The Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (BHCA) requires a bank
holding company to obtain the approval of the Federal Reserve Board
(Board) before it may acquire a bank. Section 3(d) of the Act
(known as the Douglas Amendment) prohibits the Board from approving
an application of a bank holding company located in one State to
acquire a bank located in another State unless the acquisition
"is specifically authorized by the statute laws of the State in
which such bank is located, by language to that effect and not
merely by implication."
Substantially similar Connecticut and Massachusetts statutes
provide that an out-of-state bank holding company with its
principal place of business in one of the other New England States
may acquire an in-state bank, provided that the other State accords
equivalent reciprocal privileges to the enacting State's banking
organizations. Certain bank holding companies (respondents here)
applied to the Board as out-of-state companies for purposes of
either the Connecticut or Massachusetts statute, seeking approval
for acquisitions of banks located in one or the other of those
States. Petitioners, prospective competitors, opposed the proposed
acquisitions in proceedings before the Board, contending that the
acquisitions were not authorized by the Douglas Amendment and that,
if they were, the applicable Connecticut or Massachusetts statute,
by discriminating against non-New England out-of-state bank holding
companies, violated the Commerce, Compact, and Equal Protection
Clauses of the Federal Constitution. Rejecting petitioners'
contentions, the Board approved the applications, and the Court of
Appeals, in consolidated review proceedings, affirmed.
Held:
1. The Connecticut and Massachusetts statutes are of the kind
contemplated by the Douglas Amendment to lift its ban on interstate
acquisitions. The Amendment's language plainly permits States to
lift the federal ban entirely, and although it does not
specifically indicate that a State may partially lift the ban,
neither does it specifically indicate that a State is allowed only
the alternatives of leaving the federal ban in place or lifting it
completely. The Amendment's legislative history indicates
Page 472 U. S. 160
that Congress intended to allow each State flexibility in its
approach, contemplating that some States might partially lift the
ban on interstate banking without opening themselves up to
interstate banking from everywhere in the Nation. Moreover, the
Connecticut and Massachusetts statutes, by allowing only regional
acquisitions, are consistent with the Amendment's and the BHCA's
purpose of retaining local, community-based control over banking.
Pp.
472 U. S.
168-173.
2. The Connecticut and Massachusetts statutes do not violate the
Commerce Clause. Congress' commerce power is not dormant here, but
has been exercised by enactment of the BHCA and the Douglas
Amendment, authorizing the challenged state statutes. State actions
that Congress plainly authorizes are invulnerable to constitutional
attack under the Commerce Clause. Pp.
472 U. S.
174-175.
3. The challenged state statutes do not violate the Compact
Clause, which provides that no State, without Congress' consent,
shall enter into an agreement or compact with another State. Even
assuming,
arguendo, that the state statutes (along with
statutes of other New England States under petitioners' theory)
constitute an agreement or compact,
"application of the Compact Clause is limited to agreements that
are"
"directed to the formation of any combination tending to the
increase of political power in the States, which may encroach upon
or interfere with the just supremacy of the United States."
New Hampshire v. Maine, 426 U.
S. 363,
426 U. S. 369,
quoting
Virginia v. Tennessee, 148 U.
S. 503,
148 U. S. 519.
In view of the Douglas Amendment, the challenged state statutes,
which comply with the BHCA, cannot possibly infringe federal
supremacy. Nor do the state statutes in question either enhance the
political power of the New England States at the expense of other
States or have an impact on the federal structure. Pp.
472 U. S.
175-176.
4. The Connecticut and Massachusetts statutes do not violate the
Equal Protection Clause. The statutes favor out-of-state
corporations within the New England region over corporations from
other parts of the country. However, Connecticut and Massachusetts,
in enacting their statutes, considered that interstate banking on a
regional basis combined the beneficial effect of increasing the
number of banking competitors with the need to preserve a close
relationship between those in the community who need credit and
those who provide credit, and that acquisition of in-state banks by
holding companies headquartered outside the New England region
would threaten the independence of local banking institutions.
These concerns meet the traditional rational basis for judging
equal protection claims.
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v.
Ward, 470 U. S. 869,
distinguished. Pp.
472 U. S.
176-178.
740 F.2d 203, affirmed.
Page 472 U. S. 161
REHNQUIST, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which all
other Members joined except POWELL, J., who took no part in the
decision of the case. O'CONNOR, J., filed a concurring opinion,
post, p.
472 U. S.
178.
Page 472 U. S. 162
JUSTICE REHNQUIST delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondents Bank of New England Corporation (BNE), Hartford
National Corporation (HNC), and Bank of Boston Corporation (BBC)
are bank holding companies which applied to the Federal Reserve
Board to obtain approval for the acquisition of banks or bank
holding companies in New England States other than the ones in
which they are principally located. Petitioners Northeast Bancorp,
Inc., Union Trust Company, and Citicorp opposed these proposed
acquisitions in proceedings before the Board. The Board approved
the acquisitions, and the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
affirmed the orders of the Board. Petitioners sought certiorari,
contending that the acquisitions were not authorized by the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956, 70 Stat. 133, as amended, 12 U.S.C. §
1841
et seq., and that, if they were authorized by that
Act, the state statutes which permitted the acquisitions in each
case violated the Commerce Clause and the Compact Clause of the
United States Constitution. We granted certiorari because of the
importance of these issues, 469 U.S. 810, and we now affirm.
The Bank Holding Company Act (BHCA) regulates the acquisition of
state and national banks by bank holding companies.
Page 472 U. S. 163
The Act generally defines a bank as any institution organized
under state or federal law which "(1) accepts deposits that the
depositor has a legal right to withdraw on demand, and (2) engages
in the business of making commercial loans." 12 U.S.C. § 1841(c).
The Act defines a bank holding company as any corporation,
partnership, business trust, association, or similar organization
that owns or has control over a bank or another bank holding
company. §§ 1841(a)(1), (b);
see § 1841(a)(5). Before a
company may become a bank holding company, or a bank holding
company may acquire a bank or substantially all of the assets of a
bank, the Act requires it to obtain the approval of the Federal
Reserve Board. § 1842.
The Board will evaluate the proposed transaction for
anticompetitive effects, financial and managerial resources,
community needs, and the like. § 1842(c). In addition, § 3(d) of
the Act, 12 U.S.C. § 1842(d), known as "the Douglas Amendment,"
prohibits the Board from approving an application of a bank holding
company or bank located in one State to acquire a bank located in
another State, or substantially all of its assets, unless the
acquisition
"is specifically authorized by the statute laws of the State in
which such bank is located, by language to that effect and not
merely by implication."
Pursuant to the Douglas Amendment, a number of States recently
have enacted statutes which selectively authorize interstate bank
acquisitions on a regional basis. This case requires us to consider
the validity of these statutes.
From 1956 to 1972, the Douglas Amendment had the effect of
completely barring interstate bank acquisitions, because no State
had enacted the requisite authorizing statute. Beginning in 1972,
several States passed statutes permitting such acquisitions in
limited circumstances or for specialized purposes. For example,
Iowa passed a grandfathering statute which had the effect of
permitting the only out-of-state bank holding company owning an
Iowa bank to maintain and expand its in-state banking activities,
Iowa Code § 524.1805 (1983);
see Iowa Independent Bankers v.
Board of Governors,
Page 472 U. S. 164
167 U.S.App.D.C. 286, 511 F.2d 1288,
cert. denied, 423
U.S. 875 (1975); Washington authorized out-of-state purchasers to
acquire failing local banks, Wash.Rev.Code § 30.04.230(4)(a)
(Supp.1985); and Delaware allowed out-of-state bank holding
companies to set up special purpose banks, such as credit card
operations, in Delaware so long as they do not compete in other
respects with locally controlled full-service banks, Del.Code Ann.,
Tit. 5, § 801
et seq. (Supp.1984).
Beginning with Massachusetts in December, 1982, several States
have enacted statutes lifting the Douglas Amendment ban on
interstate acquisitions on a reciprocal basis within their
geographic regions. The Massachusetts Act specifically provides
that an out-of-state bank holding company with its principal place
of business in one of the other New England States (Connecticut,
Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont), which is not
directly or indirectly controlled by another corporation with its
principal place of business located outside of New England, may
establish or acquire a Massachusetts-based bank or bank holding
company, provided that the other New England State accords
equivalent reciprocal privileges to Massachusetts banking
organizations. Mass.Gen.Laws Ann., ch. 167A, § 2 (West 1984). In
June, 1983, Connecticut followed suit by adopting a substantially
similar statute. 1983 Conn.Pub. Acts 83-411.
The other New England States have taken different courses or
have not acted. Rhode Island, in May, 1983, authorized acquisition
of local banks by out-of-state bank holding companies on a
reciprocal basis similarly limited to the New England region, but
this geographic limitation will expire on June 30, 1986, after
which the authorization will extend nationwide, subject only to the
reciprocity requirement. R.I.Gen.Laws § 19-30-1
et seq.
(Supp.1984). Since February, 1984, Maine has permitted banking
organizations from all other States to acquire local banks without
any
Page 472 U. S. 165
reciprocity requirement. Me.Rev.Stat.Ann., Tit. 9-B, § 1013
(Supp.1984-1985). At the other extreme, New Hampshire and Vermont
have not enacted any statute releasing the Douglas Amendment's ban
on interstate bank acquisitions.
One predictable effect of the regionally restrictive statutes
will apparently be to allow the growth of regional multistate bank
holding companies which can compete with the established banking
giants in New York, California, Illinois, and Texas.
See
740 F.2d 203, 209, and n. 16 (1984). The Massachusetts and
Connecticut statutes have prompted at least 15 other States to
consider legislation which, according to the Federal Reserve Board,
would establish interstate banking regions in all parts of the
country. 70 Fed.Res.Bull. 374, 375-376 (1984). At least seven of
these States have already enacted the necessary statutes.
Two months after Connecticut passed its statute, BNE applied to
the Board for approval of its merger with respondent CBT
Corporation (CBT), a Connecticut bank holding company, and thereby
to acquire indirectly the Connecticut Bank and Trust Company, N.A.,
of Hartford, Connecticut. Soon thereafter HNC applied to the Board
for approval of the acquisition of Arltru Bank Corporation
(Arltru), a Massachusetts bank holding company which owns the
Arlington Trust Company, a bank located in Lawrence, Massachusetts.
Finally, BBC applied to the Board for approval of the acquisition
of the successor by merger to Colonial Bancorp, Inc., a Connecticut
bank holding company, by which it would acquire Colonial Bank of
Waterbury, Connecticut.
Citicorp offers financial services to consumers and businesses
nationally through its bank and nonbank subsidiaries. In response
to the Board's invitation for comments from interested persons on
these three proposed acquisitions, Citicorp submitted comments
opposing all three of them. Northeast owns petitioner Union Trust
Company, a Connecticut bank that competes directly with banks owned
by CBT,
Page 472 U. S. 166
HNC, and Colonial. In addition, Bank of New York Corporation has
agreed to acquire Northeast if Connecticut or the United States
enacts the necessary enabling legislation. Northeast and Union
Trust submitted comments opposing BNE's application to acquire
CBT.
The petitioners challenged the applications in part on the
ground that the Douglas Amendment did not authorize them, and in
part on the grounds that the Massachusetts and Connecticut
statutes, by discriminating against non-New England bank holding
companies, violated the Commerce, Compact, and Equal Protection
Clauses of the Federal Constitution. They claimed. therefore, that
the proposed interstate acquisitions were not authorized by valid
state statutes, as required by the Douglas Amendment. The Board
rejected these arguments. It first determined that the BNE-CBT and
BBC-Colonial acquisitions were specifically authorized by the
Connecticut statute and the HNC-Arltru acquisition was specifically
authorized by the Massachusetts statute, and therefore that the
Douglas Amendment would not prevent the Board from approving any of
the three proposed transactions.
The Board then rejected the constitutional challenge to the two
state statutes. In doing so, it noted that it would hold a state
statute unconstitutional only if there was "clear and unequivocal
evidence" of its unconstitutionality. 70 Fed.Res.Bull. 353, 354
(1984);
id. at 376; 70 Fed.Res.Bull. 524, 525-526 (1984).
While stating that "the issue is not free from doubt," it concluded
that this standard had not been met. 70 Fed. Res. Bull. at 376-377.
Interpreting the statutory language and the legislative history of
the Douglas Amendment, it determined that
"the Douglas Amendment should be read as a renunciation of
federal interest in regulating the interstate acquisition of banks
by bank holding companies."
Id. at 380. This renunciation of federal interest
eliminated any objection to the statutes under the Compact Clause
or dormant Commerce Clause.
Page 472 U. S. 167
The Board also found nothing in the history of the Amendment to
suggest that
"the states were to be permitted only to choose between not
allowing out-of-state bank holding companies to enter and allowing
completely free entry."
Id. at 386. The Board disposed of the equal protection
challenge by reasoning that the regional restriction in the two
statutes was "rationally related to an attempt to maintain a
banking system responsive to local needs in New England."
Id. at 381. The Board then analyzed the proposed
transactions in light of the relevant statutory considerations set
out in 12 U.S.C. §§ 1842(c) and 1843(c)(8), and approved the
applications.
Pursuant to 12 U.S.C. § 1848, which provides that "[a]ny party
aggrieved by an order of the Board" may seek review in a federal
court of appeals, and § 1860, which permits prospective competitors
to be aggrieved parties under § 1848, Citibank, Northeast, and
Union Trust petitioned the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
to review the Board's order approving the BNE-CBT acquisition.
Citibank also petitioned for review of the HNC-Arltru acquisition,
and Northeast and Union Trust were permitted to intervene. These
petitions were consolidated and the acquisitions stayed pending
expedited review. Meanwhile, the Board stayed its order approving
the BBC-Colonial acquisition, and the Court of Appeals consolidated
a petition filed by Citicorp for review of that transaction with
the two other pending review petitions. The court also permitted
BBC, BNE, CBT, HNC, the State of Connecticut, and the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts to intervene. The Court of Appeals affirmed the
Board's orders approving the three applications in all respects.
740 F.2d 203 (1984). It agreed with the Board's determination that
the Connecticut and Massachusetts statutes satisfied the terms of
the Douglas Amendment, and it then rejected challenges to the
Board's orders under the Commerce Clause, the Compact Clause, and
the Equal Protection Clause. The Court of Appeals stayed its
mandate
Page 472 U. S. 168
and ordered that the
status quo be maintained pending
disposition by this Court.
The Douglas Amendment
The Douglas Amendment to the BHCA prohibits the Board from
approving the application of a bank holding company or a bank
located in one State to acquire a bank located in another State, or
substantially all of its assets, unless the acquisition
"is specifically authorized by the statute laws of the State in
which such bank is located, by language to that effect and not
merely by implication."
§ 1842(d). Clearly the proposed acquisitions with which we deal
in this case must be consistent with the Douglas Amendment, or they
are invalid as a matter of federal statutory law. If the
Massachusetts and Connecticut statutes allowing regional
acquisitions are not the type of state statutes contemplated by the
Douglas Amendment, they would not lift the ban imposed by the
general prohibition of the Douglas Amendment. While petitioners
blend together arguments about the meaning of the Douglas Amendment
with arguments about the effect of the Commerce Clause, U.S.Const.,
Art. I, § 8, cl. 3, we think the contentions are best treated
separately.
The Board resolved the statutory issue in favor of the state
statutes, concluding that they were the sort of laws contemplated
by the Douglas Amendment. While the Board apparently does not
consider itself expert on any constitutional issues raised, it is
nonetheless an authoritative voice on the meaning of a federal
banking statute.
Securities Industry Assn. v. Board of
Governors of Federal Reserve System, 468 U.
S. 207 (1984). The Board may have applied a higher
standard than was necessary when it analyzed the Douglas Amendment
to see whether there was a "clear authorization" for selective
lifting of the ban, such as the Massachusetts and Connecticut
statutes undertake to do. Whether or not so stringent a standard
was applicable, we think the Board was correct in concluding that
it was, in fact, met in this case.
Page 472 U. S. 169
The language of the Douglas Amendment plainly permits States to
lift the federal ban entirely, as has been done by Maine. It does
not specifically indicate that a State may partially lift the ban,
for example in limited circumstances, for special types of
acquisitions, or for purchasers from a certain geographic region.
On the other hand, it also does not specifically indicate that a
State is allowed only two alternatives: leave the federal ban in
place or lift it completely. The Board concluded that the language
"does not appear, on its face, to authorize discrimination" by
region or "to meet the stringent test of explicitness laid down by"
this Court in the dormant Commerce Clause cases. 70 Fed.Res.Bull.
at 384. We need not resolve this issue, because we agree with the
Board that the legislative history of the Amendment supplies a
sufficient indication of Congress' intent.
At the time of the BHCA, interstate branch banking was already
prohibited by the McFadden Act. 12 U.S.C. § 36(c). The bank holding
company device, however, had been created to get around this
restriction. A holding company would purchase banks in different
localities both within and without a State, and thereby provide the
equivalent of branch banking. One of the major purposes of the BHCA
was to eliminate this loophole. H.R.Rep. No. 609, 84th Cong., 1st
Sess., 2-6 (1955); 101 Cong.Rec. 4407 (1955) (remarks of Rep.
Wier);
id. at 8028-8029 (remarks of Rep. Patman); 102
Cong.Rec. 6858-6859 (1956) (remarks of Sen. Douglas). As enacted by
the House in 1955, the BHCA contained a flat ban on interstate bank
acquisitions. The legislative history from the House makes it clear
that the policies of community control and local responsiveness of
banks inspired this flat ban.
See 101 Cong.Rec. A2454
(1955) (remarks of Rep. Wier);
id. at 8030-8031 (remarks
of Rep. Rains); H.R.Rep. No. 609,
supra, at 2-6.
The Douglas Amendment was added on the floor of the Senate. Its
entire legislative history is confined to the Senate debate. In
such circumstances, the comments of individual
Page 472 U. S. 170
legislators carry substantial weight, especially when they
reflect a consensus as to the meaning and objectives of the
proposed legislation, though not necessarily the wisdom of that
legislation. The instant case is not a situation where the comments
of an individual legislator, even a sponsor, is at odds with the
language of the statute or other traditionally more authoritative
indicators of legislative intent, such as the conference or
committee reports.
The bill reported out by the Senate Committee on Banking and
Currency permitted interstate bank acquisitions conditioned only on
approval by the Federal Reserve Board. This approach apparently was
favored by many of the large bank holding companies which sought
further expansion,
see, e.g., Control of Bank Holding
Companies, 1955: Hearings on S. 880
et al. before the
Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, 84th
Cong., 1st Sess., 132, 136 (1955) (testimony of Ellwood Jenkins,
First Bank Stock Corp.), 298-299 (Baldwin Maull, Marine Midland
Corp.), 320 (Cameron Thomson, Northwest Bancorporation),
cf. 375, 385 (Frank N. Belgrano, Jr., Transamerica Corp.),
and by some who thought the total ban in the House bill offensive
to States' rights,
see 102 Cong.Rec. 6752 (1956) (remarks
of Sen. Robertson, floor manager of Committee bill, quoting Sen.
Maybank).
The Douglas Amendment was a compromise between the two extremes
that also accommodated the States' rights concern:
"Our amendment would prohibit bank holding companies from
purchasing banks in other States unless such purchases by
out-of-State holding companies were specifically permitted by law
in such States."
Id. at 6860 (remarks of Sen. Douglas).
Accord,
ibid. (remarks of Sen. Bennett in opposition to the
Amendment).
Of central concern to this litigation, the Douglas compromise
did not simply leave to each State a choice one way or
Page 472 U. S. 171
the other -- either to permit or bar interstate acquisitions of
local banks -- but to allow each State flexibility in its approach.
Senator Douglas explained that, under his amendment, bank holding
companies would be permitted to acquire banks in other States "only
to the degree that State laws expressly permit them."
Id.
at 6858. Petitioners contend that, by the phrase "to the degree,"
Senator Douglas intended merely a quantitative reference to the
number of States which might lift the ban, and did not mean that a
State could partially lift the ban. Petitioners' contention,
however, is refuted by the close analogy drawn by Senator Douglas
between his amendment and the McFadden Act, 12 U.S.C. § 36(c):
"The organization of branch banks proceeded very rapidly in the
1920's, and, to check their growth, various States passed laws
limiting, and in some cases preventing it, as in the case of
Illinois. National banks had previously been implicitly prohibited
from opening branches, and there was a strong movement to remove
this prohibition and completely open up the field for the national
banks. This, however, was not done. Instead, by the McFadden Act
and other measures, national banks have been permitted to open
branches only to the degree permitted by State laws and State
authorities."
"I may say that what our amendment aims to do is to carry over
into the field of holding companies the same provisions which
already apply for branch banking under the McFadden Act -- namely,
our amendment will permit out-of-State holding companies to acquire
banks in other States only to the degree that State laws expressly
permit them; and that is the provision of the McFadden Act."
Ibid. See id. at 6860.
In enacting the McFadden Act in 1927, Congress relaxed federal
restrictions on branch banking by national banks, but at the same
time subjected them to the same branching
Page 472 U. S. 172
restrictions imposed by the States on state banks.
First
National Bank v. Walker Bank & Trust Co., 385 U.
S. 252,
385 U. S. 258
(1966). Congress intended "to leave the question of the
desirability of branch banking up to the States,"
ibid.,
and to permit branch banking by national banks "
in only those
States the laws of which permit branch banking, and only to the
extent that the State laws permit branch banking.'" Id. at
259 (quoting Sen. Glass, 76 Cong.Rec. 2511 (1933)). The McFadden
Act did not offer the States an all-or-nothing choice with respect
to branch banking. As Senator Douglas observed, some States had
limited intrastate branching by state banks, and others
like Illinois had prohibited it altogether.
This variative approach to intrastate branching was nicely
illustrated at the time by the structure in New York, which Senator
Douglas described as follows:
"In New York, the State is divided into 10 zones. Branch banking
is permitted within each of the zones, but a bank cannot have
branches in another zone."
102 Cong.Rec. 6858 (1956). At the same time, Pennsylvania
permitted branching in contiguous counties.
Upper Darby
National Bank v. Myers, 386 Pa. 12, 124 A.2d 116 (1956). In
view of this analogy to the McFadden Act and Senator Douglas'
explanation of that Act, there can be no other conclusion but that
Congress contemplated that some States might partially lift the ban
on interstate banking without opening themselves up to interstate
banking from everywhere in the Nation.
Not only are the Massachusetts and Connecticut statutes
consistent with the Douglas Amendment's anticipation of differing
approaches to interstate banking, but they are also consistent with
the broader purposes underlying the BHCA as a whole and the Douglas
Amendment in particular to retain local, community-based control
over banking. Faced with growing competition from nonbank financial
services that are not confined within state lines, these States
sought an alternative that allowed expansion and growth of
local
Page 472 U. S. 173
banks without opening their borders to unimpeded interstate
banking. The Connecticut General Assembly established a Commission
in 1979 to study the problem. It concluded:
"Both at the national and state levels, the philosophy
underlying our structure of bank regulation has been to promote a
pluralistic banking system -- a system comprised of many units,
rather than a highly concentrated system made up of a few large
banks. The promotion of local ownership and control of banks has,
as one of its objectives, the preservation of a close relationship
between those in our communities who need credit and those who
provide credit. To allow the control of credit that is essential
for the health of our state economy to pass to hands that are not
immediately responsive to the interests of Connecticut citizens and
businesses would not, we believe, serve our state well. Similarly,
to expose our smaller banks to the rigors of unlimited competition
from large out-of-state banking organizations -- particularly at a
time when deregulation of banking products at the federal level is
already putting strains on the resources of smaller banks -- would
not be wise."
Report to the General Assembly of the State of Connecticut (Jan.
5, 1983), 4 App. in No. 84-4047 (CA2), pp. 1230, 1240-1241. Rather,
the Commission proposed "an experiment in regional banking" as a
first step toward full interstate banking which
"would afford the legislature an opportunity to make its own
calculus of the benefits and detriments that might result from a
broader program of interstate banking."
Id. at 1241-1242. The Connecticut General Assembly
adopted the Commission's recommendations, and we believe that
Connecticut's approach is precisely what was contemplated by
Congress when it adopted the Douglas Amendment.
We hold that the Connecticut and Massachusetts statutes are of
the kind contemplated by the Douglas Amendment to lift its bar
against interstate acquisitions.
Page 472 U. S. 174
Petitioners contend that the regional limitation in the
Massachusetts and Connecticut statutes burdens commerce from
without the region while permitting a free flow of commerce among
the States within the region. They provide numerous citations to
prove that one of the principal purposes of the Framers of the
Constitution was to break up and forestall precisely this type of
economic "Balkanization" into confederations of States to the
detriment of the welfare of the Union as a whole.
See, e.g., H.
P. Hood & Sons, Inc. v. Du Mond, 336 U.
S. 525,
336 U. S. 533
(1949);
Hughes v. Oklahoma, 441 U.
S. 322,
441 U. S.
325-326 (1979); The Federalist Nos. 7 and 22, pp. 62-63,
143-145 (Rossiter ed.1961). There can be little dispute that the
dormant Commerce Clause would prohibit a group of States from
establishing a system of regional banking by excluding bank holding
companies from outside the region if Congress had remained
completely silent on the subject.
Lewis v. BT Investment
Managers, Inc., 447 U. S. 27,
447 U. S. 39-44
(1980). Nor can there be serious question that an individual State
acting entirely on its own authority would run afoul of the dormant
Commerce Clause if it sought to comprehensively regulate
acquisitions of local banks by out-of-state holding companies.
Sporhase v. Nebraska ex rel. Douglas, 458 U.
S. 941 (1982).
But that is not our case. Here, the commerce power of Congress
is not dormant, but has been exercised by that body when it enacted
the Bank Holding Company Act and the Douglas amendment to the Act.
Congress has authorized by the latter amendment the Massachusetts
and Connecticut statutes which petitioners challenge as violative
of the Commerce Clause. When Congress so chooses, state actions
which it plainly authorizes are invulnerable to constitutional
attack under the Commerce Clause.
Western & Southern Life
Insurance Co. v. State Board of Equalization, 451 U.
S. 648,
451 U. S.
653-654 (1981);
White v. Massachusetts Council of
Construction Employers, Inc., 460 U.
S. 204 (1983);
cf. 467 U. S. Inc. v.
Wunnicke,
Page 472 U. S. 175
467 U. S. 82
(1984). Petitioners' Commerce Clause attack on the challenged
acquisitions therefore fails.
Compact Clause
Petitioners maintain that the Massachusetts and Connecticut
statutes constitute a compact to exclude non-New England banking
organizations which violates the Compact Clause, U.S.Const., Art.
I, § 10, cl. 3, because Congress has not specifically approved it.
We have some doubt as to whether there is an agreement amounting to
a compact. The two statutes are similar, in that they both require
reciprocity and impose a regional limitation, both legislatures
favor the establishment of regional banking in New England, and
there is evidence of cooperation among legislators, officials,
bankers, and others in the two States in studying the idea and
lobbying for the statutes. But several of the classic indicia of a
compact are missing. No joint organization or body has been
established to regulate regional banking or for any other purpose.
Neither statute is conditioned on action by the other State, and
each State is free to modify or repeal its law unilaterally. Most
importantly, neither statute requires a reciprocation of the
regional limitation. Bank holding companies based in Maine, which
has no regional limitation, and Rhode Island, which will drop the
regional limitation in 1986, are permitted by the two statutes to
acquire Massachusetts and Connecticut banks. These two States are
included in the ostensible compact under petitioners' theory, yet
one does not impose the exclusion to which petitioners so
strenuously object and the other plans to drop it after two
years.
But even if we were to assume that these state actions
constitute an agreement or compact, not every such agreement
violates the Compact Clause.
Virginia v. Tennessee,
148 U. S. 503
(1893).
"The application of the Compact Clause is limited to agreements
that are 'directed to the formation of any combination tending to
the increase of political power in
Page 472 U. S. 176
the States, which may encroach upon or interfere with the just
supremacy of the United States.'"
New Hampshire v. Maine, 426 U.
S. 363,
426 U. S. 369
(1976), quoting
Virginia v. Tennessee, supra, at
148 U. S.
519.
See United States Steel Corp. v. Multistate Tax Comm'n,
434 U. S. 452,
434 U. S. 471
(1978).
In view of the Douglas Amendment to the BHCA, the challenged
state statutes which comply with that Act cannot possibly infringe
federal supremacy. To the extent that the state statutes might
conflict in a particular situation with other federal statutes,
such as the provision under which the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation will arrange for the acquisition of failing banks by
out-of-state bank holding companies, 12 U.S.C. § 1823(f), they
would be preempted by those statutes, and therefore any Compact
Clause argument would be academic. Petitioners also assert that the
alleged regional compact impermissibly offends the sovereignty of
sister States outside of New England. We do not see how the
statutes in question either enhance the
political power of
the New England States at the expense of other States or have an
"impact on our federal structure."
United States Steel Corp. v.
Multistate Tax Comm'n, supra, at
434 U. S. 471,
473.
Equal Protection Clause
Petitioners argued before the Board and the Court of Appeals
that the Massachusetts and Connecticut statutes violated the Equal
Protection Clause, U.S.Const., Amdt. 14, § 2, by excluding bank
holding companies from some States while admitting those from
others. This claim was abandoned in their petition for certiorari
and their briefs on the merits, but, after our decision in
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Ward, 470 U.
S. 869 (1985), petitioners filed a supplemental brief
urging us to consider the equal protection issue. Because the issue
was fully reviewed by the Board and the Court of Appeals, and
because it would undoubtedly
Page 472 U. S. 177
cloud other pending applications for acquisitions by bank
holding companies, we elect to decide it.
In
Metropolitan Life, we held that encouraging the
formation of new domestic insurance companies within a State and
encouraging capital investment in the State's assets and
governmental securities were not, standing alone, legitimate state
purposes which could permissibly be furthered by discriminating
against out-of-state corporations in favor of local corporations.
There we said:
"This case does not involve or question, as the dissent
suggests,
post at 900-901, the broad authority of a State
to promote and regulate its own economy. We hold only that such
regulation may not be accomplished by imposing discriminatorily
higher taxes on nonresident corporations solely because they are
nonresidents."
Id. at 882, n. 10.
Here the States in question -- Massachusetts and Connecticut --
are not favoring local corporations at the expense of out-of-state
corporations. They are favoring out-of-state corporations domiciled
within the New England region over out-of-state corporations from
other parts of the country, and to this extent their laws may be
said to "discriminate" against the latter. But with respect to the
business of banking, we do not write on a clean slate; recently in
Lewis v. BT Investment Managers, Inc., 447 U.S. at
447 U. S. 38, we
said that "banking and related financial activities are of profound
local concern." This statement is a recognition of the historical
fact that our country traditionally has favored widely dispersed
control of banking. While many other western nations are dominated
by a handful of centralized banks, we have some 15,000 commercial
banks attached to a greater or lesser degree to the communities in
which they are located. The Connecticut legislative Commission that
recommended adoption of the Connecticut statute in question
considered
Page 472 U. S. 178
interstate banking on a regional basis to combine the beneficial
effect of increasing the number of banking competitors with the
need to preserve a close relationship between those in the
community who need credit and those who provide credit. 4 App. in
No. 84-4047 (CA2), pp. 1239-1241. The debates in the Connecticut
Legislature preceding the enactment of the Connecticut law evince
concern that immediate acquisition of Connecticut banks by holding
companies headquartered outside the New England region would
threaten the independence of local banking institutions.
See,
e.g., App. to Pet. for Cert. A157-A160. No doubt similar
concerns motivated the Massachusetts Legislature.
We think that the concerns which spurred Massachusetts and
Connecticut to enact the statutes here challenged, different as
they are from those which motivated the enactment of the Alabama
statute in
Metropolitan, meet the traditional rational
basis for judging equal protection claims under the Fourteenth
Amendment.
Barry v. Barchi, 443 U. S.
55,
443 U. S. 67
(1979);
Vance v. Bradley, 440 U. S.
93,
440 U. S. 97
(1979).
We hold that the state statutes here in question comply with the
Douglas Amendment, and that they do not violate the Commerce
Clause, the Compact Clause, or the Equal Protection Clause of the
United States Constitution. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is
therefore
Affirmed.
JUSTICE POWELL took no part in the decision of this case.
JUSTICE O'CONNOR, concurring.
I agree that the state banking statutes at issue here do not
violate the Commerce Clause, the Compact Clause, or the Equal
Protection Clause. I write separately to note that I see no
meaningful distinction for Equal Protection Clause purposes between
the Massachusetts and Connecticut statutes we uphold today and the
Alabama statute at issue in
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v.
Ward, 470 U. S. 869
(1985).
Page 472 U. S. 179
The Court distinguishes this case from
Metropolitan
Life on the ground that Massachusetts and Connecticut favor
neighboring out-of-state banks over all other out-of-state banks.
It is not clear to me why completely barring the banks of 44 States
from doing business is less discriminatory than Alabama's scheme of
taxing the insurance companies from 49 States at a slightly higher
rate. Nor is it clear why the Equal Protection Clause should
tolerate a regional "home team" when it condemns a state "home
team."
See id. at 878.
The Court emphasizes that here we do not write on a clean slate,
as the business of banking is "of profound local concern."
Ante at
472 U. S. 177.
The business of insurance is also of uniquely local concern.
Prudential Insurance Co. v. Benjamin, 328 U.
S. 408,
328 U. S.
415-417 (146). Both industries historically have been
regulated by the States in recognition of the critical part they
play in securing the financial wellbeing of local citizens and
businesses.
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Ward,
supra, at
470 U. S.
888-893 (dissenting opinion). States have regulated
insurance since 1851. Like the local nature of banking, the local
nature of insurance is firmly ensconced in federal law. 470 U.S. at
470 U. S.
888-889. The McCarran-Ferguson Act, enacted in 1945,
states:
"Congress hereby declares that the continued regulation and
taxation by the several States of the business of insurance is in
the public interest, and that silence on the part of the Congress
shall not be construed to impose any barrier to the regulation or
taxation of such business by the several States."
59 Stat. 33, 15 U.S.C. § 1011.
The Court distinguishes the Connecticut and Massachusetts
banking laws as having a valid purpose: "to preserve a close
relationship between those in the community who need credit and
those who provide credit."
Ante at
472 U. S. 178.
This interest in preserving local institutions responsive to local
concerns was a cornerstone in Alabama's defense of its
insurance
Page 472 U. S. 180
tax. It survives as one of the "15 additional purposes" the
Court remanded for reconsideration.
Metropolitan Life Insurance
Co. v. Ward, supra, at
470 U. S.
875-876, n. 5.
Especially where Congress has sanctioned the barriers to
commerce that fostering of local industries might engender, this
Court has no authority under the Equal Protection Clause to
invalidate classifications designed to encourage local businesses
because of their special contributions. Today's opinion is
consistent with the longstanding doctrine that the Equal Protection
Clause permits economic regulation that distinguishes between
groups that are legitimately different -- as local institutions so
often are -- in ways relevant to the proper goals of the State.