First State Bank (Jud, ND)

Episode Information

Episode UID
77062471477
Episode Type
Suspension โ†’ Closure
Bank Type
state
Bank ID
7706247 routing
Routing Number
77-0624
Start Date
January 19, 1923
Location
Jud, North Dakota (46.526, -98.896)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
dee7ed5a0ceac0c8

Response Measures

None

Description

Bank was listed among state banks closed and placed in receivership; exact failure date not given in these articles.

Events (3)

1. January 19, 1923 Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
seventy state banks have been closed by the Banking Department and receivers appointed therefor ... depositors of the First State Bank at Jud ... have been paid in full
Source
newspapers
2. January 19, 1923 Suspension
Cause
Bank Specific Adverse Info
Cause Details
Bank was closed as insolvent and placed in receivership under state banking board proceedings
Newspaper Excerpt
depositors of the First State Bank at Jud ... have been paid in full
Source
newspapers
3. June 6, 1924 Other
Newspaper Excerpt
ten to 15 percent in the case of the First State Bank of Jud, to the Guaranty Fund Commission, which had reimbursed depositors, and the non-secured creditors, as soon as proofs of claims are in
Source
newspapers

Newspaper Articles (3)

Article from The Bismarck Tribune, January 19, 1923

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Article Text

# GUARANTY LAW # IS TOO LOOSE # SOLONS TOLD (Continued from page 1) receiver, that the Guaranty Fund has no definite legal direction as to he method of paying out the money n its hands, that it had no power o protect or salvage assets that may e in jeopardy of sale under fore-closure, that there is no method of eliminating weak banks from the system, that the banking board consists of elected officials who do not have adequate time to perform their duties; that the banking board has no power to sell the assets of closed banks although expenses may be eating up the assets. The commission will later submit detailed figures of the condition of each bank to the legislature. Report in Full The report follows: "Pursuant to the request contained in the joint resolution adopted by you, for a report of the activities of the Depositors' Guaranty Fund Commission for the past two years, we beg leave to report. "The Legislature of 1917 enacted the law creating the Depositors' Guaranty Fund and provided therein for a guaranty of certain deposits in state banks, through an assessment upon the state banks proportionate to such deposits, and provided for a commission of five, of which the Governor and State Examiner are ex-officio members, the three remaining members to be appointed by the Governor from nominations made by the state banks. "The work and problems of this Guaranty Fund Commission for the past two years have been principally the problems of closed banks. Since the enactment of law, seventy state banks have been closed by the Banking Department and receivers appointed therefor as provided by law. Of the banks which have been closed, depositors of the First State Bank at Jud and the Farmers State Bank of Marmarth have been paid in full; Nineteen banks have been reopened and are now running, leaving now fifty-one state banks closed and in the hands of receivers appointed by the Banking Board. We submit herewith a statement as to these closed state banks showing their condition in detail, and, as a total. An examination of this statement will show that no substantial amount can be expected to be realized from the assets of these banks after paying expenses. Audit Made The state banks, upon which the burden of losses must eventually fall, at their Annual Association Meeting held in 1922, appointed a committee consisting of Geo. H. Hollister, H. P. Goddard and A. E. Severeid, to represent them in all things before this commission, and gave to that committee as full powers as it was possible for them to do. The rating of the assets of these closed banks has been, we think, thoroughly done. Mr. H. P. Goddard of the State Bank Committee and Mr. B. J. Schoregge, supervisor of Receivers, have done the work in detail and the Guaranty Fund Commission and the Members of the State Bank Committee all feel confident that the values placed upon these assets are as nearly correct as can be determined at this time. In making these ratings they took advantage of all information they could secure from every source, and much time and care was used in making the ratings reliable. You will observe that the total deposits in the closed banks amount to $7,145,636.00, and of this amount, according to the audit by the State Bank Committee, less than fifty per cent is guaranteed under the Guaranty Law. This same Committee was appointed in June, 1921, by the State Bankers' Association, to aid in the auditing of deposits in all the closed banks, both for their own information and to assist the Commission in developing the facts that they might eventually arrive at an intelligent decision as to what claims were guaranteed and what were not. The origin and detail of every deposit in every one of the closed banks were investigated and the reports are now on file with the Secretary of this Commission, and to which reports reference is hereby made, Much Undetermined "The Commission has not finally admitted nor denied liability to individuals on their claims for guaranty of ther deposits; the law provides no method for certifying to individual claims. Court decisions will in many cases be necessary to determine the liability of the Guar-


Article from The Bismarck Tribune, June 6, 1924

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Article Text

CLOSED BANK DIVIDENDS TO BE PAID SOON Expiration of Time For Notice of Payment to Bring Action by Receiver Payment of dividends to depositors from funds of closed banks, the first of which was made sometime ago in the case of a Leith bank by L. R. Baird, general receiver, will be continued during the summer months. Mr. Baird said today that dividends will be paid in the Farmers State Bank of Marmarth of five percent and ten to 15 percent in the case of the First State Bank of Jud, to the Guaranty Fund Commission, which had reimbursed depositors, and the non-secured creditors, as soon as proofs of claims are in. Dividends will be made in five other banks as soon as the expiration time of the notice given to creditors to file claims is reached, it being required under court order that four months notice be given to creditors to present claims.


Article from The Bismarck Tribune, January 16, 1925

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Article Text

SUPREME COURT From Burleigh County The State of North Dakota for itself and on behalf of all creditors of defendant banks, Plaintiff and Respondent, vs. First State Bank of Jud, Mohall State Bank and numerous other insolvent banking corporation, Defendants and Appellants. SYLLABUS: 1. Under the Constitution of this State all governmental power is vested in the legislature except such as is granted to the other departments of government, or expressly withheld from the legislature by constitutional restrictions. 2. The only test of the validity of an act regularly passed by the legislature is whether it violates any of the express or implied restrictions of the state or federal constitutions. 3. If the end be legitimate, all the means which are appropriate which are plainly adapted to that end. and which are not prohibited, may constitutionally be employed to carry it into effect. 4. A litigant can be heard to question the validity of a statute only when, and in so far as, it is applied to his disadvantage. 5. For reasons stated in the opinion it is held that Chapter 137, Laws 1923 is constitutional; that the legislature in the exercise of its constitutional powers as the lawmaking body of the state may prescribe the conditions under which a banking corporation organized under the laws of this state shall be deemed insolvent; authorize the Attorney General of the State to bring an action in the name of the state for the liquidation of such bank, or banks; vest the district court of Burleigh county with jurisdiction of such action, and require the supreme court, in the exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction over inferior courts, to designate a district judge to hear and determine such actions and appoint a receiver. Appeal from the district court of Burleigh County, Cooley, Special J. Defendant appeals from an order sustaining M demurrer to his answer. Affirmed. Opinion of the court by Christianson, J. Francis J. Murphy, of Fargo, At. torney for Appellants. Geo. F. Shafer, Attorney General and John Thorpe, Assistant Attorney General, Attorneys for Respondent.