Page:A History of Banking in the United States.djvu/365

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COURSE OF THE CRISIS; 1840-41.
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of the resolution of Congress, threatening to support New York in the trial of McLeod, and produced a slight panic. The State stocks, however, had not, at this time, undergone any great decline. The London "Times" said that £2.4 millions sterling borrowed in England by the Bank had been so much saved for New York. "Such a wreck of a great banking concern has probably never before occurred." The shares were quoted at £4 10s., nominal. All its drafts were accepted however.

February 13th, the Bank addressed a memorial to the Legislature praying not to be separated from the other banks in the relief which it was proposed to allow them by measures then under discussion. The memorial states that the Bank has paid the State $3,022,662 has subscribed $415,000 to railroads, etc., and has loaned the State $8,620,000 within five years of depression. In March, an act was passed which in many respects was nearer to what the lobbyists of the Bank of the United States wanted than the bill which was passed the previous year. The extra penalties for suspension were repealed. Permission was given to the banks to issue small notes for five years to the extent of fifteen per cent. of their capital; loans to directors and proxy voting were restricted; five per cent. dividends might be made during suspension; the Bank of the United States might reduce its capital to $14 millions, if it desired to do so, and was released from a part of the bonus. This bill was vetoed and failed.[1] The struggle was then re-opened, and finally on the last day of the session, May 4, 1841, the so-called relief act was passed over the Governor's veto. The act was so loosely drawn that it is not easy to understand the relation of its separate parts.

A State loan of $3 millions at five per cent. was to be issued, no bond to be less than $100; the banks, with the exception of the Bank of the United States, might subscribe to this loan in their ones, twos, and threes, which bank notes should be redeemable in the State bonds whenever presented at their counters (i.e., after the State had put them in circulation); notes redeemed to be marked "canceled;" the bank's charter to be forfeited if this redemption did not take place within ten days; the banks were to have one per cent. for the loan while the notes were out, but were to pay the interest on the State bonds with which they redeemed their notes, and to deduct that interest from the dividend tax which they would otherwise have to pay the State. The small notes issued in this way were to be receivable for debts to the State, re-issuable by the banks and the State, and receivable by the banks for debts and on deposit. The banks might pay five per cent. dividend in spite of suspension. The banks which, having paid a bonus, had no tax on dividends to pay, might deposit State stocks with the Auditor-general to the amount of five per cent. on their paid-up capital, and issue notes to that amount in denominations not!ess than fives. The dividend-paying banks might also take this latter course

  1. 60 Niles, 71.