 362;
Railroad v. Baugh, 149 U. S. 368,
149 U. S. 372;
Folsom v. Ninety-Six, 159 U. S. 611,
159 U. S. 625;
Stanly County v. Coler, 190 U. S. 437,
190 U. S. 444;
Kuhn v. Fairmont Coal Co., 215 U.
S. 349,
215 U. S. 357,
215 U. S.
360.
The statute in question is the so-called bank Depositors'
Guaranty Fund act of Oklahoma, first enacted December 17, 1907, and
several times amended, but not in essential respects. The portions
pertinent to the discussion, as they stood upon the statute book
when the present cause of action arose (in the year 1912) are set
forth in the margin, followed by an amendment adopted in 1913,
shortly before the action was commenced.
*
Page 235 U. S. 479
It seems to me clear that, by the language and evident meaning
of this law, the state has no property interest in the guaranty
fund. No part of it is raised through general taxation, nor can any
part of it be lawfully placed in the treasury of the state, or
devoted to any of the
Page 235 U. S. 480
ordinary purposes of the government, or to any purpose other
than the payment of depositors. The state, it is true, through the
banking commissioner, holds the bare legal title to the fund, and
enforces in the name of the
Page 235 U. S. 481
state the liabilities of the failed banks, but this is done for
the sole benefit of the fund. Thus, the state has title only, but
without real ownership. Not even is the credit of the state pledged
for the success of the scheme, for while § 8 permits banks to
display an official certificate of compliance with the law, the
certificate declares that safety to the depositors is guaranteed
not by the state, but by the Depositors' Guaranty Fund, and it is
made a misdemeanor for any bank officer to advertise the deposits
as guaranteed by the state. It would, I think, be difficult to find
language more clearly showing that the state is
Page 235 U. S. 482
neither interested in the fund nor responsible to the depositors
with respect to it. And when we read these and the other provisions
of the act in the light of the state constitution, the matter
becomes still more plain. For, by the constitution, Article 5,
§ 55,
"No money shall ever be paid out of the treasury of this state,
nor any of its funds, nor any of the funds under its management,
except in pursuance of an appropriation by law, . . . and every
such law . . . shall distinctly specify the sum appropriated and
the object to which it is to be applied, and it shall not be
sufficient for such law to refer to any other law to fix such
sum."
It cannot, I think, be reasonably contended that the guaranty
fund was intended to be a state fund, or a fund under the
management of the state, within the meaning of the constitution. To
so hold would render the act violative of the section quoted, since
its provisions are plainly inconsistent with the slow and formal
process of legislative appropriations. Again, by Article 10, §
15, of the state constitution,
"The credit of the state shall not be given, pledged, or loaned
to any individual, company, corporation, or association . . . ; nor
shall the state become an owner or stockholder in, nor make
donation by gift, subscription to stock, by tax or otherwise, to
any company, association, or corporation."
These constitutional limitations explain, I think, why, in the
framing of the act, the legislature was so careful to dissociate
the state in its organized capacity from all participation in the
scheme or responsibility for its success. The act contemplates that
the cash constituting the fund is to be in the physical custody of
the banks themselves, until actually needed, for, by § 3, as
amended in 1911, it was provided that the fund should be
redeposited with the banks from which it was paid, and a special
certificate or certificates of deposit issued to the Bank
Commissioner by each bank, bearing 4 percentum interest per annum,
and by the 1913 amendment, the
Page 235 U. S. 483
annual assessments for that and succeeding years are to be paid
by cashier's checks, to be held by the Banking Board until, in its
judgment, it is necessary to collect them; but the checks are not
to bear interest during the time they are so held. In short, the
act, as I read it, simply establishes a plan for enforced
cooperative insurance by all the banks in favor of the depositors
of each and every bank, the Bank Commissioner and the Banking Board
being charged with the management of it as public trustees, with
duties owing to a limited class of persons having financial, and
not political, interests.
The promise held out to bank depositors is clear and
unequivocal. By §§ 5 and 6, in the event of the
insolvency of any bank, the Bank Commissioner may take possession
of its assets, and in this event,
"
the depositors of said bank or trust company shall be paid
in full, and when the cash available or that can be made
immediately available of said bank or trust company is not
sufficient to discharge its obligations to depositors, to said
Banking Board shall draw from the Depositors' Guaranty Fund and
from additional assessments, if required, as provided in §
300, the amount necessary to make up the deficiency."
And by § 3 (300), if the amount realized from emergency
assessments shall be insufficient to pay off the depositors,
"The State Banking Board
shall issue and deliver to each
depositor, having such unpaid deposit, a certificate of
indebtedness for his unpaid deposit, bearing 6 percentum
interest,"
these certificates to be consecutively numbered and to be paid
in the order of their issue out of future emergency assessments
which the Banking Board is required to levy annually until the
certificates of indebtedness, with accrued interest, shall have
been fully paid. By the 1913 amendment, the certificates of
indebtedness are designated as "Depositors' Guaranty Fund
warrants," and are to constitute a charge upon the guaranty fund
when collected, as well as a lien against the capital stock,
surplus, and
Page 235 U. S. 484
undivided profits of every bank to the extent of its liability
to the fund.
The entire scheme is carefully devised to give assurance to
every bank and to every bank depositor not merely of ultimate
payment of the amount of the deposits, but of immediate payment in
cash or in certificates salable for cash, in case the bank becomes
insolvent. A winding up of the bank's affairs, with a liquidation
of its assets and enforcement of the liabilities of stockholders,
officers, and directors, is provided for, and the proceeds are to
be devoted to restoring the guaranty fund and repaying to the
solvent banks the amount of the emergency assessments; but the
depositors are not to await the outcome of the process. A main
purpose of the act, as I read it, is to relieve them not merely
from the hazard of ultimate loss, but from the hardships normally
incident to the delays of winding-up proceedings, and for which, as
everybody knows, an ultimate allowance of interest is very often an
inadequate compensation.
The law was intended, as I think, to render the rights of
depositors so clear as to be readily understood by all, and free
from cavil or question in any quarter. It constitutes a clear and
unequivocal tender of a benefit to every person who might
contemplate becoming a depositor of a state bank in Oklahoma. Under
§ 8, every bank is permitted to advertise that its depositors
are protected by the Depositors' Guaranty Fund. Every would-be
depositor is thus directly referred to the terms of the law, and on
reading it may learn that, in the event of insolvency, "the
depositors of said bank or trust company shall be paid in full,"
etc.
It was said upon the argument that this promise, however
unequivocal, is a "political" promise, and therefore not
enforceable by suit. If it is a promise of the State of Oklahoma,
it, of course, is a "political" promise; otherwise not. But does
not § 8 show most plainly that it is not
Page 235 U. S. 485
at all a promise of the state, and is enforceable out of, and
only out of, a fund kept upon deposit in the banks themselves, and
controlled by trustees whose salaries are, indeed, paid from the
public treasury, but who are charged with no political function,
and whose duties are owing solely to the banks and to depositors
and other interested in the banks?
The failure of the statute to make any express provision for an
action against the Banking Board at the suit of a depositor can
hardly be deemed significant. This is taken care of in the
constitution, which declares (Article 2, § 6):
"The courts of justice of the state shall be open to every
person, and speedy and certain remedy afforded for every wrong and
for every injury to person, property, or reputation."
That the fund is established for a public purpose through the
exercise of the police power of the state does not, I submit, make
the fund itself public property. It is closely analogous, I think,
to the surplus of a mutual insurance company. The argument that the
fund is public will hardly bear analysis. In one of the briefs, it
is expressed as follows:
"The essence of the law therefore is not to establish a private
right, but to serve public welfare, and, as such, no justiciable
rights in the depositors are presumed to arise; the law was not
primarily enacted to return to the depositor his money, but more
properly to prevent the public injury by bank panics. Nowhere is
there language used showing an intent to give to a depositor the
right to sue."
But, since bank panics are caused by the fear on the part of
depositors that their money -- that is, their ability to withdraw
the money or otherwise realize upon their deposits -- is in
jeopardy, the argument pretty clearly defeats itself.
Not only has the state no part in the raising of the guaranty
fund nor property in it, nor interest or responsibility in the
distribution of it, nor even the remotest
Page 235 U. S. 486
reversionary right should the scheme prove a failure, but the
act contains no expression of a purpose that the public trustees
are to be clothed with that immunity from private suit which is one
of the prerogatives of sovereignty. There is nothing to suggest any
participation by the state in the transaction, except that § 6
declares that "the state shall have, for the benefit of the
Depositors' Guaranty Fund, a first lien upon the assets of said
bank," etc., and that "such liabilities may be enforced by the
state for the benefit of the Depositors' Guaranty Fund." But does
not this plainly show that the state is to be a merely nominal
party, and that the fund alone is the real beneficiary? It seems to
me the language naturally imports the familiar action brought in
the name of one, but for the sole use of another, an action in
which the nominal plaintiff at the same time avows that he has no
interest in the proceeds. I cannot find in § 6, or elsewhere,
anything to suggest that the state is to be an active agent in the
matter, otherwise than as the Bank Commissioner and Banking Board
act therein.
It is argued that the Board is endowed with discretionary powers
in respect to the administration of the fund. I concede that the
act implies a considerable latitude of administrative discretion
with respect to the care and management of the fund; but it is
quite different with the provision for the payment of depositors.
Here, the plain mandate is: "Pay in cash, so far as you have it,
and give certificates of indebtedness or warrants to the extent
that the cash falls short." The argument in behalf of appellants
goes to the length of saying:
"It [the fund] may be used not only to pay the depositors of
failed banks, but frequently to aid banks while in a failing
condition. All of the fund which may be available at a particular
time might, in the judgment of the Banking Board, be better used to
aid disabled banks than to be
Page 235 U. S. 487
applied to the immediate payment of depositors of a particular
bank which had already been taken into the custody of the Bank
Commissioner. In this way, the available funds might be withdrawn
by the Banking Board, in the exercise of its discretion, from the
payment of a failed bank,"
etc. As showing the results to which the argument for
discretionary powers with respect to paying depositors logically
leads, this is illuminating; but if anything is clear in the letter
and spirit of this enactment, it is that the legislature by no
means intended that the fund or any part of it should be subject to
use in supporting banks while in a failing condition, or in any
other form of hazardous enterprise.
And it would seem plain enough that an interest on the part of
the state or a discretion on the part of the Banking Board ought
not to be read into the act by construction when the result is not
to make the promised guaranty more clear or more readily
enforceable by the depositors, but, on the contrary, to render it
unenforceable except with the consent of the state, and therefore
materially less valuable to the depositors than otherwise it would
be.
It is submitted that, for the proper interpretation of the
statute -- or for its construction, if construction be needed -- we
should observe the fundamental rules that apply to contracts; for
while there is disagreement upon the question whether the state is
a party to it, we all agree that the act prescribes a contract, and
one of wide importance, between the banks and the depositors, and
that the public interest is as much concerned in seeing it carried
out and enforced according to its true intent and meaning as in
requiring that the contract be made. Not only has the state obliged
the banks to make this contract with their depositors, but in the
law it has expressed the terms in which it shall be made. The
courts therefore ought by all means to adopt an interpretation such
as reasonably
Page 235 U. S. 488
would have been placed and presumably was placed upon the
statute by ordinary bankers and bank depositors in advance of
judicial interpretation; reading it according to the fair import of
its terms, without resort to legal subtlety in order to overthrow
or weaken it, but seeking rather to uphold it and give it effect,
"
Ut res magis valeat quam pereat;" and if construction be
needed, adopting that meaning which the promisor had reason to
believe the promisee relied upon in accepting the offer. 2 Kent,
Com. *557;
The Binghamton
Bridge, 3 Wall. 51,
70 U. S. 74;
Ewing v.
Howard, 7 Wall. 499,
74 U. S. 506;
Empire Rubber Mfg. Co. v. Morris, 73 N.J.L. 602, 610;
Gunnison v. Bancroft, 11 Vt. 490;
Jordan v. Dyer,
34 Vt. 104;
Barlow v. Scott, 24 N.Y. 40, 42;
Tallcot
v. Arnold, 61 N.Y. 616;
White v. Hoyt, 73 N.Y. 505;
Chamberlain v. Painesville & Hudson R. Co., 15 Ohio
St. 225, 246;
Clinton County v. Ramsey, 20 Ill.App. 577,
579.
I cannot resist the conviction that this legislation was
intended to convey and did convey to the banks and to intending
depositors the understanding that the deposits were to be secured
by the fund, and not by the state; that, in the event of the
insolvency of any bank, its depositors were to be paid in full,
without delay and without "ifs" or "ands," out of the cash in the
fund, or at worst, by delivery of interest-bearing certificates of
indebtedness capable of being sold for cash, and payable in
consecutive order as issued, and that the duty imposed upon the
Banking Board to thus pay off the depositors without regard to the
ultimate outcome of the liquidation of the particular bank would be
enforceable, if need be, by process out of the courts of justice.
It savors of repudiation to read into the scheme an unexpressed
condition that renders the promise unenforceable by any means
within the command of the promisee.
Let us now examine the state decisions in their order.
Page 235 U. S. 489
State ex Rel. Taylor v. Cockrell (1910), 27 Okl. 630.
This was an action for a writ of mandamus instituted upon the
relation of the "state examiner and inspector" (a constitutional
officer with large powers, in the performance of which he is
independent of the chief executive), to require the State Bank
Commissioner to permit relator to examine the records and accounts
pertaining to the collection and disbursement of the Depositors'
Guaranty Fund and the assets of failed or insolvent banks. Relator
invoked a statute which declared:
"The examiner and inspector shall examine the books and accounts
of state officers whose duty it is to collect or disburse funds of
the state or (under) its management at least once each year."
As the court said (27 Okl. 632), the sole question involved was
whether relator was authorized under the law to examine these
records. The court's response was succinctly expressed:
"That the Bank Commissioner is a state officer has not been and
cannot be questioned. That the Depositors' Guaranty Fund, and the
funds of a failed bank in the hands of a Bank Commissioner for the
purpose of reimbursing the Depositors' Guaranty Fund, is as much a
fund of the state as the common school fund, is also true. . . .
The title of such Depositors' Guaranty Fund vests in the state,
just as much so as the common school lands, or the proceeds of the
sale of the same, and the taxes levied and collected for the
maintenance and support of said schools, all of which are held in
trust by the state for a specific purpose. Even if it were not a
state fund, it would at least be a fund under the management of the
state."
I cannot see that this amounts to the placing of a construction
upon the statute in any respect pertinent to the question now
before us. The decision was in effect that the Depositors' Guaranty
Fund was under the management of the state through the Bank
Commissioner, a state officer, and that therefore
Page 235 U. S. 490
the accounts of the latter were subject to examination by the
examiner and inspector by the terms of the statute that defined his
duties. Treating it as a decision that the
title of the
fund is in the state, within the meaning of that statute, this is
very far from holding that the
real ownership of the fund
is in the state, so as to clothe the managers of the fund with
immunity from suit in a controversy raised by one of the stated
beneficiaries. The decision, rather, puts the Bank Commissioner in
a subordinate position than in one that entitles him to participate
in the sovereign's immunity from responsibility to action in the
courts of justice.
Columbia Bank & Trust Co. v. United States Fidelity
& Guaranty Co. (1912), 33 Okl. 535. The Bank Commissioner
applied to a state court for orders in connection with the
administration of the affairs of an insolvent bank of which he was
in possession, and prayed that the creditors and depositors be
granted all relief to which they might be entitled. The Fidelity
& Guaranty Company filed its petition in intervention, alleging
that it had signed, as surety for the bank, a bond to the State of
Oklahoma for the sum of $50,000 to protect the state against loss
by reason of a deposit in the bank of certain funds in possession
of the commissioners of the land office, and that the Bank
Commissioner, since taking charge of the assets of the bank, had
acted under the direction and control of the State Banking Board,
and had paid the claims of other depositors in full without in any
way protecting the deposit for which the intervening petitioner was
surety. The trial court rendered a decree directing the Bank
Commissioner to treat the amount due the commissioners of the land
office as a deposit, and pay over to said depositors their
pro
rata share of the assets. The supreme court, upon a review of
other legislation (Comp.Laws 1909, § 7943) relating to the
custody and investment of the permanent school
Page 235 U. S. 491
funds of the state in the hands of the commissioners of the land
office, which provided (
inter alia) that they might be
deposited in bank upon security being given, held that such a
deposit of the state's money was not within the purview of § 3
of the guaranty fund law, and hence that the surety was not
entitled to relief. In the course of reaching this conclusion, the
court held (p. 540) that the surety, having responded to the
invitation implied in relator's prayer for relief in behalf of
creditors and depositors, was entitled to
"maintain its petition of intervention, and have its rights, if
it has any, in relation to the bank guaranty fund, determined
without having previously paid the penalty of its bond."
There was no intimation that the Bank Commissioner was clothed
with immunity from action or endowed with any discretion that
rendered it inappropriate that he should be sued.
Lankford, Comm'r v. Oklahoma Eng. & Ptg. Co.
(1913), 35 Okl. 404. The court simply held that a "merchandise
creditor" of a defunct bank was not entitled to share
pro
rata with the depositors in the distribution of the
assets.
It will be observed that both of the two latter cases were
decided upon the merits of the intervener's claims -- upon grounds
inconsistent, indeed, with the immunity from suit that is now
asserted.
The last-mentioned decision was subsequent to the time when the
rights of the present plaintiff accrued; the cases in 27 and 33
Okl. were decided before that time.
Another case, decided not only after the cause of action
accrued, but
after this Court acquired jurisdiction by the
taking of the appeal, is
Lovett et al. v. Lankford
(September 29, 1914, 145 P. 767). Here, the Supreme Court of
Oklahoma has distinctly held that a petition for mandamus brought
by a depositor against the State Banking Board to require payment
of the deposit
Page 235 U. S. 492
is in effect a suit against the state, and that the Board is a
part of the executive branch of the government, charged with the
exercise of judgment and discretion in the administration of the
law, so that their acts cannot be controlled by mandamus. This, of
course, is directly in favor of the contention of the present
appellants. Ought it to control our decision? What are the grounds
upon which the state court proceeded? (a) Citing the language of
the act that gives to the state a first lien upon the assets of the
bank, and invoking the authority of
State ex Rel. Taylor v.
Cockrell, 27 Okl. 630, 633, 112 P. 1000 (
supra), the
court holds that a judgment in favor of the depositor
"would directly affect the state, and would, in effect, be a
judgment against the state and would require the subjection of
state funds to satisfy said judgment."
This treats the word "title" as equivalent to "ownership." I
have endeavored to show that this is inconsistent with the language
and purpose of the act, and that state ownership renders the act,
in its other and essential provisions, inconsistent with the
limitations found in the state constitution. (b) The court cites
Murray v. Wilson Distilling Co., 213 U.
S. 151. For reasons already indicated, it seems to me
this case is clearly distinguishable. (c) It is said that the
failure of the legislature to make specific provision for review in
the courts of the action of the Banking Board concerning claims
against the guaranty fund tends to prove a legislative purpose to
give exclusive jurisdiction to the Board. As already shown, it
would be a work of supererogation for the legislature to
specifically provide for an action in the courts, for, if the
statute confers a right upon the depositor, Article 2, § 6 of
the state constitution provides a remedy. And I find nothing in the
act that expressly or by reasonable implication confers any
judicial jurisdiction upon the Board. Exclusive jurisdiction in
that body seems plainly inconsistent with the same
constitutional
Page 235 U. S. 493
provision. (d) After quoting from the first section of the act,
which gives to the Banking Board supervision and control of the
fund, with power to adopt necessary rules and regulations, not
inconsistent with law, for its management and administration, and
after quoting the other pertinent sections that are set forth in
the marginal note,
supra, the court cites
Lankford v.
Oklahoma Engraving & Printing Co. supra, as authority for
holding that, under § 6 (303), it is the duty of the Banking
Board and the Bank Commissioner to determine the validity of claims
against the fund, and that,
"by this section, it is not only their duty to determine when a
claim is valid against the bank, but they must further determine
whether such claim is protected and required to be paid from the
Depositors' Guaranty Fund."
I am unable to find any provision of this kind in the statute,
and the case cited, far from holding that these questions are
confided to the decision of the Board or the commissioner, is
directly to the point that such questions are properly to be
decided by the courts, and to the same effect is the case from 33
Okl. cited above.
For these reasons, it is submitted that the decision just
referred to ought not to be followed by this Court in the present
case. Laying that on one side, and adopting that view of the
statute above indicated as being in accord with its letter and
spirit, there appears to be no legal or constitutional obstacle in
the way of affirming the present decree.
For if the action is not nominally or in effect a suit against
the state, is not brought to enforce any liability or duty of the
state, or interfere with its property, but has for its object
merely to require public officers to perform a plain official duty,
not of a political nature, owing to a special class of persons,
among whom the plaintiff is included, it is not properly to be
deemed a suit against the state within the prohibition of the
Eleventh Amendment.
Page 235 U. S. 494
We are referred by appellant's counsel to
Louisiana v.
Junel, 107 U. S. 711;
Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick R. Co., 109 U.
S. 446;
Hagood v. Southern, 117 U. S.
52;
In re Ayers, 123 U.
S. 443;
N.Y. Guaranty Co. v. Steele,
134 U. S. 230;
Pennoyer v. McConnaughy, 140 U. S. 1,
140 U. S. 10;
Smith v. Reeves, 178 U. S. 436, and
similar cases. But there is a broad distinction, uniformly
recognized by this Court, which, as it seems to me, takes the
present action out of the prohibition of the Eleventh Amendment. It
was well expressed in
Board of Liquidation v. McComb,
92 U. S. 531,
92 U. S. 541,
where the Court, by Mr. Justice Bradley, said:
"The objections to proceeding against state officers by mandamus
or injunction are first, that it is, in effect, proceeding against
the state itself and, secondly, that it interferes with the
official discretion vested in the officers. It is conceded that
neither of these things can be done. A state, without its consent,
cannot be sued by an individual, and a court cannot substitute its
own discretion for that of executive officers in matters belonging
to the proper jurisdiction of the latter. But it has been well
settled that, when a plain official duty, requiring no exercise of
discretion, is to be performed and performance is refused, any
person who will sustain personal injury by such refusal may have a
mandamus to compel its performance, and when such duty is
threatened to be violated by some positive official act, any person
who will sustain personal injury thereby, for which adequate
compensation cannot be had at law, may have an injunction to
prevent it."
In the
Junel case, 107 U.S. at p.
107 U. S. 727,
Mr. Chief Justice Waite said:
"The relators do not occupy the position of creditors of the
state, demanding payment from an executive officer charged with the
ministerial duty of taking the money from the public treasury and
handing it over to them, and, on his refusal, seeking to compel him
to perform that specific duty."
In the
Cunningham case, 109 U.S. at p.
109 U. S. 452,
Mr. Justice Miller, in describing
Page 235 U. S. 495
the class of cases in which public officers may be sued,
said:
"A third class, which has given rise to more controversy, is
where the law has imposed upon an officer of the government a well
defined duty in regard to a specific matter, not affecting the
general powers or functions of the government, but in the
performance of which one or more individuals have a distinct
interest capable of enforcement by judicial process."
In
Rolston v. Missouri Fund Comm'rs, 120 U.
S. 390,
120 U. S. 411,
Mr. Chief Justice Waite said:
"It is next contended that this suit cannot be maintained
because it is in its effect a suit against the state, which is
prohibited by the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution of the
United States, and
Louisiana v. Junel, 107 U. S.
711, is cited in support of this position. But this case
is entirely different from that. There, the effort was to compel a
state officer to do what a statute prohibited him from doing. Here,
the suit is to get a state officer to do what a statute requires of
him. The litigation is with the officer, not the state. The law
makes it his duty to assign the liens in question to the trustees
when they make a certain payment. The trustees claim they have made
this payment. The officer says they have not, and there is no
controversy about his duty if they have. The only inquiry is
therefore as to the fact of a payment according to the requirements
of the law. If it has been made, the trustees are entitled to their
decree. If it has not, a decree in their favor, as the case now
stands, must be denied; but, as the parties are all before the
court, and the suit is in equity, it may be retained so as to
determine what the trustees must do in order to fulfill the law,
and under what circumstances the governor can be compelled to
execute the assignment which has been provided for."
In
Reagan v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.,
154 U. S. 362,
154 U. S. 390,
where it was objected that the suit was in effect a suit against
the State of Texas, the court, by Mr. Justice Brewer, said:
"There
Page 235 U. S. 496
is a sense, doubtless, in which it may be said that the state is
interested in the question, but only a governmental sense. It is
interested in the wellbeing of its citizens, in the just and equal
enforcement of all its laws; but such governmental interest is not
the pecuniary interest which causes it to bear the burden of an
adverse judgment. Not a dollar will be taken from the treasury of
the state, no pecuniary obligation of it will be enforced, none of
its property affected by any decree which may be rendered."
Finally, this is an equitable action brought to establish and
enforce a trust in favor of plaintiff, with only an incidental
prayer for a mandatory decree. It is not an original proceeding by
mandamus, of which the federal courts have no jurisdiction.
Bath County v.
Amy, 13 Wall. 244;
Jordan v. Cass County,
3 Dill. 185, Fed.Cas. No. 7,517;
Cass County v. Johnston,
95 U. S. 360,
95 U. S. 370;
Greene County v. Daniel, 102 U. S. 187,
102 U. S. 195;
Davenport v. Dodge County, 105 U.
S. 237,
105 U. S.
242.
It seems to me that the decree should be affirmed.
* Extracts from bank Depositors' Guaranty Fund Act, as found in
Revised Laws of Oklahoma, 1910 (Harris and Day), §§ 298
et seq., and in subsequent Session Laws.
Section 3 (299 and 300, as amended by Laws 1911, p. 54):
"There is hereby levied an assessment against the capital stock
of each and every bank and trust company organized or existing
under the laws of this state, for the purpose of creating a
Depositors' Guaranty Fund, equal to 5 percentum of its average
daily deposits during its continuance in business as a banking
corporation. Said assessment shall be payable one-fifth during the
first year of existence of said bank or trust company, and one
twentieth during each year thereafter until the total amount of
said 5 percentum assessment shall have been fully paid. . . . After
the 5 percentum assessment, hereby levied, shall have been fully
paid, no additional assessment shall be levied or collected against
the capital stock of any bank or trust company, except emergency
assessments, hereinafter provided for, to pay the depositors of
failed banks, and except assessments that may be necessary by
reason of increased deposits to maintain such funds at 5 percentum
of the aggregate of all deposits in such banks and trust companies,
doing business under the laws of this state. . . ."
"Whenever the depositor's fund shall become impaired or be
reduced below said 5 percentum by reason of payments to depositors
of failed banks, the State Banking Board shall have the power and
it shall be its duty to levy emergency assessments against capital
stock of each bank and trust company doing business in this state
to restore said impairment or reduction, but the aggregate of such
emergency assessments shall not, in any one calendar year, exceed 2
percentum of the average daily deposits of all such banks and trust
companies. If the amount realized from such emergency assessments
shall be insufficient to pay off the depositors of all failed banks
having valid claims against said Depositors' Guaranty Fund, the
State Banking Board shall issue and deliver to each depositor
having such unpaid deposit a certificate of indebtedness for his
unpaid deposit, bearing 6 percentum interest. Such certificate
shall be consecutively numbered, and shall be payable, upon the
call of the State Banking Board, in like manner as state warrants
are paid by the state treasurer in the order of their issue, out of
the emergency levy thereafter made, and the State Banking Board
shall from year to year levy emergency assessments, as hereinbefore
provided, against the capital stock of all the banking corporations
and trust companies doing business in this state, until such
certificates of indebtedness, with the accrued interest thereon,
shall have been fully paid. As rapidly as the assets of failed
banks are liquidated and realized upon by the Bank Commissioner,
the same shall be applied first, after the payment of the expenses
of liquidation, to the repayment of the Depositors' Guaranty Fund
of all money paid out of said fund to the depositors of such failed
bank, and shall be applied by the State Banking Board toward
refunding any emergency assessment levied by reason of the failure
of such liquidated bank. Provided, that the guaranty fund collected
under this act shall be redeposited with the banks from which it
was paid, and a special certificate, or certificates, of deposit,
shall be issued to the Bank Commissioner by each and every bank and
trust company, bearing 4 percentum interest per annum."
By § 5 (303), in the event of the insolvency of any bank,
the Bank Commissioner
"may, after due examination of its affairs, take possession of
said bank or trust company and its assets, and proceed to wind up
its affairs and enforce the personal liability of the stockholders,
officers, and directors."
Section 6 (303):
"In the event that the Bank Commissioner shall take possession
of any bank or trust company which is subject to the provisions of
this chapter, the depositors of said bank or trust company shall be
paid in full, and when the cash available or that can be made
immediately available of said bank or trust company is not
sufficient to discharge its obligations to depositors, the said
Banking Board shall draw from the Depositors' Guaranty Fund and
from additional assessments, if required, as provided in §
300, the amount necessary to make up the deficiency, and the state
shall have, for the benefit of the Depositors' Guaranty Fund, a
first lien upon the assets of said bank or trust company, and all
liabilities against the stockholders, officers, and directors of
said bank or trust company, and against all other persons,
corporations, or firms. Such liabilities may be enforced by the
state for the benefit of the Depositors' Guaranty Fund."
Section 8 (305):
"The Bank Commissioner shall deliver to each bank or trust
company that has complied with the provisions of this chapter a
certificate stating that said bank or trust company has complied
with the laws of this state for the protection of bank depositors,
and that safety to its depositors is guaranteed by the Depositors'
Guaranty Fund of the State of Oklahoma. Such certificate shall be
conspicuously displayed in its place of business, and said bank or
trust company may print or engrave upon its stationery and
advertising matter words to the effect that its depositors are
protected by the Depositors' Guaranty Fund of the State of
Oklahoma: Provided, however, that no bank shall be permitted to
advertise its deposits as guaranteed by the State of Oklahoma, and
any bank or bank officers or employees who shall advertise their
deposits as guaranteed by the State of Oklahoma shall be guilty of
a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by a
fine not exceeding $500, or by imprisonment in the county jail for
thirty days, or by both such fine and imprisonment."
By Act of March 6, 1913 (Sess.Laws, c. 22, pp. 27-29), the third
section was amended so as to provide for the issuance of
certificates of indebtedness to be known as "depositor's guaranty
fund warrants of the State of Oklahoma," in order to liquidate the
deposits of failed banks or other indebtedness properly chargeable
against the fund; the warrants to bear 6% interest, and to
constitute a charge and first lien upon the Depositors' Guaranty
Fund when collected, as well as a first lien against the capital
stock, surplus, and undivided profits of every bank operating under
the banking laws of the state to the extent of its liability to the
fund, and that
"all warrants heretofore issued by the Banking Board shall be
paid serially in the order of their issuance from any funds on hand
when this act takes effect, or provided for by the terms of this
act, and all warrants hereafter issued shall be in numerical order
and retired in like order. As rapidly as the assets of failed banks
are liquidated and realized upon by the Bank Commissioner, the
proceeds thereof, after deducting the expenses of liquidation,
shall be paid to the State Banking Board, and by said board
credited to the Depositors' Guaranty Fund."