Page:A History of Banking in the United States.djvu/348

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326
A HISTORY OF BANKING.

at its convenience—what the charter did not forbid and what it did not impose on them. The United States District Attorney being instructed from Washington to examine the security which these banks offered, was apparently not satisfied. He obtained as collateral a large amount of their bills receivable. McNutt was afraid that he would put the bonds in suit in the federal court, and thus escape responsibility to the State institutions. He thought that the remonstrance of a sovereign State would not be unheeded, and he proposed to the Legislature to memorialize the federal government to remove the District Attorney. The suits were postponed by the intervention of Senator Walker.

In the references in this message of the Governor to the Union Bank there is as yet no repudiation. The same may be said of the report of a legislative committee at this session, although complaint was made of the terms on which the bonds had been negotiated. The committee stated that the losses of the Union Bank would be immense, and it was already evident that the State would have to pay the principal and interest of the bonds. Their argument is all directed to the point that the rest of the bonds should be withheld from the bank. They attributed the bad management of the Union Bank to the eagerness to provide "relief." "When a community, by speculation, over-trading, and inflated prices, has become deeply involved, greatly increased banking facilities only increase the violence and malignity of the disease."

Louisiana.—A committee of the Legislature made a report, March 14, 1838, from which it appears that twelve directors of the Gas Light Bank owed to it, December 23, 1837, $1.4 millions, as drawers, and nearly $400,000 as endorsers. Hermann, Briggs & Co. stand first on the list, debtors for a half million. The committee find that a large part of this indebtedness was for "kites or race-horses," and that exchange operations to a large amount had been agreed to by the president, in which he was himself interested, when no one but the cashier and himself were present. The bank owed the Bank of the United States $2 millions, payable in one and two years.[1]

A statement of the condition of the sixteen banks of Louisiana, December 23, 1837, showed that they held undivided profits, $6.2 millions; protested paper on hand, $2.8 millions; besides $1 million held for account of the Bank of the United States. The total capital was $30.9 millions; the deposits, $7.4 millions; the circulation, $7.5 millions; the specie, $2.7 millions.[2]

The banks of Louisiana resumed about January 1, 1839. A healing act for the suspension was passed March 14th. This was not to be construed as authorizing any future suspension; weekly balances were to be paid between the banks.

Tennessee.—The Southwestern Railroad Bank was chartered by Tennessee December 5, 1837. The fourth Bank of the State of Tennessee was

  1. 1 Raguet's Register, 332.
  2. 1 Raguet's Register, 270.