1. Many state banks, in satisfying checks drawn upon them by
their depositors and sent through other banks for collection, were
accustomed to remit by draft on their reserves elsewhere, and to
make a small charge, called exchange, deducted from the remittance.
The Federal Reserve Board, and the federal reserve banks, being
forbidden to pay exchange charges but believing it their duty to
accept checks on any bank for collection and to make par clearance
and collection of checks universal throughout the United States,
adopted the practice of causing checks drawn on state banks which
refused par clearance to be presented to such banks at the counter
for payment in cash. To protect North Carolina banks from serious
loss of income which would ensue from this practice, both through
reduction of exchange charges and through transference of
income-producing assets to their vaults, the legislature of that
state enacted, (Pub.Laws 1921, c. 20) that any check drawn
Page 262 U. S. 650
upon a local bank (other than checks in payment of obligations
to the federal or state governments) unless specified to the
contrary on its face by the maker, should be payable, at the option
of the drawee, in exchange drawn on the drawee's reserve deposits
when such check was presented by or through any federal reserve
bank, post office, or express company or their agents, and further
that state banks might charge a fee, within specified limits, on
remittances covering checks.
Held:
(a) That the North Carolina Act does not violate the provision
of the federal Constitution, Art. I, § 10, cl. 1, which
prohibits a state from making anything except gold and silver coin
a tender in payment of debts. P.
262 U. S.
659.
(b) That it does not deprive the respondent Federal Reserve
Bank, without due process of law, of its right to engage in the
business of collecting checks payable on presentation within its
district (which it claims it may make a source of revenue), nor of
its liberty of contract, by compelling it to accept payment in
drafts, good or bad, and so driving it from that branch of
business. The statute is not to be construed as authorizing payment
in bad drafts, and is an exercise of police power not offensive to
the due process clause. P.
262 U. S. 660.
(c) That it does not deprive the Federal Reserve Bank of equal
protection of the laws by obliging it to accept payment in drafts
while leaving other banks free to demand cash, since it was
reasonable classification for the legislature to limit the
regulation to the particular existing condition sought to be
remedied. P.
262 U. S.
661.
(d) That it does not conflict with duties imposed by Congress on
the Federal Reserve Board and the federal reserve banks. P.
262 U. S.
662.
2. Neither § 13 nor any other provision of the Federal
Reserve Act imposes on reserve banks any obligation to receive for
collection checks for which it is impossible to obtain payment
except by incurring serious expense, as by presenting them by
special messenger at a distant place. P.
262 U. S.
662.
3. In declaring that reserve banks may receive checks on
nonmember banks "payable on presentation," the Federal Reserve Act,
§ 13, as amended, would seem to imply that the checks must be
payable in cash or in such funds as are deemed by the reserve bank
an equivalent. P.
262 U. S.
663.
4. The federal reserve legislation does not impose on the
Federal Reserve Board or the federal reserve banks a duty to
establish in the United States a universal system of par clearance
and collection of checks. P.
262 U. S.
664.
Page 262 U. S. 651
5. The contention that Congress imposed this duty is
irreconcilable with the provision of the Hardwick Amendment to
§ 13 (Act of June 21, 1917, c. 32, § 4, 40 Stat. 232)
allowing members and affiliated nonmembers to make a limited charge
(except to federal reserve banks) for "payment of checks and . . .
remission therefor by exchange or otherwise." P.
262 U. S.
666.
6. The Hardwick Amendment in no way interferes with the right of
a depositor in a nonaffiliated state bank to agree with his bank
that his checks in certain cases (unless otherwise indicated on
their face) should be payable, at its option, by exchange. P.
262 U. S.
667.
183 N.Car. 546 reversed.
Certiorari to a decree of the Supreme Court of North Carolina
reversing a decree which perpetually enjoined the respondent
Federal Reserve Bank from refusing to accept payment of checks on
petitioner banks in exchange drafts, as permitted by a North
Carolina statute, and from returning, as dishonored, checks for
which payment had been tendered only in that way.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Legislature of North Carolina provided by § 2 of c. 20,
Public Laws of 1921, entitled "An act to promote the solvency of
state banks":
"That, in order to prevent accumulation of unnecessary amounts
of currency in the vaults of the banks and trust companies
chartered by this state, all checks drawn on said banks and trust
companies shall, unless specified on the face thereof to the
contrary by the maker or makers thereof, be payable at the option
of the drawee bank, in exchange drawn on the reserve deposits of
said drawee
Page 262 U. S. 652
bank when any such check is presented by or through any Federal
Reserve Bank, post office, or express company, or any respective
agents thereof."
Section 1 authorizes banking institutions chartered by the state
to charge a fee not in excess of one-eighth of one percent on
remittances covering checks, the minimum fee on any remittance
therefor to be 10 cents. Section 4 exempts from the operation of
§§ 1 and 2 all checks drawn in payment of obligations to
the federal or the state government. Whether this statute conflicts
with § 13 of the Federal Reserve Act (December 23, 1913, c. 6,
38 Stat. 251, 263, as amended by Act Sept. 7, 1916, c. 461, 39
Stat. 752, and Act June 21, 1917, c. 32, § 4, 40 Stat. 232,
234) or otherwise with the federal Constitution is the question for
decision.
The legislation arose out of the effort of the Federal Reserve
Board to introduce in the United States universal par clearance and
collection of checks through Federal Reserve Banks.
See
American Bank & Trust Co. v. Federal Reserve Bank of
Atlanta, 256 U. S. 350. The
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond serves the Fifth Federal Reserve
District, which includes North Carolina. Upon the enactment of this
statute, the bank gave notice that it considered the legislation
void under the federal Constitution; that, when presenting checks
to North Carolina state banks for payment over the counter, it
would refuse to accept exchange drafts on reserve deposits as
required by § 2, and that it would return as dishonored checks
for which only exchange drafts had been tendered in payment. Some
checks were returned thus dishonored, and to enjoin such action,
this suit was brought in a court of the state by the Farmers' &
Merchants' Bank of Monroe and eleven other state banks. Two hundred
and seventy-one more joined later as plaintiffs. So far as appears,
none of them was a member of the federal reserve system or was
affiliated with it. The trial court granted a perpetual
Page 262 U. S. 653
injunction. The supreme court of the state reversed the decree,
183 N.C. 546, and the case is here on writ of certiorari, 261 U.S.
610. Defendant admits that, if the North Carolina statute is
constitutional, plaintiffs are entitled to an injunction.
To understand the occasion for the statute, its operation, and
its effect, the applicable banking practice must be considered.
[
Footnote 1] Par clearance does
not mean that the payee of a check who deposits it with his bank
for collection will be credited in his account with the face of the
check if it is collected. His bank may, despite par clearance, make
a charge to him for its service in collecting the check from the
drawee bank. It may make such a charge although both it and the
drawee bank are members of the federal reserve system, and some
third bank which aids in the process of collection may likewise
make a charge for the service it renders. Such a collection charge
may be made not only to member banks by member banks, national or
state, but it may be made to member banks also by the federal
reserve banks for the services which the latter render. The
collection charge is expressly provided for in § 16 of the
Federal Reserve Act (38 Stat. 268), which declares that:
"The Federal Reserve Board shall, by rule, fix the charges to be
collected by the member banks from its patrons whose checks are
cleared through the Federal Reserve Bank and the charge which may
be imposed for the service of clearing or collection rendered by
the Federal Reserve Bank. "
Page 262 U. S. 654
Par clearance refers to a wholly different matter. It deals, not
with charges for collection, but with charges incident to paying.
It deals with exchange. Formerly, checks, except where paid at the
banking house over the counter, were customarily paid either
through a clearing house or by remitting, to the bank in which they
had been deposited for collection a draft on the drawee's deposit
in some reserve city. For the service rendered by the drawee bank
in so remitting funds available for use at the place of the deposit
of the check, it was formerly a common practice to make a small
charge, called "exchange," and to deduct the amount from the
remittance. This charge of the drawee bank the Federal Reserve
Board planned to eliminate, and, in so doing, to concentrate in the
twelve federal reserve banks the clearance of checks and the
accumulation of the reserve balances used for that purpose. The
board began by efforts to induce the banks to adopt par clearance
voluntarily. [
Footnote 2] The
attempt was not successful. The board then concluded to apply
compulsion. Every national bank is necessarily a member of the
federal reserve system, and every state bank with the requisite
qualifications may become such. Over members the board has large
powers, as well as influence. The first step in the campaign of
compulsion was taken in the summer of 1916, when the board issued a
regulation requiring every drawee bank which is a member of the
federal reserve system to pay without deduction all checks upon it
presented through the mail by the federal reserve bank of the
district. The operation of this requirement was at first limited in
scope by the fact that the original act (§ 13) authorized the
reserve banks to collect only those checks which were drawn on
member banks and which were deposited by a member bank of another
reserve
Page 262 U. S. 655
bank or the United States. Few of the many state banks had then
elected to become members. In September, 1916, § 13 was
amended, so as to authorize a Reserve Bank to receive for
collection from any member (including other reserve banks) also
checks drawn upon nonmember banks within its district. Thereby the
Federal Reserve Board was enabled to extend par clearance to a
large proportion of all checks issued in the United States. But the
regulation (J) then issued expressly provided that the federal
reserve banks would receive from member banks at par only checks on
those of the nonmember banks whose checks could be collected by the
federal reserve bank at par. It was recognized that nonmembers were
left free to refuse assent to par clearance. By December 15, 1916,
only 37 of the state banks within the United States, numbering
about 20,000, had become members of the system, and only 8,065 of
the state banks had assented to par clearance.
reserve banks could not, under the then law, make collections
for nonmembers. It was believed that, if Congress would grant
federal reserve banks permission to make collection also for
nonmembers, the board could offer to all banks inducements adequate
to secure their consent to par clearance. A further amendment to
§ 13 was thereupon secured by Act of June 21, 1917, c. 32,
§ 4, which provided, among other things, that federal reserve
banks:
Reserve banks could not, under the then law, make collections
for nonmembers. It was believed that if Congress would grant
federal reserve banks permission to make collection also for
nonmembers, the Board could offer to all banks inducements adequate
to secure their consent to par clearance. A further amendment to
§ 13 was thereupon secured by Act of June 21, 1917, c. 32,
§ 4, 40 Stat. 232, 234, which provided, among other things,
that federal reserve banks,
"[s]olely for the purposes of exchange or of collection, may
receive from any nonmember bank . . . deposits of . . . checks . .
. payable upon presentation: . . .
Provided such nonmember
bank . . . maintains with the federal reserve bank of its district
a balance sufficient to offset the items in transit held for its
account by the federal reserve bank."
To this provision, which embodied the legislation proposed by
the Federal Reserve Board, there was added,
Page 262 U. S. 656
while in the Senate, another proviso relating to the exchange
charge now known in a modified form as the Hardwick Amendment,
which declares:
"That nothing in this or any other section of this Act shall be
construed as prohibiting a member or nonmember bank from making
reasonable charges, to be determined and regulated by the Federal
Reserve Board, but in no case to exceed 10 cents per $100 or
fraction thereof, based on the total of checks and drafts presented
at any one time for collection or payment of checks and drafts and
remission therefor by exchange or otherwise, but no such charges
shall be made against the federal reserve banks."
Thus, a federal reserve bank was authorized to receive for
collection checks from nonmembers who maintained with it the
prescribed balance, and strenuous efforts were then made to induce
all state banks to so arrange. But the law did not compel state
banks to do this. Many refused, and they continued to insist on
making exchange charges. On March 21, 1918, the Attorney General,
31 Op. Attys.Gen. 245, 251, advised the President:
"The Federal Reserve Act, however, does not command or compel
these state banks to forego any right they may have under the state
laws to make charges in connection with the payment of checks drawn
upon them. The act merely offers the clearing and collection
facilities of the federal reserve banks upon specified conditions.
If the state banks refuse to comply with the conditions by
insisting upon making charges against the federal reserve banks,
the result will simply be, so far as the Federal Reserve Act is
concerned, that, since the federal reserve banks cannot pay these
charges, they cannot clear or collect checks on banks demanding
such payment from them."
The Federal Reserve Board and the federal reserve banks were
thus advised that they were prohibited from
Page 262 U. S. 657
paying an exchange charge to any bank. But they believed that it
was their duty to accept for collection any check on any bank, and
that Congress had imposed upon them the duty of making par
clearance and collection of checks universal in the United States.
So they undertook to bring about acquiescence of the remaining
state banks to the system of par clearance. [
Footnote 3] Some of the nonassenting state banks
made stubborn resistance. [
Footnote
4] To overcome it, the reserve banks held themselves out as
prepared to collect at par also checks on the state banks which did
not assent to par clearance. This they did by publishing a list of
all banks from whom they undertook to collect at par, regardless of
whether such banks had agreed to remit at par or not. This resulted
in drawing to the federal reserve banks for collection the large
volume of checks which theretofore had come to the drawee bank by
mail from many sources and which had been paid by remittances drawn
on the bank's balance in some reserve city. If a state bank
persisted in refusal to remit at par, the reserve banks caused
these checks to be presented at the drawee bank for payment in cash
over the counter. The practice adopted by the reserve banks would,
if pursued, necessarily subject country banks to serious loss of
income. It would deprive them of their income from exchange
charges, and it would reduce
Page 262 U. S. 658
their income-producing assets by compelling them to keep in
their vaults in cash a much larger part of their resources than
theretofore. That such loss must result was admitted. That it might
render the banks insolvent was clear. But the federal reserve banks
insisted that no alternative was left open to them, since they had
to collect the checks, and were forbidden to pay exchange charges.
The state banks denied that the federal reserve banks were obliged
to accept these checks for collection, and insisted that federal
reserve banks should refrain from accepting for collection checks
on banks which did not assent to par clearance.
It was to protect its state banks from this threatened loss,
which might disable them, that the Legislature of North Carolina
enacted the statute here in question. [
Footnote 5] It made no attempt to compel the federal
reserve bank to pay an exchange charge. It made no attempt to
compel a depositor to accept something other than cash in payment
of a check drawn by him. It merely provided that, unless the drawer
indicated by a notation on the face of the check that he required
payment in cash, the drawee bank was at liberty to pay the check by
exchange drawn on its reserve deposits. Thus, the statute merely
sought to remove (when the drawer acquiesced) the absolute
requirement of he common law that a check presented at the bank's
counter must be paid in cash. It gave the drawee bank the option to
pay by exchange only in certain cases, namely when the check was
"presented by or through any federal reserve bank, post office or
express
Page 262 U. S. 659
company, or any respective agents thereof." The option was so
limited because the only purpose of the statute was to relieve
state banks from the pressure which, by reason of the common law
requirement, federal reserve banks were in a position to exert and
thus compel submission to par clearance. It was expected that
depositors would cooperate with their banks and refrain from making
the prescribed notation, and that, when the reserve banks were no
longer in a position to exert pressure by demanding payment in
cash, they would cease to solicit or to receive for collection
checks on nonassenting state banks. Thus, these would be enabled to
earn exchange charges as theretofore. Such was the occasion for the
statute and its purpose. Whether this legislative modification of
the common law rule which requires payment in cash violates the
federal Constitution is the question for decision. That it does is
asserted on five grounds.
First. It is contended that in authorizing payment of
checks by draft on reserve deposits § 2 violates the provision
of article I, § 10, clause 1, of the federal Constitution,
which prohibits a state from making anything except gold and silver
coin a tender in payment of debts. This claim is clearly unfounded.
The debt of the bank is solely to the depositor. The statute does
not authorize the bank to discharge its obligation to its depositor
by an exchange draft. It merely provides that, unless the depositor
in drawing the check specifies on its face to the contrary, he
shall be deemed to have assented to payment by such a draft. There
is nothing in the federal Constitution which prohibits a depositor
from consenting, when he draws a check, that payment may be made by
a draft. And, as the statute is prospective in its operation,
Denny v. Bennett, 128 U. S. 489;
Abilene National Bank v. Dolley, 228 U. S.
1,
228 U. S. 5, there
is no constitutional obstacle to a state's providing that, in the
absence of
Page 262 U. S. 660
dissent, consent shall be presumed. Laws which subsist at the
time and place of the making of a contract and where it is to be
performed enter into and form a part of it as fully as if they had
been expressly referred to or incorporated in its terms. This
principle embraces alike those laws which affect its construction
and those which affect its enforcement or discharge.
See Ogden v.
Saunders, 12 Wheat. 213, 231 [argument of counsel
-- omitted];
Von Hoffman v.
Quincy, 4 Wall. 535,
71 U. S. 550.
If therefore the provision of § 2 authorizing payment by
exchange draft is otherwise valid, it is binding upon the drawer of
the check. Since it binds the drawer, it binds the payee and every
subsequent holder, whether he be a citizen of North Carolina or of
some other state, and wherever the transfer of the check was made.
Brabston v.
Gibson, 9 How. 263. For the holder of a check has,
in the absence of acceptance by the drawee bank, no independent
right to require payment under the general law.
Bank of
the Republic v. Millard, 10 Wall. 152. He takes it
subject to the construction and with rights conferred by the laws
of North Carolina, the place of the bank's contract and of
performance.
Pierce v. Indseth, 106 U.
S. 546.
Compare Rouquette v. Overmann, L.R. 10
Q.B. 525.
Second. It is contended that § 2 violates the due
process clause. The argument is that defendant is a federal
corporation authorized to engage in the business of collecting
checks payable upon presentation within the district, a business
common to all banking institutions; that the right to engage in
this branch of the business is a valuable property right; that,
while defendant has in the past not made any charge for such
collections, it has the right to do so, and could make this branch
of its business an important source of revenue; that to compel
defendant to accept in payment of checks exchange drafts on reserve
deposits, whether good or bad, deprives it of liberty of contract,
and in effect of an important branch
Page 262 U. S. 661
of its business, since that of collecting checks cannot be
conducted under such limitations. To this argument the answer is
clear. The purpose of the statute, as its title declares, was to
promote the solvency of state banks. We should, in the absence of
controlling decision of the highest court of the state to the
contrary, construe the statute not as authorizing payment in a
"bad" draft, but as authorizing payment in such exchange drafts
only as had customarily been used in remitting for checks. So
construed the statute is merely an exercise of the police power, by
which the banking business is regulated for the purpose of
protecting the public, and promoting the general welfare.
Noble
State Bank v. Haskell, 219 U. S. 104,
219 U. S. 575. The
regulation here attempted is not so extreme as inherently to deny
rights protected by the due process clause.
Compare Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy R. Co. v. McGuire, 219 U.
S. 549,
219 U. S.
567-568;
Central Lumber Co. v. South Dakota,
226 U. S. 157,
226 U. S. 162. If
the regulation exceeds the state's power to protect the public, it
must be because some other provision of the federal Constitution is
violated by the means adopted or by the manner in which they are
applied.
Third. It is contended that the statute is obnoxious to
the equal protection clause. The argument is that the Federal
Reserve Bank of Richmond is obliged to accept payment in exchange
drafts, whereas other banks with whom it might conceivably compete
may demand cash, except in those cases where they present the check
through an express company or the post office. It is well settled
that the legislature of a state may (in the absence of other
controlling provisions) direct its police regulations against what
it deems an existing evil without covering the whole field of
possible abuses.
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co.,
220 U. S. 61,
220 U. S. 81;
Missouri Pacific Ry. Co. v. Mackey, 127 U.
S. 205. If the legislature finds that a particular
instrument of trade war is being used
Page 262 U. S. 662
against a policy which it deems wise to adopt, it may direct its
legislation specifically and solely against that instrument.
Central Lumber Co. v. South Dakota, supra, p.
226 U. S. 160.
If it finds that the instrument is used only under certain
conditions or by a particular class of concerns, it may limit its
prohibition to the conditions and the concerns which it concludes
alone menace what it deems the public welfare. The facts recited
above disclose ample ground for the classification made by the
legislature. Hence, there was no denial of equal protection of the
law. There remains to consider whether § 2 exceeds the state's
power because Congress has imposed specifically upon federal
reserve banks duties the performance of which § 2 obstructs,
and that in this way it conflicts with the Federal Reserve Act.
This is the ground on which the invalidity of the North Carolina
act has been most strongly assailed.
Fourth. One contention is that § 2 conflicts with
the Federal Reserve Act because it prevents the federal reserve
banks from collecting checks of such state banks as do not
acquiesce in the plan for par clearance. The argument rests on the
assumption that the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond is obliged to
receive for collection any check upon any North Carolina state bank
if such check is payable upon presentation, and is obliged to
collect the same at par without allowing deductions for exchange or
other charge. But neither § 13 nor any other provision of the
Federal Reserve Act imposes upon reserve banks any obligation to
receive checks for collection. The act merely confers authority to
do so. The class of cases to which such authority applies was
enlarged from time to time by Congress. But in each amendment, as
in § 13, the words used were "may receive" -- words of
authorization merely. It is true that, in statutes, the word "may"
is sometimes construed as "shall." But that is where the context or
the subject matter compels
Page 262 U. S. 663
such construction.
Supervisors v. United
States, 4 Wall. 435. Here, it does not. This
statute appears to have been drawn with great care. Throughout the
act, the distinction is clearly made between what the Board and the
reserve banks "shall" do and what they "may" do. [
Footnote 6]
Moreover, even if it could be held that the reserve banks are
ordinarily obliged to collect checks for authorized depositors, it
is clear that they are not required to do so where the drawee has
refused to remit except upon allowance of exchange charges which
reserve banks are not permitted to pay. There is surely nothing in
the act to indicate that reserve banks must undertake the
collection of checks in cases where it is impossible to obtain
payment except by incurring serious expense, as in presenting
checks by special messenger at a distant point. Furthermore, the
checks which the act declares reserve banks may receive for
collection are limited to those "payable on presentation." The
expression would seem to imply that the checks must be payable
either in cash or in such funds as are deemed by the reserve bank
to be
Page 262 U. S. 664
an equivalent. A check payable at the option of the drawee by a
draft on distant reserves would seem not to be within the limited
class of checks referred to in the act. The argument for the
federal reserve bank is not helped by reference to the incidental
power conferred by § 4. It is only
"such incidental powers as shall be necessary to carry on the
business of banking within the limitations prescribed by this [the
Federal Reserve] Act"
which are granted. No duty or right of the federal reserve bank
to collect checks is obstructed by the North Carolina statute,
which merely gives to the drawee bank the right to pay in the
customary exchange draft where its depositor has, by the form used
in drawing the check, consented that this be done.
Fifth. The further contention is made that § 2
conflicts with the Federal Reserve Act because it interferes with
the duty of the Federal Reserve Board to establish in the United
States a universal system of par clearance and collection of
checks. Congress did not in terms confer upon the Federal Reserve
Board or the federal reserve banks a duty to establish universal
par clearance and collection of checks, and there is nothing in the
original act or in any amendment from which such duty to compel its
adoption may be inferred. The only sections which in any way deal
either with clearance or collection are 13 and 16. In neither
section is there any suggestion that the Reserve Board and the
reserve banks shall become an agency for universal clearance. On
the contrary, § 16 strictly limits the scope of their
clearance functions. It provides that the Federal Reserve
Board--
"may, at its discretion, exercise the functions of a clearing
house for such federal reserve banks, . . . and may also require
each such bank to exercise the functions of a clearing house for
its member banks."
There is no reference whatever to "par" in § 13, either as
originally enacted or as amended from time to time.
Page 262 U. S. 665
There is a reference to "par" in § 16, and it is so clear
and explicit as to preclude a contention that it has any
application to nonmember banks or to the ordinary process of check
collection here involved. Section 16 (38 Stat. 268) declares:
"Every federal reserve bank shall receive on deposit at par from
member banks or from federal reserve banks checks and drafts drawn
upon any of its depositors, and when remitted by a federal reserve
bank, checks and drafts drawn by any depositor in any other federal
reserve bank or member bank upon funds to the credit of said
depositor in said reserve bank or member bank. Nothing herein
contained shall be construed as prohibiting a member bank from
charging its actual expense incurred in collecting and remitting
funds or for exchange sold to its patrons."
The depositors in a federal reserve bank are the United States,
other federal reserve banks, and member banks. It is checks on
these depositors which are to be received by the federal reserve
banks. These checks from these depositors the federal reserve banks
must receive. And when received they must be taken at par. There is
no mention of nonmember banks in this section. When, in 1916,
§ 13 was amended to permit federal reserve banks to receive
from member banks solely for collection other checks payable upon
presentation within the district, and when, in 1917, § 13 was
again amended to permit such receipt solely for collection also
from certain nonmember banks, § 16 was left in this respect
unchanged. In other respects § 16 was amended both by the Act
of 1916 and by the Act of 1917. The natural explanation of the
omission to amend the provision in § 16 concerning clearance
is that the section has no application to nonmember banks, even if
affiliated.
Moreover, the contention that Congress has imposed upon the
Board the duty of establishing universal par
Page 262 U. S. 666
clearance and collection of checks through the federal reserve
banks is irreconcilable with the specific provision of the Hardwick
Amendment which declares that even a member or an affiliated
nonmember may make a limited charge (except to federal reserve
banks) for "payment of checks and . . . remission therefor by
exchange or otherwise." The right to make a charge for payment of
checks, thus regained by member and preserved to affiliated
nonmember banks, shows that it was not intended or expected that
the federal reserve banks would become the universal agency for
clearance of checks. For since against these the final clause
prohibited the making of any charge, then if the reserve banks were
to become the universal agency for clearance, there would be no
opportunity for any bank to make as against any bank a charge for
the "payment of checks." The purpose of Congress in amending §
13 by the Act of 1917 was to enable the Board to offer to nonmember
banks the use of its facilities which it was hoped would prove a
sufficient inducement to them to forego exchange charges, but to
preserve in nonmember banks the right to reject such offer,
[
Footnote 7] and to protect the
interests of member and affiliated nonmember banks (in competition
with the nonaffiliated state banks) by allowing also those
connected with the federal system to make a reasonable exchange
charge to others than the reserve banks. The power of the Federal
Reserve Board to establish par clearance was thus limited by the
unrestricted right of unaffiliated nonmember banks to make a charge
for exchange and the restricted
Page 262 U. S. 667
right of members and affiliated nonmembers to make the charge
therefor fixed as reasonable by the Federal Reserve Board. No bank
could make such a charge against the federal reserve banks, because
these were prohibited from paying any such charge. Member and
nonmember affiliated banks, because they were such, performed the
service for the federal reserve banks without charge. Unaffiliated
nonmember banks were under no obligation to do so. Thus construed,
full effect may be given to all clauses in the Hardwick Amendment
as enacted. It in no way interferes with the right of a depositor
in a nonaffiliated state bank to agree with his bank that the
checks which he might draw should (unless otherwise indicated on
their face) be payable at the option of the drawee, in exchange in
certain cases.
The North Carolina statute here in question does not obstruct
the performance of any duty imposed upon the Federal Reserve Board
and the federal reserve banks. Nor does it interfere with the
exercise of any power conferred upon either. It is therefore
consistent with the Federal Reserve Act and with the federal
Constitution.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER and MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND dissent.
[
Footnote 1]
See Annual Reports of the Federal Reserve Board, 1914,
pp. 19, 20, 174; 1915, pp. 14-17; 1916, pp. 9-12; Regulation I,
Series of 1916, p. 169; 1917, pp. 23, 24; Regulation J, Series of
1917, pp. 181-183; 1918, pp. 74-77; 204-206; 810, 811, 817, 821;
1919, pp. 40-44; 222-228; 1920, pp. 63-69; 1921, 68-73; 228-230;
Letter from the Governor of the Federal Reserve Board of January
26, 1920, Senate Document No. 184, 66th Congress,2d Session; also
"Par Clearance of Checks," by C. T. Murchison, 1 No.Car.Law Review,
133.
[
Footnote 2]
See Report, Federal Reserve Board, 1915, pp. 14-17;
ibid., 1916, pp. 9-11.
[
Footnote 3]
North Carolina was placed on the par list on November 15, 1920.
There were on January 1, 1921, in the United States 30,523 banks,
state and national. Of these 1,755 state banks had refused to enter
the par list. About 250 of the banks so refusing were in North
Carolina. During the year 1921, the number which refused to consent
to par clearance increased to 2,353. Annual Report of Federal
Reserve Board, 1921, p. 71.
[
Footnote 4]
See American Bank & Trust Co. v. Federal Bank of
Atlanta, supra; Brookings State Bank v. federal reserve bank of San
Francisco, 277 F. 430, 281 F. 222;
Farmers' &
Merchants' Bank of Catlettsburg, Ky. v. Federal Reserve Bank of
Cleveland, 286 F. 610.
[
Footnote 5]
Statutes similar in purpose were enacted in Alabama, Florida,
Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Dakota, and Tennessee.
See Annual Report of Federal Reserve Board, 1921, p. 70;
Alabama, Gen. & Loc. Acts 1920, No. 35; Florida, Laws 1921, c.
8532; Georgia, Laws 1920, p. 107; Louisiana, Acts 1920, No. 23;
Mississippi, Laws 1920, c. 183; South Dakota, Laws 1921, c. 31;
Tennessee, Pub. Acts 1921, c. 37.
[
Footnote 6]
In the original Federal Reserve Act (38 Stat. 251), "may" is
used in §§ 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16,
18, 19, 21, 22, 24, 25, 26, 28. "Shall" is used in those sections
and also in §§ 1, 6, 7, 20, 23, 27, 29. Thus: Section
2:
"The Secretary . . . shall designate . . . cities to be known as
Federal Reserve cities, and shall divide the continental United
States . . . into districts. . . . The districts . . . may be
readjusted. . . . Such districts shall be known as Federal Reserve
Districts, and may be designated by number."
Section 3:
"Each federal reserve bank shall establish branch banks within
the federal reserve district in which it is located and may do so
in the district of any federal reserve bank which may have been
suspended."
Section 5:
"Outstanding capital stock shall be increased . . . as member
banks increase their capital stock . . . , and may be decreased as
member banks reduce their capital stock. . . ."
Section 13: " . . . may receive . . . deposits . . . may
discount . . . shall at no time exceed." Section 16: "Every federal
reserve bank shall maintain reserves. . . ." "Every federal reserve
bank shall receive on deposit."
[
Footnote 7]
The Governor of the Federal Reserve Board stated in his letter
to the Senate, January 26, 1920, Sen.Doc. 184, 66th Cong., 2d
Session, p. 6:
"That a relatively small number of nonmember banks should not
want to become members of the clearing system, or should not want
to remit at par is, of course, their own concern, and the Federal
Reserve Board and the federal reserve banks have not and will not
dispute their right to decline to do so."