Court Opinion

ID: 3551497
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:04:01.720409+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:39.699672
License: Public Domain

It is settled that congress has power to charter a national bank, as an agency for executing the powers conferred and performing the duties imposed upon it. M'Culloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316. This power is not subject to state control, and, from its very nature, includes the power to endow the agency with all the faculties necessary to accomplish its object. The power of loaning money is a necessary faculty of a bank, and the rate of interest to be charged is an incident of the loan. Authority to loan *Page 311 
and to take interest involves the power to fix the rate of interest, and the penalty for taking a greater rate than allowed by law. If a state could fix the rate of interest to be taken by a national bank, it could fix the penalty for taking a greater rate; and if it could fix both the rate and the penalty, it could, practically, destroy the power to take interest, and thus seriously impair, if not wholly destroy, one of the most valuable and important functions of national banks.
The national currency act, being constitutional, is a part of the supreme law, and is binding upon the states and their citizens, and, providing as it does the penalty to which corporations organized under it are subject for taking usurious interest, necessarily renders the state law on this subject inapplicable to them. It follows, then, that this action, having been brought upon the state law, cannot be maintained. Osborn v. U.S., 9 Wheat. 738; Weston v. Charleston, 2 Pet. 466; Brown v. Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419; Dobbins v. Erie Co., 16 Pet. 435, 447; Bank v. Pratt, 115 Mass. 539; Davis v. Randall, 115 Mass. 547; Bank v. Brown, 72 Pa. St. 209; Bank v. Garlinghouse, 22 Ohio 492; Wiley v. Starbuck, 44 Ind. 298; Higley v. Bank,26 Ohio 75; Hintermister v. Bank, 64 N.Y. 212; Bank v. Dearing, 91 U.S. 29; Tiffany v. Bank, 18 Wall. 409; Lucas v. Bank, 78 Pa. St. 228; Bank v. Duncan, 6 Reporter 69.
Judgment on the verdict.
CLARK, J., did not sit: the others concurred.