The Act of February 25, 1927, provides that any national bank
may be consolidated with any state bank or trust company under the
charter of the national bank; that, upon such consolidation, all
the rights, franchises and interests in property of the state
corporation shall be deemed transferred to and vested in the
national bank; that the consolidated national bank
"shall hold and enjoy the same and all rights of property,
franchises, and interests including the right of succession as
trustee, executor, or in any other fiduciary capacity in the same
manner and to the same extent as was held and enjoyed"
by the state corporation, but that no such consolidation shall
be in contravention of the law of the state under which such state
bank or trust company was incorporated.
Held:
1. That the Act enjoins upon a consolidated national bank
complete conformity with the state law in its conduct of estates of
deceased persons when acting as trustee or administrator thereof.
P.
279 U. S.
360.
2. Where the highest state court decided that, under the state
law, a national bank with which a local trust company had been
consolidated under the Act did not succeed to an executorship held
by the trust company and could not render an account of the estate,
except as executor
de son tort, because the consolidation
had ended the existence of the trust company and the bank, being a
different entity, could not rightfully represent the estate without
a new appointment from the probate court, this decision, as to the
state law, should be followed by the Court. P.
279 U. S.
359.
3. To conform with the state law, under the Act of Congress, the
bank, in order to represent and administer the estate, should apply
for an appointment by the probate court. P.
279 U. S.
359.
23 Mass. 444 affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment entered by the Probate Court for
Worcester County, Massachusetts, in accordance with a rescript from
the Supreme Judicial Court dismissing the appellant's petition for
allowance of its account as executor under a will.
Page 279 U. S. 353
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Worcester County National Bank is a consolidated banking
corporation, formed by uniting, on June 27, 1927, the Fitchburg
Bank & Trust Company, a state institution of Massachusetts, and
the Merchants' National Bank of Worcester, a national bank of
Worcester County, Massachusetts, under the Act of Congress of
February 25, 1927, c.191, 44 Stat. 1224, amending the Act of
November 7, 1918, c. 209, 40 Stat. 1044. The amendment added a new
section, 3, and this case turns chiefly on the construction,
effect, and validity of that new section.
The consolidated bank filed in the probate court of Worcester
County a first and final account of the Fitchburg
Page 279 U. S. 354
Bank & Trust Company, executor of the last will and
testament of Julia A. Legnard, late of Fitchburg in the County of
Worcester. The account was for the period beginning April 21, 1926,
and ending February 9, 1928. The account was rendered by the
Worcester County National Bank for the Fitchburg Bank & Trust
Company to June 27, 1927, and thereafter as its own account.
The Fitchburg Bank & Trust Company had been appointed by the
probate court executor of the will of Julia A. Legnard on April 21,
1926, and qualified by giving bond approved on that day.
The consolidated bank claimed that, in view of the proceedings,
its right and duty was to render the account presented for
allowance, and, as all the parties interested had assented to it,
that it should be allowed by the court.
The probate court found that the account was in proper form for
allowance, and should be allowed as rendered, if the said Worcester
County National Bank, as successor or otherwise, was executor of
said will or had the right to render the account.
The probate judge reported a certificate from the Comptroller of
the Currency that the two banks had complied with all the
provisions of the Acts of Congress and had been consolidated under
the charter of the Merchants' National Bank, with the capital stock
of $1,875,000, that the consolidation had been approved, and that,
pursuant to the Federal Reserve Act, enacted December 23, 1913,
§ 11(k), c. 6, 38 Stat. 251, 262, the consolidated bank had
permission to act as executor.
He further reported that many estates were being administered by
the consolidated bank under a claim of right where the Fitchburg
Bank had been appointed administrator, executor, or in some other
fiduciary capacity, and no new appointment of the consolidated bank
in place of the Fitchburg Bank had been made by decree of the
probate court.
Page 279 U. S. 355
He concluded the report as follows:
"Without action upon said account, I report the above facts and
the question of law involved, for the consideration and
determination of the full court, as to whether the petitioner is
entitled to render said account."
Fredk. H. Chamberlain,
Judge of Probate Court
After a hearing on the report, a rescript of the Supreme
Judicial Court was as follows:
"Ordered that the register of probate and insolvency in said
county make the following entry under said case in the docket of
said court, viz.: the question reported, namely, 'Whether the
petitioner is entitled to render said account,' is answered in the
negative. Probate court instructed accordingly."
Following the rescript, the probate court made the following
entry:
"The foregoing account having been presented for allowance,
after rescript from the Supreme Judicial Court (Full Court) and
pursuant to the terms of said rescript, it appearing that the
Worcester County National Bank of Worcester, the accountant and
petitioner in this case, has not succeeded the Fitchburg Bank &
Trust Company as executor of the will of said testatrix, and is not
entitled to render this account, this petition for the allowance of
the same is hereby dismissed."
A petition for appeal to this Court, with an assignment of
errors, was filed, and an appeal was allowed under § 237(a) of
the Judicial Code, as amended by the Act of February 13, 1925, c.
229, 43 Stat. 936, 937.
The Supreme Judicial Court stated its reasons for the conclusion
reached in an elaborate opinion. 263 Mass. 444..
The Court began with a statement of the substance of § 3 of
the Act of February 25, 1927, c.191, 44 Stat. 1224, 1225, providing
that any bank, including a trust company
Page 279 U. S. 356
incorporated under the laws of any state, may be consolidated
with a national bank located in the same county under the charter
of the national bank on such terms and conditions as may lawfully
be agreed upon in the manner specified; that all the rights,
franchises, and interests of the state bank in and to every species
of property, real, personal, and mixed, and choses in action
thereto belonging, shall be deemed to be transferred to and vested
in such national bank into which it is consolidated without any
deed or transfer, and that the national bank shall hold and enjoy
all this property, franchises, and interests, including the right
of succession as trustee, executor, or in any other fiduciary
capacity, in the same manner and to the same extent as was held and
enjoyed by the state bank. The section closes with the limitation:
"No such consolidation shall be in contravention of the law of the
state under which such bank is incorporated."
The court examined the question whether there was any statute of
Massachusetts or any policy declared in its statutes which
prevented or forbade such consolidation, and found that there was
none, but pointed out that there was a provision in the General
Laws of Massachusetts, c. 172, § 44, as amended by Stat. 1922,
c. 292, which should be regarded as a limitation upon such
consolidation, as follows:
"The charter of a trust company, the business of which shall, on
or after July 1, 1922, be consolidated or merged with, or absorbed
by, another bank or trust company, shall be void except for the
purpose of discharging existing obligations and liabilities."
With this qualification, the court found the field to be left
open, under Massachusetts law, to the exercise by Congress of
whatever power it possessed over the subject. The court then
considered the congressional power, and cited the case of
Casey
v. Galli, 94 U. S. 673, to
show that,
Page 279 U. S. 357
under § 44 of the Banking Act of Congress, c. 106, 13 Stat.
99, 112, a state bank could change its organization into that of a
national bank without any authority given by the state in its
charter or otherwise to make the change. The Supreme Judicial Court
could not find any distinction between the power of Congress to
authorize the conversion of a state bank into a national bank and
its power to authorize the consolidation of a state bank with a
national bank under the charter of the national bank, and concluded
that, if no state legislation was necessary to accomplish the
conversion, there was no legislation necessary to accomplish
consolidation, and that the consolidation of a Massachusetts trust
company with a national bank under the § 3 of the Act of
Congress of February 25, 1927, was permissible and valid.
The court then considered what was the legal effect of the
consolidation on the trust company and the national bank, and
emphasized the explicit provision of § 3 that the
consolidation was to be under the charter of the national bank. It
referred again to the provision of the state law that, upon the
consolidation, the charter of the trust company should be "void
except for the purpose of discharging existing obligations and
liabilities." It held that the word "franchises" directed to be
transferred to the national bank by virtue of § 3 did not mean
its charter or its right to be a corporation, for that would be in
contravention of the law of the commonwealth; that it was only the
national bank that retained its corporate identity; that the
certificate of the Comptroller did not constitute a charter; but
only his approval of the consolidation; that the trust company had
gone out of existence, and all its property had become the property
of the consolidated bank, and that the latter was not a newly
created organization, but an enlargement of the continuously
existing national bank. Thus, the court found that the
Page 279 U. S. 358
identity of the trust company had not been continued in a
national bank, but had been extinguished. The court distinguished
this case from cases of union, where contract obligations had been
held to pass from one of the uniting corporations to the other.
Such cases were held not to be applicable to sustain the view that
positions of trust, like executor, administrator, and other
fiduciaries, could be transferred to the national bank by the mere
consolidation under Massachusetts law.
The court then set out at some length the reasons why, under the
Constitution and practice of Massachusetts, the appointment of an
executor was a judicial act, and that, in the case before the
court, no one could succeed to the void and defunct state trust
company as executor except by appointment by the probate court. The
trust involved was highly personal. The court said:
"To treat the national banking association into which the state
trust company has been consolidated as preserving the identity of
the trust company in this particular would be contrary to the
juridical conception and practice touching the appointment of such
fiduciaries under the law of this commonwealth."
The third question the court discussed and decided was the
validity and binding effect on courts of Massachusetts of the
declaration in § 3 of the Act of Congress that the right of
succession as trustee, executor, or in any other fiduciary capacity
would follow to the same extent as it was held and enjoyed by such
state bank. It first inquired what was its meaning, and held that
it meant that the original appointment of the state bank was to
continue wholly unaffected by the fact that the state bank had
ceased to be, and that another and different corporation, whose
credit, standing, and competency had never been the subject of
judicial inquiry for this purpose, must be substituted by virtue of
§ 3. The court found that
Page 279 U. S. 359
this result was in contravention of the law of the commonwealth,
and contrary to the state and federal Constitutions.
The court found, however, that this provision was not the
dominant part of § 3, that the clause was separable and
distinct, that the rest of the section could stand independently,
and that there was no such connection between the two as to
indicate that Congress would not have enacted the valid part
without the other.
The court therefore held that the Worcester County National Bank
of Worcester, the accountant and petitioner in the case at bar, had
not succeeded the Fitchburg Bank & Trust Company as executor of
the will of the testatrix, and was not entitled to render an
account as such executor, that it could only account as executor
de son tort, and that the question of the probate court
must be answered in the negative.
In passing on this appeal, we must observe that, in determining
the policy of a state from its statutes and their construction, we,
of course, follow the opinion of the state court, except as it may
be affected by the federal Constitution. When, therefore, the state
court holds that an executor, to act as such in the state, must be
appointed by the probate court, this Court must respect that
conclusion and act accordingly; but, when the question arises as to
what is the proper interpretation and construction of federal
legislation, this Court adopts its own view.
It is very clear to us that Congress, in the enactment of §
3 of the Act of February 25, 1927, was anxious even to the point of
repetition to show that it wished to avoid any provision in
contravention of the law of the state in which the state trust
company and the national bank to be consolidated were located. So
strongly manifest is this purpose that we do not hesitate to
construe the effect of § 3 in Massachusetts to be only to
transfer the property
Page 279 U. S. 360
and estate from the trust company to the national bank to be
managed and preserved as the state law provides, for administration
of estates, and not to transfer the office of executor from the
state trust company to the succeeding national bank. As this
requires another judicial appointment by a probate court, it would
become the duty of a consolidated national bank, after the union,
immediately to apply for the appointment of itself as
administrator, subject to the examination and approval of the
proper probate court. Because of the interest of the national bank
in all of the assets of the trust company, including the estate at
bar, transferred to its custody, the bank would seem to have a
right to make such an application to the probate court and await
the action of that court. If, on the other hand, it assumed
improperly that it was made an executor by the mere consolidation,
and held the transferred property as such, it must be held to have
become an executor
de son tort, and should bring the
assets before the probate court and proceed by proper application
to secure the appointment of a legal executor by the court, as
pointed out by the Supreme Judicial Court in this case and in
Commonwealth-Atlantic National Bank, 261 Mass. 217, and
Commonwealth-Atlantic National Bank, 249 Mass. 440.
These views lead us to agree with the conclusions of the Supreme
Judicial Court in respect to the legality of the consolidation of
the trust company and the national bank, and only to differ from it
in its construction of § 3, by which it would hold that
section unconstitutional under the Construction of Massachusetts,
and also under the Constitution of the United States.
We think § 3 enjoins upon the national bank complete
conformity with the Massachusetts law in its conduct of estates of
deceased persons when acting as trustee or administrator
thereof.
Page 279 U. S. 361
The Supreme Judicial Court refers in its opinion in this case to
that of
Commonwealth-Atlantic National Bank, 261 Mass.
217, as showing that the consolidated bank in this case could not
act as executor. In that case, a state trust company was appointed
by the probate court as trustee under wills in two cases and as
conservator of property in a third. It qualified by giving bond,
and for some time held and administered the property as fiduciary.
Thereafter it was converted into a national bank, which still later
was consolidated with another national bank. No new appointment as
trustee was made by the probate court. The consolidated national
bank petitioned for allowance of accounts as fiduciary. The court
held that, while the accounts were accurate and complete, the
consolidated bank was not a duly appointed fiduciary merely by
virtue of the original appointment of the state trust company, and
could only account
de son tort. The court relied on
Commonwealth-Atlantic National Bank, 249 Mass. 440. There,
a state trust company was named as executor in a will. Thereafter
it became converted into a national bank, which still later was
consolidated with another national bank. The testator having died,
the consolidated national bank petitioned for the issuance of
letters testamentary to it as the executor named in the will. The
court held that it was not the executor named therein, and that the
designation of the state trust company as executor did not confer
on it a property right passing to its successor, the consolidated
national bank.
The court in both
Commonwealth-Atlantic Bank Cases
accepted the effect of the decisions in
First National Bank of
Bay City v. Fellows, 244 U. S. 416, and
Burnes National Bank of St. Joseph v. Duncan, 265 U. S.
17, the latter holding that national banks may act as
executors in a state where state trust companies have that
privilege.
Page 279 U. S. 362
The court, in 249 Mass., said, "We accept, as we are bound to
accept, that principle in all its amplitude and with all its
implications," but said that "that principle does not reach to the
facts here presented." There was similar language in 261 Mass. The
Supreme Judicial Court did not then hold, and has not held, that a
probate court of Massachusetts may not appoint a national bank,
otherwise qualified, to be executor, administrator, or trustee, if
it approves one as such. In construing § 3, we think it to be
in conformity therewith for the national bank, after consolidation,
to apply to the Massachusetts probate court for appointment as a
succeeding fiduciary to carry on the duties. In the present case,
no such appointment has been made by the probate court.
Under the Massachusetts authorities as already cited, the bank,
in attempting in this case to act as executor, has become an
executor
de son tort, and that situation must be disposed
of in accordance with the laws applicable in Massachusetts to such
a situation.
Clabburn v. Phillips, 245 Mass. 47. When the
executor
de son tort has been released, it would seem that
application might be made to the probate court for appointment of
the national bank as administrator to close the estate. It seems to
us that our construction of § 3 of the Act of 1927, in
differing from that of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts,
makes it possible by the appointment of the probate judge, if he
approves, to enforce the requirements which the laws of that state
impose in the execution of such trusts and still preserve the
constitutional effectiveness of § 3.
This result requires us to affirm the dismissal of the petition
of the Worcester County National Bank in seeking to render the
first and final account of the Fitchburg Bank & Trust Company
as executor of the last will and
Page 279 U. S. 363
testament of Julia A. Legnard, deceased, and its own account as
executor of her will, but to remand the cause to the probate court
for a proceeding by the petitioner as executor
de son
tort, and for such further proceedings as it may be advised
and as are permissible by the laws of Massachusetts and the
statutes of the United States not inconsistent with this
opinion.
And it is so ordered.