CORPORATE EXISTENCE
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of me National Banking Law of 1863 provided that national banks
should have a corporate existence for the period named in the
articles of association, but not to exceed twenty years. In the re-
vision and re-enactment of the law in 1864, the corporate existence
was fixed at twenty years from the date of organization. By the
Act of June 12, 1882, the associations were authorized to extend
their corporate existence for an additional period of twenty years,
and by the Act of April 12, 1902, for a further period of twenty years.
In 1922, a number of banks organized in 1863 reached the end of
their corporate existence. In anticipation of this condition the
Comptroller, in his Annual Report to Congress in 1921, submitted
two bills; First, for a third extension of charters for a period of
twenty years, to be effected as had been the prior extensions, and the
other to grant to national banking associations perpetual succession.
The latter bill received favorable consideration by the Committee on
Banking and Currency of the House of Representatives, and was
passed by the House. The bill had the unanimously favorable con-
sideration of the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, but
when reported to the Senate was amended, fixing ninety-nine years
as the period of succession. This amendment being agreed to in
conference and the House accepting the report of the conferees, the
bill as submitted was passed, and received Presidential approval on
July 1, 1922.
This legislation automatically extended for ninety-nine years the
period of succession of all banks organized and operating on July 1,
1922, and granted to all banks organized after that date, succession
for ninety-nine years from the date of organization. With the passage
of the Act of February 25, 1927, a national bank has “succession from
the date of the approval of this Act, or from the date of its organiza-
tion if organized after such date of approval, until such time as it be
dissolved by the act of its shareholders owning two-thirds of its stock,
or until its franchise becomes forfeited by reason of violation of law,
or until terminated by either a general or a special Act of Congress or
until its affairs be placed in the hands of a receiver and finally wound
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