1. The only forfeiture declared by the thirtieth section of the
Act of June 3, 1864, 13 Stat. 99, is of the
entire
interest which the note, bill, or other evidence of debt, carries
with it or which has been agreed to be paid thereon when the rate
knowingly received, reserved, or charged by a national bank is in
excess of that allowed by that section, and no loss of the entire
debt is incurred by such bank, as a penalty or otherwise, by reason
of the provisions of the usury law of a state.
2. National banks organized under the act are the instruments
designed to be used to aid the government in the administration of
an important branch of the public service, and Congress, which is
the sole judge of the necessity for their creation, having brought
them into existence, the states can exercise no control over them
nor in any wise affect their operation except so far as it may see
proper to permit.
Page 91 U. S. 30
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE SWAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented for our determination involves the
construction of the provisions of the National Bank Act of Congress
of the 3d of June, 1864, 13 Stat. 99, upon the subject of the
interest to be taken by the institutions organized under that
act.
The plaintiff in error is one of those institutions. The
thirtieth section of the act declares
"That every association may take, receive, reserve, and charge
on any loan or discount made or upon any note, bill of exchange or
other evidences of debt, interest at the rate allowed by the laws
of the state or territory where the bank is located, and no more,
except that where by the laws of any state a different rate is
limited for banks of
Page 91 U. S. 31
issue organized under state laws, the rates so limited shall be
allowed for associations organized in any such state under this
act. And when no rate is fixed by the laws of the state or
territory, the bank may take, receive, reserve, or charge a rate
not exceeding seven percentum, and such interest may be taken in
advance, reckoning the days for which the note, bill, or other
evidence of debt, has to run. And the knowingly taking, receiving,
reserving, or charging a rate of interest
greater than
aforesaid shall be held and adjudged a forfeiture of the
entire interest which the note, bill, or other evidence of debt
carries with it or which has been agreed to be paid thereon. And in
case a greater rate of interest has been paid, the person or
persons paying the same, or their legal representatives, may
recover back, in any action of debt, twice the amount of interest
thus paid from the association taking or receiving the same,
provided that such action is commenced within two years from the
time the usurious transaction occurred. But the purchase, discount,
or sale of a
bona fide bill of exchange, payable at
another place than the place of such purchase, discount, or sale,
at not more than the current rate of exchange for sight drafts, in
addition to the interest, shall not be considered as taking or
receiving a greater rate of interest."
The facts of the case are few and simple. On the 2d of
September, 1874, it was agreed between the parties that Dearing
should make his promissory note to one Deitman for $2,000, payable
one month from date, and that the bank should discount the note for
Dearing at the rate of interest of ten percent per annum. This
agreement was carried out. The bank received the note and paid to
Dearing the sum of $1,981.67. The discount reserved and taken was
$18.33. The rate of interest which the bank was legally authorized
to take was seven percent per annum. The excess reserved over that
rate was $5.50. Dearing failed to pay the note at maturity. The
bank thereupon sued him in the Superior Court of Buffalo. He
answered, that the agreement touching the discount was usurious,
corrupt, and illegal, that it avoided the note, and that he was in
no wise liable to the plaintiff. The court sustained this defense
and gave judgment for the defendant.
At a general term of that court, the judgment was affirmed,
Page 91 U. S. 32
and the judgment of affirmance was subsequently affirmed by the
Court of Appeals.
No searching analysis is necessary to eliminate the several
provisions of the section to be considered to develop the true
meaning of each and to draw the proper conclusions from all of them
taken together.
1. The rate of interest chargeable by each bank is to be that
allowed by the law of the state or territory where the bank is
situated.
2. When, by the laws of the state or territory, a different rate
is limited for banks of issue organized under the local laws, the
rate so limited is allowed for the national banks.
3. Where no rate of interest is fixed by the laws of the state
or territory, the national banks may charge at a rate not exceeding
seven percent per annum.
4. Such interest may be reserved or taken in advance.
5. Knowingly reserving, or charging
"a rate of interest greater than aforesaid shall be held and
adjudged a forfeiture of the interest which the note, bill, or
other evidence of debt, carries with it, or which has been agreed
to be paid thereon."
6. If a greater rate has been paid, twice the amount so paid may
be recovered back, provided suit be brought within two years from
the time the usurious transaction occurred.
7. The purchase, discount, or sale of a bill of exchange,
payable at another place at not more than the current rate of
exchange on sight drafts, in addition to the interest, shall not be
considered as taking or reserving a greater rate of interest than
that permitted.
These clauses, examined by their own light, seem to us too clear
to admit of doubt as to anything to which they relate. They form a
system of regulations. All the parts are in harmony with each other
and cover the entire subject.
But it is contended that the phrase, "a rate of interest greater
than aforesaid," as it stands in the context, has reference only to
the preceding sentence, which relates to banks where no rate of
interest is fixed by law, and that hence it leaves the consequences
of usury, where such rate is fixed, to be governed wholly by the
local law upon the subject. This, in the State
Page 91 U. S. 33
of New York, would in all such cases render the contract a
nullity and forfeit the debt. Such the Court of Appeals held to be
the law of this case and adjudged accordingly.
Neither of these views can be maintained. The collocation of the
terms in question does not grammatically require such a
construction. Viewed in this light, the phrase is as much
applicable to both the foregoing clauses as to the next preceding
one. The point to be sought is the intent of the lawmaking power.
The offense of usury under this section is as great where the local
law does not, as where it does, define the rate of interest. The
same considerations apply in both cases. Why should Congress punish
in one class of cases and, so far as its action is concerned,
exempt in the other? Why such discrimination? The result would be
that in Pennsylvania, where the contract would be void only as to
the unlawful excess, the bank would lose nothing but such excess,
while in New York, under a contract precisely the same except as to
the identity of the lender, the entire debt would be lost to the
bank. This would be contrary to the plainest principles of reason
and justice.
A purpose to produce or permit such a state of things ought not
to be imputed to Congress unless the circumstances are so cogent as
to render that result inevitable.
We find nothing within the scope of the subject of that
character.
The second proposition -- that the state law, including its
penalties, would apply if the first proposition be sound -- is
equally untenable. If the construction contended for were correct,
the state law would have no bearing whatever upon the case.
The constitutionality of the Act of 1864 is not questioned. It
rests on the same principle as the act creating the Second Bank of
the United States. The reasoning of Secretary Hamilton and of this
Court in
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, and in
Osborne v. Bank of the
United States, 9 Wheat. 708, therefore, applies.
The national banks organized under the act are instruments designed
to be used to aid the government in the administration of an
important branch of the public service. They are means appropriate
to that end. Of
Page 91 U. S. 34
the degree of the necessity which existed for creating them
Congress is the sole judge.
Being such means, brought into existence for this purpose and
intended to be so employed, the states can exercise no control over
them, nor in any wise affect their operation except insofar as
Congress may see proper to permit. Anything beyond this is "an
abuse, because it is the usurpation of power which a single state
cannot give." Against the national will
"the states have no power, by taxation or otherwise, to retard,
impede, burthen, or in any manner control the operation of the
constitutional laws enacted by Congress to carry into execution the
powers vested in the General Government."
Bank of the United States v. McCulloch, supra; 27 U.
S. Charleston, 2 Pet. 466;
Brown v.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419;
Dobbins v.
Erie County, 12 Wheat. 419.
The power to create carries with it the power to preserve. The
latter is a corollary from the former.
The principle announced in the authorities cited is
indispensable to the efficiency, the independence, and indeed to
the beneficial existence, of the general government; otherwise it
would be liable, in the discharge of its most important trusts, to
be annoyed and thwarted by the will or caprice of every state in
the Union. Infinite confusion would follow. The government would be
reduced to a pitiable condition of weakness. The form might remain,
but the vital essence would have departed. In the complex system of
polity which obtains in this country, the powers of government may
be divided into four classes:
Those which belong exclusively to the states;
Those which belong exclusively to the national Government;
Those which may be exercised concurrently and independently by
both;
And those which may be exercised by the states, but only with
the consent, express or implied, of Congress.
Whenever the will of the nation intervenes exclusively in this
class of cases, the authority of the state retires and lies in
abeyance until a proper occasion for its exercise shall recur.
Gilman v.
Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713;
Ex
Parte McNeil, 13 Wall. 240.
Page 91 U. S. 35
The power of the states to tax the existing national banks lies
within the category last mentioned.
It must always be borne in mind that the Constitution of the
United States, "and the laws which shall be made in pursuance
thereof," are "the supreme law of the land," Const., Art. VI, and
that this law is as much a part of the law of each state, and as
binding upon its authorities and people, as its own local
constitution and laws.
In any view that can be taken of the thirtieth section, the
power to supplement it by state legislation is conferred neither
expressly nor by implication. There is nothing which gives support
to such a suggestion.
There was reason why the rate of interest should be governed by
the law of the state where the bank is situated, but there is none
why usury should be visited with the forfeiture of the entire debt
in one state, and with no penal consequence whatever in another.
This, we think, would be unreason, and contrary to the manifest
intent of Congress.
Where a statute prescribes a rate of interest, and simply
forbids the taking of more, and more is contracted for, the
contract is good for what might be lawfully taken, and void only as
to the excess.
Burnhisel v.
Firman, 22 Wall. 170;
German v. Calvert,
12 Serg. & R. 46. Forfeitures are not favored in the law.
Courts always incline against them.
Marshall v.
Vicksbury, 15 Wall. 156. When either of two
constructions can be given to a statute and one of them involves a
forfeiture, the other is to be preferred. Vattel, 20th Rule of
Construction.
Where a statute creates a new offense and denounces the penalty
or gives a new right and declares the remedy, the punishment or the
remedy can be only that which the statute prescribes.
Stafford
v. Ingersoll, 3 Hill 38;
First National Bank of Whitehall
v. Lamb, 57 Barb. 429.
The thirtieth section is remedial as well as penal, and is to be
liberally construed to effect the object which Congress had in view
in enacting it.
Gray v. Bennet, 3 Met. 539.
The forty-sixth section of the Banking Act of Feb. 25, 1863, 12
Stat. 679, declared that reserving or taking more than the interest
allowed should "be held and adjudged a forfeiture of
Page 91 U. S. 36
the debt or demand." In the Act of 1864, the forfeiture of the
debt is omitted, and there is substituted for it the forfeiture of
the interest stipulated for, if it had only been reserved, and the
recovery of twice the amount where the interest had been actually
paid.
In the Revised Statutes of the United States of the 22d of June,
1874, 1011, the provisions of the thirtieth section of the Act of
1864 are divided into two sections, and the language is so changed
as to render impossible in that case the same construction as that
of the thirtieth section contended for by the counsel of the
defendant in error in this case.
In the "Act to amend the usury laws of the District of Columbia"
of the 22d of April, 1870, 16 Stat. 91, it is provided that six
percent per annum shall be the lawful rate of interest, but that
parties may contract for ten percent, and that if more than ten
percent be contracted for, the entire interest shall be forfeited,
and that only the principal debt shall be recoverable. It is
further declared that if the unlawful interest has been paid, it
may be recovered back, provided it be sued for within a year.
It is declared in the last section that this act shall not
affect the banking act of 1864.
This later legislation shows the spirit by which Congress was
animated in passing the thirtieth section of the act here under
consideration, and is not without value as affording light whereby
to ascertain the true meaning of that section, if there could
otherwise by any doubt upon the subject.
This section has been elaborately considered by the highest
court of Massachusetts, of Pennsylvania, of Ohio, and of Indiana.
Davis v. Randall, 115 Mass. 547;
Central Nat. Bank v.
Pratt, id., 539;
Second Nat. Bank of Erie v. Brown,
72 Penn. 209;
First Nat. Bank of Columbus v. Gurlinghouse,
22 Ohio St. 492;
Wiley v. Starbuck, 44 Ind. 298. In all
these cases, views were expressed in conflict with those maintained
in
First Nat. Bank of Whitehall v. Lamb, 50 N.Y. 100. This
adjudication controlled the result of the litigation between these
parties.
Upon reason and authority, we have no hesitation in coming to
the conclusion that there is error in the case before us.
Page 91 U. S. 37
The plaintiff below was entitled to recover the principal of the
note sued upon less the amount of the interest unlawfully reserved.
Whether he was entitled to recover interest upon the amount of the
principal so reduced after the maturity of the note is a point
which has not been argued, and upon which we express no
opinion.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the
case will be remanded with directions to proceed in conformity with
this opinion.