1. A National Farm Loan Association, composed of borrowers under
the Federal Farm Loan Act, though in a general sense it is a public
agency or instrumentality for carrying out the policy of the
statute, does not act as the agent of the lending Federal Land Bank
after money transmitted through the Association to the borrower has
passed from the control of the Land Bank. P.
290 U. S.
254.
Page 290 U. S. 248
2. A borrower, by his application and by endorsing the check
sent by the lending Land Bank to pay a loan, consents to the
procedure prescribed by the Act whereby the Association shall be a
co-obligor with the borrower and the money borrowed shall be sent
by the Land Bank to the Association, and the Association shall have
control over the disbursement of the proceeds of the check for the
agreed purposes of the loan. There is no inconsistency with the
purposes sought by the Farm Loan Act in placing upon the borrower,
instead of the lending bank, the risk of insolvency of a depository
bank in which the Association places the proceeds of the check
pending their disbursement. P.
290 U. S.
254.
3. This conclusion is fortified by the fact that the Act
contemplates that lending banks shall use the mortgages, given by
borrowers, as collateral for Land Bank bonds, and that such use
would be impaired if the risk were upon the lending bank during the
long period that may elapse between the time the proceeds of a loan
pass from the control of the Land Bank and the time they are
actually disbursed by the Association to the use of the borrower.
P.
290 U. S.
255.
4. There is no failure of consideration for a borrower's
mortgage when, pursuant to the scheme of the Act, a Land Bank has
sent a check made payable to the borrower and a Farm Loan
Association, when the check has been endorsed by the borrower and
delivered to the Association for disbursement of the proceeds, and
when the proceeds are lost through the insolvency of a bank in
which they had been deposited by the Association pending
disbursement. P.
290 U. S. 256.
204 N.C. 278, 167 S.E. 856, reversed.
Certiorari to review the affirmance of a decree cancelling a
mortgage for failure of consideration. This relief was conditioned
upon prior repayment of a small sum that had been advanced to
defray taxes on the land. It was a "controversy without action,"
submitted to the trial court upon an agreed statement of facts.
Page 290 U. S. 249
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by respondent in the Superior Court for
Polk County, North Carolina, to cancel a mortgage, given by her to
petitioner, as invalid for want of consideration. It presents a
question of the construction of the Federal Farm Loan Act of July
17, 1916, c. 245, 39 Stat. 360, which was raised and decided upon
an agreed statement of facts. Judgment for respondent was affirmed
by the Supreme Court of the state, 204 N.C. 278, 167 S.E. 856. The
case comes here on certiorari.
On August 16, 1930, respondent applied to petitioner, through
the Columbus Farm Loan Association, for a loan secured by mortgage
upon her land, located in Polk County. The loan was approved by the
loan Association on October 1, 1930, and on that day respondent was
admitted to membership in the Association. In due course, she
executed a promissory note to petitioner, secured by mortgage upon
her land, both of which she delivered to petitioner as required by
the provisions of the Federal Farm Loan Act. The note, as the
statute commands, bore indorsement of the agreement of the
Association to be liable upon it. Petitioner's check for the amount
of the loan, less authorized charges, made payable jointly to the
secretary-treasurer of the Association and respondent, was
delivered by petitioner to attorneys of the respondent together
with a "closed loan statement." This statement was a detailed
report of the loan transaction, including data of the disbursement
of its proceeds and of fees charged by the Association to the
borrower. The secretary-treasurer was to fill out the statement
after the loan transaction was completed, procure the borrower's
signature to it, and return it to the bank. These documents were
delivered by the attorneys to the secretary-treasurer, who, after
the check was duly indorsed
Page 290 U. S. 250
by the payees, deposited it in a bank to the credit of the
Association. At the time of the indorsement and before, respondent
understood that the check was to be so deposited and the proceeds
after collection were to be disbursed by the Association for the
purposes for which the loan was procured. The bank, immediately
after collection of the check, closed its doors, and the proceeds
of the collection, with an exception not now material, have not
become available either to the Association or the respondent.
The Supreme Court of North Carolina, construing the provisions
of the Federal Farm Loan Act, concluded that the Association,
organized under its provisions as an intermediary between the
borrower and the petitioner, acted as a "public agent," and that
the receipt by it and the deposit of the check for collection and
credit, though it was first indorsed by respondent, was not a
receipt of the loan by the borrower or in her behalf such as to
establish liability of respondent upon her note.
The Federal Farm Loan Act was adopted in response to a national
demand that the federal government should set up a rural credit
system by which credit, not adequately provided by commercial
banks, should be extended to those engaged in agriculture, upon the
security of farm mortgages. The report of the Senate Committee
which drafted the bill enacted as the Federal Farm Loan Act, Report
of Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, No. 144, 46th Cong.,
1st Sess., emphasizes as features of the proposed national rural
credit system the creation of regional federal land banks under
control of the Farm Loan Board. The banks were to make loans to
farmers, upon the security of farm mortgages, with funds obtained
in large part by the sale to investors of long-term bonds.
See
also Report of House Committee on Banking and Currency, No.
630, 64th Cong. 1st Sess. To adapt the system to local needs and to
promote cooperation among borrowers,
Page 290 U. S. 251
it was proposed that the loans should be made through local
associations controlled by their membership, composed exclusively
of borrowers.
These proposals were carried out in the Federal Farm Loan Act by
providing for the creation of twelve regional federal land banks,
§ 4, 12 U.S.C. §§ 671-683, of which petitioner is
one, all under the direction and control of the Federal Farm Loan
Board, [
Footnote 1] § 3,
12 U.S.C. §§ 651, 652. Each has authority to lend money
on the security of mortgages on farms within its own district.
Section 13, 12 U.S.C. § 781. The banks are authorized to issue
farm loan bonds secured by mortgages taken as security for loans.
They are without authority to make loans "except through National
Farm Loan Associations," organized as provided by other sections of
the Act, § 14, 12 U.S.C. § 791, [
Footnote 2] or by agents, which are banking
institutions organized under state laws. Section 15, 12 U.S.C.
§ 803. They may make loans only for specified agricultural
purposes, including the payment of existing loans upon the security
of farm lands or the purchase of farm lands or equipment for them
or their improvement. Section 12, Par. Fourth, 12 U.S.C. §
771. Loans are made on written applications which are required
to
Page 290 U. S. 252
designate the purpose for which the loan is to be used, and the
borrower is required to agree that the loan shall be used for those
purposes. § 12, Par. Eighth, 12 U.S.C. § 771.
National farm loan Associations are local Associations,
organized under charters granted by the Federal Loan Board, §
7, 12 U.S.C. §§ 711, 719. Their membership is restricted
to those who are borrowers from federal land banks. They are
controlled by boards of directors elected by their members, who,
with the exception of the secretary-treasurer, the chief executive
officer of the Association, serve without compensation.
§§ 7, 8, 12 U.S.C. §§ 712, 713, 733. They are
also authorized to charge fees to borrowers, limited in amount,
§ 11, 12 U.S.C. § 761, "to indorse, and thereby become
liable for the payment of, mortgages taken from its shareholders by
the Federal land bank of its district," § 11, 12 U.S.C. §
761, and to receive from the federal land bank "funds advanced" by
the land bank and to deliver them to its members on receipt of
first mortgages, §§ 7, 11, 12 U.S.C. §§ 720,
761. By § 14, 12 U.S.C. § 714, the secretary-treasurer is
the custodian of the funds of the Association, which are required
to be deposited in a bank designated by the board of directors. He
is required to
"assure himself . . . that the loans made through the national
farm loan Association of which he is an officer are applied to the
purposes set forth in the application of the borrower,"
to pay over to borrowers all sums "received for their account
from the Federal land bank upon first mortgage," and, acting under
the direction of the Association,
"to collect, receipt for, and transmit to the Federal Land Bank
payments of interest, amortization installments, or principal
arising out of loans made through the Association,"
and to report to the land bank of the district any failure of
the borrower to comply with the terms of the application or
mortgage, and any delinquent taxes on land mortgaged
Page 290 U. S. 253
to the bank. Expenses of the secretary-treasurer are payable
from the funds of the Association, and, if such funds are not
available, by levy of assessment on the members. § 7, 12
U.S.C. § 715.
Borrowers from federal land banks through national farm loan
Associations are required to subscribe and pay for shares of stock
in the Association to an amount equal to 5% of the face of the
loan, which stock is to be paid off at par and retired upon full
payment of the loan. § 8, 12 U.S.C. § 733. The cost of
these shares may be included in the loan. § 9, 12 U.S.C.
§ 742. The Association in turn is required, "whenever" it
"shall desire to secure for any member a loan on first mortgage
from the Federal land bank of its district," to subscribe and pay
for capital stock of the lending federal land bank in like amount,
and similarly this stock is to be retired upon payment of the
mortgage loan. § 7, 12 U.S.C. § 721.
In the present loan transaction, carried out in strict
conformity with the statute, it was plainly contemplated that
petitioner was to be the lender, and, as lender, it was to become
the owner of the note and the mortgage, in which it was named
respectively as payee and mortgagee. Respondent, as maker of the
note, and the Association, by its indorsement agreeing to be liable
for its payment, were both to be obligated to pay the loan. As
between the two, the Association was in the position of a surety or
guarantor, entitled to be exonerated by the mortgage security and
protected to some extent by the 5% stock subscription exacted of
respondent. If the transaction were unaffected by the provisions of
the Farm Loan Act, it would require no argument or citation of
authority to support the conclusion that the delivery of the note
and mortgage to the lender, and the receipt of the check from the
lender, payable to the obligors upon the mortgage indebtedness, and
their indorsement and the collection of it, would establish their
liability for the payment
Page 290 U. S. 254
of the loan, regardless of what might become of the
proceeds.
The state court rested its decision on the characterization of
the Association as a public agent, but it did not hold that the
Association was in any sense an agent for the lender bank. It could
not well have done so, for neither the provisions of the Farm Loan
Act nor the particular circumstances which attended the loan in the
present case gave to the petitioner any right of control over the
Association or any power to recall the check or its proceeds after
its delivery and collection. The Association was controlled by
directors, elected by its own members, who, like the respondent,
were borrowers. After the check was delivered to the Association,
it passed completely from the control of the lender and into the
exclusive control of the payees who were the obligors of the
mortgage indebtedness.
It is true that both the petitioner and the Association were, in
a broad and general sense, public agencies or instrumentalities to
carry out a policy of the government -- the extension of credit to
those engaged in agriculture to be availed of in the furtherance of
agricultural undertakings. But those purposes could only be
achieved through loans made to private individuals. The borrower is
under no legal compulsion to borrow. If he takes the benefit of the
privilege extended by the statute, he can do so only in compliance
with its requirement that he shall join, with himself as obligor,
the local cooperative Association of which he is a member. This
supplies a strong incentive on the part of the Associations to
perform the duties commanded by the statute looking to the safety
and security of the loan and, as agreed by the borrower and
required by the statute, its disbursement for the purposes for
which it is made. By applying for the loan and delivering to the
lender her mortgage and note, indorsed by the Association, in
compliance with the Act,
Page 290 U. S. 255
respondent consented in advance to the procedure for creating
and disbursing the loan which the statute prescribes. She renewed
that consent when her indorsement of the check was made, with full
knowledge that the Association, her co-obligor, was to deposit the
check to its credit and disburse the proceeds for the purposes for
which the loan was made. This consent could not be affected by the
closed loan statement which it was intended she should later sign.
The statement was to be merely a confirmation or report of what had
gone before. The indorsement of the check was the crucial act, for
it drew the funds from the control of the petitioner and dedicated
them irrevocably to the purposes for which the loan had been
secured.
We can perceive no inconsistency between the public ends to be
effected and the purpose plainly exhibited by the statute and the
conduct of the parties that they should occupy the position of
co-obligors upon the loan indebtedness, with the mutual
understanding that one of them, the Association, was to disburse
the proceeds of the loan for purposes agreed upon. And we can
discern no difference between the legal consequence of their acts
and that which would have ensued had respondent consented that the
loan be received and disbursed by any third person who afterward
had lost the money, or, if she had herself taken the indorsed check
and deposited it to her credit in the insolvent bank. If we thought
this conclusion more doubtful, we should regard as persuasive the
fact that a different conclusion would break down the scheme of the
Act to make the mortgages taken by the federal land banks available
as collateral for federal land bank bonds sold to investors. Its
operation would be seriously impaired if such use of the mortgages
taken must await the long period which may often elapse after the
lending bank has paid out its money, and before the disbursement of
it is completed by the local Association.
Page 290 U. S. 256
We conclude that there was no failure of consideration for the
mortgage, and that the judgment of the state court must be
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
The Farm Loan Board consisted of the Secretary of the Treasury
and six members, appointed by the President, § 3, 12 U.S.C.
§ 652. After the entry of the final judgment in this cause,
the Federal Farm Loan Board was abolished and its functions were
transferred to the Farm Loan Commissioner, subject to the
jurisdiction and control of the Farm Credit Administration, by
Executive Order of the President, No. 6084 of March 27, 1933; the
name of the officer of the Farm Loan Commissioner was afterward
changed to that of Land Bank Commissioner by Act of June 16, 1933,
Session Laws, First Session 1933, 273.
[
Footnote 2]
By Act of March 4, 1933, Session Laws, Second Session, 1932,
1933, pp. 1547-1548, after the loan transaction in the present
case, this section was amended so as to permit loans to be made
either through national farm loan Associations or direct to
borrowers, as provided in § 7. § 7 was also amended so as
to provide for direct loans in localities where no farm loan
Associations have been organized.