Page:Harvard Law Review Volume 32.djvu/729

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693
HARVARD LAW REVIEW
693

POWERS OF CORPORATIONS CREATED BY CONGRESS 693 The Chief Justice said that while fully recognizing the right of Congress to exercise its legislative judgment as to the necessity of creating the bank including the scope and character of the public and private powers which should be given to it, the court dis- regarded this discretion in Congress to determine whether it was relevant or appropriate to give the bank the particular functions in question, and in so doing the court below took a mistaken view of the actual conditions and failed to observe that the state banks exercised these same functions and by reason of this were rivals in the same field of business so that it was plain that it was neces- sary to confer these functions upon the national banks in order to promote their efiiciency and the success of their business. As to the point that the functions of executors and administrators and trustees were peculiarly within the domain of state regulation, the court said that it was established in M'Culloch v. Maryland and Osborn v. Bank of the United States that "although a business was of a private nature and subject to state regula- tion, if it was of such character as to cause it to be incidental to the successful discharge by a bank chartered by Congress of its public functions, it was competent for Congress to give the bank the power to exercise such private business in cooperation with or as part of its public authority." The Supreme Court took no notice of the suggestion of counsel that Congress had not, in fact, declared its opinion that the new privileges conferred were necessary to the efficiency of the national banks. They only declared that they might be conferred by the Federal Reserve Board on such national banks as applied for them. It is, perhaps, sufiicient that Congress should determine that these privileges were necessary to the efficiency of any national bank that should, in view of the rivalry of state banks, find it was desirable that it should take up these new lines of business. It will be observed that in this case of the national banks the court found as an essential fact that the new functions now conferred upon them were functions which had now become familiar functions of state banks, their rivals in the banking business, so that it was a reasonable exercise of discretion for Congress to consider them a relevant and appropriate means of preserving the efficiency of the banks as instrumentalities in carrying into execution the purposes of the government for which they were created.