Full opinion text
BONE, Circuit Judge. I The essential issues presented on this appeal primarily involve and concern the status and operations of Federal Home Loan Banks. The instant appeal is from one of the many orders made by the lower court in proceedings in the so-called “consolidated cases” (“Mallonee Case” and the “Los Angeles Action”) described in our opinion in Case No. 12,511, 196 F.2d 336, entitled “Home Loan Bank Board et al. v. Mallonee et al., and consolidated case Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco, et al. v. Federal Home Loan Bank of Los Angeles, et al.” For convenience wc shall hereafter refer to the entensive litigation embraced in these consolidated cases as the “main case,” and for a better understanding of the facts and issues involved in this appeal reference should be had to our opinion in the main case. Many important contentions advanced on this appeal were relied on by the same parties in that case and they have stipulated that portions of the printed record in appeal No. 12,511 should be available for reference and utilization in this case. We approved this procedure. A frequent reference will be made herein to “the Board” or “Board.” As indicated in footnote 3 to our opinion in the main case, 196 F.2d 342, the composition and official status of the administrative authority or agency having supervisory control over the operations of Federal Home Loan Banks under the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, Chapter 11, Title 12 U.S.C.A., underwent the various changes there noted. Our use of the terms “Board” or “the Board” is a reference to this central administrative agency or authority and includes (when suggested in context) the former Home Loan Bank “Administration” referred to in our opinion in case No. 12,511. The term “association” or “associations” is a reference to any Federal Savings and Loan Association other than the “Long Beach Federal Savings and Loan Association” (a litigant in the main case) the latter being referred to herein as “Association.” A reference to three Board orders here in controversy means the three reorganization orders issued by the Board (then “Administration”) on March 29, 1946, these being numbered 5082, 5083 and 5084. See footnote 5 in our main case opinion for text of the orders. 196 F.2d 343. The former Federal Home Loan Bank of Los Angeles was abolished by these Orders which merged it (along with the Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland) into the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco. The former Federal Home Loan Bank of Los Angeles will be variously referred to by that title or as “Los Angeles Bank,” or “Los Angeles.” “Los Angeles Action” means the action instituted in the main case by the Federal Home Loan Bank of Los Angeles and six “association” co-plaintiffs. It was there consolidated with the socalled “Mallonee Case.” The Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco will be referred to by that title or simply as “San Francisco.” Where necessary or desirable, the Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland will be referred to by that title, or as “Portland,” or the “Portland Bank.” The highly involved controversy described in our opinion in the main case appears to be without a counterpart in the books and by reason of entire absence of case law authority which directly deals with and/or directly passes on issues here presented Which involve the problem of administrative supervision of Federal Home Loan Banks, we must and do conclude that the final and conclusive answer to many important contentions of the parties before us must necéssarily be found in the clear and unambiguous terms of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act. Allied legislation touching the operations of associations under the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, as amended, 12 U.S.C.A. § 1461 et seq., is also involved. Where any issues raised in the main case legitimately come within the orbit of the instant appeal we will treat them as proper factors for consideration and comment. The Basis of This Appeal. The order which is the subject of the instant appeal directed the payment of “interim attorneys’ fees” to appellees from certain funds which had .been impounded in the registry of the lower court by an order made during proceedings in the main case. Which of the various litigants in that case owned these funds, and/or had right to possession of the whole Of any part thereof, was a controversy confronting the lower court, and the impounding order here involved placed these funds and assets in the registry of the court pending final adjudication of the merits of the various claims. At a later point we discuss their source and nature. The order on appeal originated in the manner we now indicate. It was entered on June 19, 1950 in the main case and was issued pursuant to motions filed in that case in January 1949 and February 1950 by the co-plaintiffs in the so-called “Los Angeles Action.” Appellees were and are counsel for the former Federal Home Loan Bank of Los Angeles and one of its six association co-plaintiffs (Wilmington) and the motion was based on the grounds that this former bank had no funds with which to pay its attorneys for services in that case “since all of its assets are in the possession of Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland, sometimes known and referred to as a Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco,” and that the associated plaintiffs (plaintiffs in the so-called “Los Angeles action”) “have a beneficial interest in the assets of Los Angeles Bank now in possession of said defendant Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland sufficient to entitle them, and each of them, to the payment out of said assets of the fees of their attorneys.” (Emphasis supplied.) The order directed the clerk of the lower court to pay from and out of these impounded funds the sum of $67,500 to- appel-lees who were counsel for Los Angeles, for services theretofore rendered in the so-called “Los Angeles action”; and to pay the sum of $7,500 to counsel for Wilmington Association (a co-plaintiff in said action) for services theretofore rendered in the “consolidated actions.” The court described the allowance as “an interim allowance on account only” and the formal order provided that the payment be made “out of funds and moneys heretofore deposited and now on deposit in the Registry of the Court in the above entitled consolidated actions” and that “the amounts ordered hereby paid generally from the funds in the Registry of the Court are not by the terms of this Order, imposed, allocated or assessed upon or against any specific party or parties, fund or funds, provided, however, that it is hereby determined and ordered that the amounts, or any part thereof, herein allowed and ordered paid from said funds shall never be allocated against or imposed upon funds or assets owned by or belonging to the Long Beach Federal Savings and Loan Association, (Association) or any of its shareholders, members or stockholders, either individually, or as an association, except as such association shall be required to bear as a member-shareholder only of a Federal Home Loan Bank. The intention being that the services for which fees are herein allowed are primarily for the benefit of said Los Angeles Bank and its associa- tion member-shareholders as distinguished from the Long Beach Association and other parties as separate entities or parties.” The order further provided “that Long Beach Association shall not at any time be required to deposit any additional money or property in Court in these consolidated actions upon or because of the payment of all or any portion of the sums herein ordered and directed to be paid.” It will be noted that the foregoing motion of Los Angeles refers to “assets of Los Angeles Bank now in possession of said defendant Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland.” As indicated above, “Portland” and “Los Angeles” banks were merged into the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco. Other appeals now pending in this court also- involve these impounded funds which suggests the necessity of identifying their source and nature. The record indicates, and stress is given the fact that this fund arose out of five “interpleader or intervention proceedings” in the so-called “Mal-lonee Case,” supra, (which was consolidated with the “Los Angeles Action” in the main case) each of which interpleader proceedings was based on the presumption that the 1946 order of the Federal Home Loan Bank Administration appointing Ammann as Conservator of the Long Beach Federal Savings and Loan Association was void ab initio, and that every act performed by Am-mann in the management of.the said Association was a nullity and therefore subject to collateral attack. These interpleader and/or intervention proceedings in ,the main case which we describe at this point were instituted by Title Service Company, Robert H. Wallis, Home Investment Company, George Turner and the Long Beach Federal Savings and Loan Association. AU were parties in and to the so-called Mallonee case. Home Investment Company intervened on July 1, 1946 to secure an order quieting title and to secure recon-veyance of 174 deeds of trust which had previously been interpleaded by Title Service Company in its answer and cross-claim in interpleader and which deeds had been deposited in court. Home Investment Company does not appear to be a claimant to the funds here considered. '• As to the intervening and interpleading parties mentioned in the preceding paragraph see our opinion in the main case, 196 F.2d 336, 378, 379, wherein we held that the five original actions or proceedings instituted by the there identified Mallonee-Association group and Wallis and Home Investment Company should have been dismissed by the lower court for the reason that they failed to state a claim upon which the relief they demanded could be granted and for the further reason that Association had failed to exhaust tendered and available administrative remedies. Title Service Company (a'John Doe defendant in the Mallonee case) filed so-called cross-claims in interpleader in that action in which it alleged that it was trustee under some 8,000 trust deeds securing loans made by the Association with a remaining balance of over $12,000,000; that it was faced with a demand of the Conservator that it make reconveyances of title to borrowers on repayment of loans secured by the trust deeds while the Association was demanding that it not make such reconvey-ances. It asked the lower court to adjudicate the “rights” of these adverse claimants. In this posture of the controversy the court thereafter required borrowers desiring to obtain reconveyances of title on final repayment of their loans, to intervene in the Mallonee action and to deposit their final payment in the registry of the court. The court also ordered the Conservator to deposit in court all sums paid -by these borrower interveners during the Conservator-ship, after which the court ordered delivery of the reconveyances. In proceedings in the Mallonee case $1,641,037.96 of Association funds were thus drawn into the registry of the court. In his “cross-claim in interpleader” Wallis, a John Doe defendant in the Mallonee case, deposited an unendorsed cashier’s check for $50,000 payable to himself — a check delivered to him by Association to be used to pay his legal fees, etc., in litigation in connection with the troubles of Association described in our opinion in the main case. He prayed that the court “instruct” him as to his “rights and duties” in the face of conflicting demands upon him by Association and the Conservator as to “the use of the check.” After the termination of the Conserva-torship over Association, Turner, a John Doe defendant in the .Mallonee case [196 F.2d 349], filed a so-called “cross-claim in interpleader” alleging certain undefined conflicting claims to rentals due from him under a lease of real property from Association. He deposited in the registry of the court the sum of $11,515.87 (the amount then alleged to be due). From time to time he deposited additional rentals as they became due and at the date of the order here appealed from, the amount of rentals so “interpleaded” and drawn into the registry of the court was $18,503.52. In April 1949, Association, claiming conflicting demands by the “Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation”, see sub-chapter IV, Title 12 U.S.C.A. § 1724 et seq., on the one hand and Association shareholders (.Mallonee group) on the other, was permitted by the court to interplead in the Mallonee case and deposit in the registry of the court the sum of $24,374.06 being the amount of insurance' premiums claimed by the sáid insurance corporation, which was required by statute to insure the accounts of Association. See 12 U.S.C.A. § 1726(a). As succeeding installments of insurance premiums fell due, Association filed “supplemental interpleaders” in the Mallonee case in connection with which proceedings these “installments” were deposited in court. At the date of the order here on appeal the amount of insurance premiums so “interpleaded” and deposited in the registry of the court was $55,485.25. In May 1946, Association, acting through its (then) Conservator (Ammann) borrowed from the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco the sum of $7,300,000 (later paid down to $6,300,000) and pledged as security for this loan some $12,000,000 of its notes and trust deeds and $5,300,000 face value of government bonds. On Motion of Association in the Mallonee case the court, on March 13, 1948, entered an order requiring the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco to deposit in the registry of the court the notes of Association evidencing the $6,300,000 loan together with the United States bonds in the sum of $5,300,-000 and the notes and trust deeds which had been pledged as collateral. On motion of Association, the lower court, on March 26, 1948, entered an order releasing to Association the said notes and trust deeds then amounting to more than $8,000,000 and “lifted” the then lien of the Bank of San Francisco thereon, and transferred this lien to so much of the funds then in the registry of the court (under the borrower-intervener proceedings) as would make the difference between $5,300,000 (the face value of the deposited bonds) and $6,324,098.35 (the amount of principal and interest due as of March 10, 1948 on Association’s notes to the Bank of San Francisco) plus interest on $6,300,000 from March 10, 1948 until paid. So much by way of specific identification of the interpleader-intervention proceedings and the impounded funds. It should again be emphasized that the question as to the validity of the original appointment of Am-mann as Conservator of Association underlies, explains the existence of, and gives decisive character to much of the controversy over the impounded funds. A vigorous dispute and controversy arose among the parties to the main case concerning the legal ownership of, or posses-sory and/or lien rights, in, the said impounded funds, and their contentions are illuminating. During argument of counsel in April, 1950, preliminary to formulating the order here on appeal, counsel for Association made plain to the lower court that it was claiming all of the impounded funds and assets and that its claim extended to a cancellation of its note held by the Bank of San Francisco. Association also demanded a return of all of the bonds which had been deposited as security with the Bank of San Francisco. Counsel for appellant Bank of San Francisco pointed out to the court that all it had in its possession were the notes executed by Conservator Ammann which Association claims are void because the appointment of Ammann as Conservator of Association was invalid. (It appears that four notes of Association are involved.) See further contentions set forth in footnote 4, infra. A part of the colloquy in open court here set out sheds much light on this important issue in both this and the main case. (Emphasis supplied by us.) The Court: “So far as the Long Beach Association is concerned, it is claiming that it owes neither the San Francisco Bank nor the Los Angeles Bank any money.” Counsel for Association: “That is right.” The Court: “That it is entitled not only to all of the [impounded] funds in court but also to a cancellation of the note [given by the Conservator of Association (Ammann) to the Bank of San Francisco]” Counsel for Association: “That is right.” The Court: “And the return of all of the bonds which are deposited [with Bank of San Francisco] as security. And if that did ultimately occur, then there would be no funds [impounded] in court except the Long Beach Association’s. Is that not your basis of objection”? Counsel for Bank of San Francisco: “That is one hundred per cent correct. All we have is the notes, which are claimed by the Association to be void because Ammann had no authority [when acting as Conservator of Association] to make them; and if that be true and the Association ultimately prevails on that, then the security securing these notes falls with the void notes.” The record at this point does not show that counsel for the contending parties rejected the implications of the contention here raised by counsel for Association; furthermore all parties agreed that they wanted “a final [appealable] judgment” on the issue of payment of appellees’ fees from the impounded funds. Counsel for the Bank of San Francisco added this statement to the court: “I think who owns them [the impounded funds] is as clear as anything can be, that is, that Long Beach [Association] owns them. I never, never knew of any person who had anything put up for security that didn’t own it. All the other fellow had was a security in it.” Counsel was here apparently conceding that Association owned the impounded assets but was insisting that Association still remained lawfully indebted to the Bank of San Francisco on its several notes security for payment of which was some portion of the impounded funds. At another point occurred the following exchange: “The Court: (addressing counsel for Bank of San Francisco) “You just asserted a claim to $6,000,000, in bonds and $1,000,000 in cash.” Counsel for Bank of San Francisco: “We do, your Honor. The bonds in this impound we claim to have a lien on them. We recognize the general property ownership in that collateral belonging to the Long Beach Association. We have them as pledgees as security for our notes.” Counsel for Long Beach Association : “This lien that they claim they have got from Ammann. I don’t think they got anything.” (This contention of Association is of course also a challenge to the validity of the appointment of Ammann as Conservator.) That the various claims affecting rights in the impounded funds were creating a confusing pattern is evidenced by another extract from the colloquy before the court. Referring to the claims of appellees for interim attorneys’ fees to be paid from the impounded funds the court said: “They [appellees] are not saying that they want "attorney fees from the defendant [Bank of San Francisco]; they say they want attorney fees from their own money which the defendant [Bank of San Francisco] has got and money to which they lay claim and title and this court has jurisdiction in personam over the defendant to compel him to disgorge what belongs to them. Is that your theory?” (The “them” here referred to was of course the former Bank of Los Angeles.) Counsel for appellees: “That’s it exactly, your Honor.” The record in the main case sheds further light on the impounded funds. In a supplemental cross-claim filed by Association on May 28, 1948, it alleged that in making the advancements of said $6,300,-000 to Ammann as purported Conservator for Association, San Francisco Bank and other cross-defendants “were using wholly or in part, money, funds, and assets, which they knew were owned by, the property of, and belonging to the Federal Home Loan Bank of Los Angeles [or belonging to its stockholders] which said money, funds and assets have been acquired by the cross-defendants by fraudulent and malicious seizure and confiscation of said Los Angeles Bank * * Further light is shed on the various claims by an argument of counsel for Los Angeles made in court in the main case on July 30, 1948. He stated: “We [Los Angeles Bank] are assenting claims to the $6,300,000 worth of notes on deposit in the registry of the court, executed by Ammann as Conservator, and it is our claim that the funds used to make these loans, in large part, were funds of the Los An-geles Bank." This frank avowal leaves no doubt as to the position of Los Angeles. In an answer of the Bank of San Francisco (in the main case) to the amended cross-claim of Association which answer was filed July 30, 1948 San Francisco describes the loan made to Association in the following manner. It asserted that during the period while Ammann was in charge of Association as Conservator, Association borrowed from the Bank of San Francisco sums exceeding $6,300,000 which sums were at all times secured as required under the provisions of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act and rules and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, by the assignment and pledge of United States Government Bonds, promissory notes secured by mortgages or deeds of trust on real property, and stock held by said Association in said Bank of San Francisco. That all said sums so borrowed by Association were used by Association in transacting and operating the business of Association and for purposes and to the .benefit of the business of Association. San Francisco further averred that no payment of said indebtedness has ever been tendered to the said Bank of San Francisco and no demand for surrender of said collateral or any part thereof has even been made by Association and no attempt has ever been made by Association to effect a redemption of said collateral by payment of said indebtedness. As the record indicates, the conflicting contentions respecting the impounded funds make a confusing picture. Because of the importance which all parties attach to these funds we have given them more elaborate treatment in the margin. Before concluding this part of our opinion reference should be made to the views expressed by the Supreme Court in Fahey v. Mallonee, 332 U.S. 245, 67 S.Ct. 1552, 91 L.Ed. 2030, concerning matters which bear directly on the issue of the validity of the notes held by the Home Loan Bank of San Francisco. A formal holding of the Court was that the shareholders of Association (Mallonee) were estopped, as the Association would be, from challenging the provisions of the Act, Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, which authorized the Board to prescribe the terms and conditions under which a conservator may be named, 332 U.S. at page 256, 67 S.Ct. at page 1557. A final decision was that it was error to oust the conservator (Ammann) or to enjoin any of his proceedings, or to enjoin the administrative hearing on his appointment. 332 U.S. at page 257, 67 S.Ct. at page 1557. It was during his tenure as conservator of Association that Ammann negotiated loans from the Home Loan Bank of San Francisco to Association and for and on behalf of Association executed and delivered these notes to that bank to evidence the loans. The claimed lien of San Francisco on the impounded funds is based on these notes. For a detailed record of the proceedings in the lower court leading up to the order impounding the funds, recourse should be had to the printed transcript of record on the appeal in the main case (12,511). The motion of Association for order of impound appears at pp. 3562 to 3597; the motion of Association for an order to San Francisco to show cause why funds should not be impounded appears at pp. 3597 to 3599; the order directed to San Francisco and Los Angeles requiring these banks to show cause why the motion of Association to impound the funds claimed by Association should not be granted, appears at pp. 3599 to 3601; the “Return” of San Francisco to the court’s order to show cause appears at pp. 3690 to 3752; the “Return” of Los Angeles to the court’s order to show cause appears at pp. 3642 to 3646; the impounding order of the court, dated March 13, • 1948, appears at pp. 8399 to 8525. The above mentioned “Returns” of San Francisco and the accompanying affidavit, of Frank Noon set forth a detailed description of the conditions under which the loan was made by San Francisco to Association during the time Ammann was serving as Conservator of Association. The basis of the asserted “lien” of San Francisco, on the impounded funds is clearly indicated in these documents. For further illuminating comments on this loan transaction by counsel for the Mallonee group see printed transcript in case 12,511, pages 6219 to 6225, and pages 6298 to 6301. II Underlying practically all of the issues posed on this appeal is an impressive body of statute law and we are persuaded that many of the contentions which are asserted to be of not only vital, but controlling importance on this appeal must find sanction and support in this legislation, or be rejected. We refer to the “Federal Home Loan Bank Act”, Title 12, Chapter 11, U. S.C.A. It is our view that this legislation represents a constitutional exercise of Congressional authority; that its unambiguous language expresses a clear and definite Congressional purpose and intent to preempt the entire field of banking activities embraced within the terms and provisions of this banking legislation and reserve to Congress the fullest measure of control over such activities. To accomplish the purpose or purposes expressed in this legislation our Congress saw fit to create its own administrative arm or agency (the Home Loan Bank Board) through which it could direct and control the administration of the provisions of the Home Loan Bank Act. To that end it vested in this Board wide power and authority to control the affairs and operation of banks in the Home Loan Bank System set up under the Home Loan Bank Act. We consider it unnecessary to recite the powers of the Board— they are set out in great detail in the bank act, and their inclusion would unduly expand this opinion. Our ultimate conclusions as to their meaning and significance must serve our purpose. We have previously indicated that we adhere to the view that the Home Loan Bank Act which created the nationwide “Federal Home Loan Bank System” must control when its terms are applicable to fact situations revealed in the record. And as related legislation we may not overlook the here involved Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation or the Home Owners Loan Act of 1933. Where we deem it necessary we shall refer to any of the provisions of these legislative enactments. One thing is abundantly clear in this case. Appellants and appellees are poles apart in their appraisal of the effect and controlling force and applicability of the sweeping terms of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act (and allied legislation) on the many issues present in this case. The sharp conflict of views is best exemplified by the formal contentions of the parties which we set out at this point. We think it necessary to fully expose them because we are convinced that the acid test of their validity must, in the last analysis, lie in the terms of the legislation just above noted. Appellants’ Contentions Appellants the Federal Home Loan Bank Board and its members, and the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco assert that eight questions are presented for decision on this appeal and we summarize them as follows: 1. Whether the (three) orders of March 29, 1946 (see footnote 5 in opinion No. 12,-511) readjusting the Eleventh Federal Home Loan Bank District and dissolving the Los Angeles Bank invaded any legally protected private rights of the bank or its members so as to give them standing to sue. 2. Whether out-of-state service of process (in the main case) on the members of the Home Loan Board and other non-resident appellants under either Section 1655 or Section 2361 of Title 28 U.S.C.A. gives the court jurisdiction. to invalidate the (three) orders of March 29, 1946. 3. Whether the allegations of the Los Angeles complaint that there was a failure to afford a (Board) hearing and make find- ' ings thereon or that the (three) orders were issued for improper motives give the court jurisdiction to review the (three) orders. 4. Whether the Los Angeles complaint in the main case fails to state a claim within the jurisdiction of the court either (a) because the action constitutes a collateral" attack upon administrative orders; or (b) because the orders are valid until duly set aside in an appropriate proceeding. 5. Whether the consolidated actions (in the main case) insofar as they seek to invalidate the orders of March 29, 1946, constitute an unconsented suit against the United States. 6. Whether prior to trial and a determination of the merits of this action (the main case) claimed by plaintiffs to be quasi in rem and claimed by defendants to be in personam, the court is authorized"to award attorneys’ fees to plaintiffs’ attorneys. 7. Whether in this action (the main case) to recover property, based upon the alleged invalidity of the (three) orders of March 29, 1946, the right and title to which property is in dispute between the plaintiffs and the defendants, the court is authorized to award attorneys’ fees out of such property. 8. Whether the (impounded) deposits in court are unavailable for payment of the fees allowed to attorneys for the Los An-geles Bank and its plaintiff shareholders (a) because they do not constitute funds “created, preserved or protected” by the plaintiffs; or (b) because the proceedings as a result of which the deposits were made constitute an impermissible collateral attack upon administrative orders; or ■ (c) because the attorneys’ fees are not alleged to have been earned in any of the intervention or inter-pleader proceedings in which the deposits were made; or (d) because the order by its terms precludes payment out ©f any funds of Long Beach Association, and there are no other funds available for such payment. Appellants urge that in disposing of the foregoing questions the lower court erred in six particulars, as follows: 1. In determining that it had Or has jurisdiction of the “consolidated actions” No. 5678 and 5421, (the Los Angeles Action and the Mallonee Case in the main case) or either of them, and its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law to that effect are erroneous. 2. In determining, that it had jurisdiction in the consolidated actions over the persons -of the Home Loan Bank Board, John H. Fahey, individually and as a Federal Home Loan Bank-Commissioner, and Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, either (a) on the ground that the actions are brought under 28 U.S.C.A. § 1655, or (b) by reason of the various subjoined and subsidiary interpleader or intervention proceedings, or (c) by reason of any general appearance having been made on behalf of said parties, or ■ (d) by virtue of determination by the District Court in previous orders entered in the consolidated actions that it has jurisdiction, and its findings of fact and conclusions of law to the contrary are erroneous. 3. In determining that the legal services rendered by appellees O’Melveny & Myers, Richard Fitzpatrick, and W. I. Gilbert, Jr. (in the main case) have inured to the bene-' fit of their respective clients (Bank-of Los Angeles and Wilmington Association) so that they are now compensable, and Findings of Fact No. 14, 15,116, 17, 18 and 21 are erroneous. (These Findings accompany the order on appeal.) 4. In determining that O’Melveny & Myers, Richard Fitzpatrick, and W. I. Gilbert, Jr., are entitled to recover attorneys’ fees upon their motion therefor and in fixing the amount of such fees. 5. In directing payment of such attorneys’ fees out of funds and monies on deposit in the registry of the court in the consolidated actions; and the court especially erred in directing payment generally out of funds in the registry of the court without designating the particular fund or funds from which the payment should be made, or the party or parties upon whom the burden of payment is to rest. 6. In exempting Long Beach Association and its property from the burden of contributing to the payment of said judgment while adjudicating that all other parties to the litigation and all other claimants to the funds on deposit in the registry of the court are potentially liable for the payment of the same as may be determined in subsequent adversary proceedings which the court reserves power to conduct. Appellants boil down the foregoing arguments to three basic contentions which typify their ¡case and if these postulates are sound in law the order on appeal must be reversed. They are based on the broad premise that the order may not stand primarily because the lower court was without jurisdiction of the so-called “Los Angeles Action” in connection with which the award was made, as well as because of the absence of any legal basis upon which the award could be made. Summarized, (with our emphasis supplied) these three contentions are: A The Los Angeles Action does not present a claim within the jurisdiction of the district court. Neither the Los Angeles Bank nor its shareholder plaintiffs (co-plaintiffs in the Los Angeles Action) had any jus-ticiable right which could be adjudicated by a Federal Court. The shareholders had no standing to sue (in the main case) because none of their legally protected rights was invaded by the (three) orders of March 29, 1946, which readjusted the Eleventh and Twelfth Federal Home Loan Bank Districts and consolidated the Los Angeles and Portland Banks. The Los Angeles Bank had no standing to sue because, being an instrumentality of the United States performing solely governmental functions, it had no justiciable right to the continuance of its existence. Further, the administrative action complained of is not subject to judicial review because it was the exercise of legislative authority properly delegated to the Board and involved determinations which the Act provided could be made only by the Board. This is not altered by the fact that the orders complained of were issued without notice, hearing or formal findings. The statute does not require such hearing or findings and there exists no constitutional right of the plaintiffs to such hearing. The Home Loan Bank Board and its members are indispensable parties to the maintenance of the Los Angeles Action because no effective relief could be granted without compelling action by the Board. Valid service upon the Board and its members has not been had. Finally, the action is an unconsented suit against the United States because it seeks to compel official action by the Home Loan Bank Board, a branch of the Executive Department of the Government. B The order awarding attorneys’ fees cannot be sustained for the reason that it does not fall within any of the limited exceptions to the general rule that plaintiffs may not recover attorneys’ fees from other parties to the litigation. This is not a case where a fiduciary is put to expense in defending an unfounded suit or in administering or protecting trust property. This is not a case where the plaintiffs have either recovered or preserved a fund for the benefit of a class. This is not an action in rem where fees may be allowed for services rendered directly to the court or its representative. This is not a case resisting an application fpr the appointment of a receiver for a corporation, in which attorneys’ fees may under some circumstances be allowed out of the undisputed property of such corporation. This is a suit where the plaintiffs, attacking the validity of Governmental orders, valid on their face, seek to recover property, the right and title to which is 'claimed by the defendant (Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco) and seek attorneys’ fees before a determination on the merits has been made. The plaintiff may not recover attorneys’ fees out of the funds in dispute. C In no event was the court authorized to award attorneys’ fees out of funds deposited in the registry of the court. Such funds are improperly in court because they result from impermissible collateral attacks upon administrative action. They are, therefore, not subject to disbursement by the court. Finally, the order awarding attorneys’ fees cannot be sustained because the deposits out of which the fees are ordered paid were made in proceedings at most “in the nature of interpleader,” and attorneys’ fees may not be paid out of such deposits. Appellees’ Contentions Appellees have summarized their arguments, and their views concerning the' foregoing theories of appellants are as follows: (Emphasis ours) 1.. The Los Angeles action is not an action brought, as such, to review the actions of the commissioner (Board) evidenced by his Orders Nos. 5082, 5083, 5084. It is, on the contrary, a plenary equity action quasi in rem brought under 28 U.S.C.A. § 57 (now § 1655). In this action the effect of these orders of the Board which reorganized the Bank of Los Angeles into the Bank of San Francisco constitute the sole muni-ments of title under which the San Francisco Bank claims are drawn in question purely as an incident to the district court’s inquiry into title, ownership and the right to possession of the assets and properties constituting the res before the court. In' addition, to this, and as an incident to its basic jurisdiction in rem, (over the assets in possession of the San Francisco Bank) the lower court has acquired jurisdiction in personam of the San Francisco Bank, the party in actual possession of the assets and properties in dispute. 2. The activities of the commissioner leading up to the seizure of the demanded assets and properties are subject to» judicial scrutiny. 3. The contention of appellants that neither the Los Angeles Bank nor its member associations have any standing to question the validity of the (three administrative) orders of March 29, 1946, is devoid of merit. ' 4. The contention of appellants that the Home Loan Bank Board and its members are indispensable parties is devoid of merit; as is the contention that these are uncon-sented suits against the United States. 5. Under the plain provisions of 28 U.S. C.A. § 1655, the district court had and has plenary power and jurisdiction to hear and determine all questions material to the claim of Los Angeles Bank and its member associations that their respective titles to, the assets and properties in dispute should be quieted, that clouds upon such titles should be removed and that'possession of such assets and properties should be restored to their rightful owners. 6. Upon the case made by the pleadings; in the actions below and by the findings in. this proceeding, Los Angeles Bank is in precisely the same situation as is any corporation whose assets are seized by public-authority in visitatorial proceedings. (a) In such a case, the corporation, acting in good faith, is entitled to its day in court to contest the validity of the seizure- and, irrespective of whether or not a casé-is ultimately made out for the interference-of state or governmental authority, it is entitled to an allowance of fees to its attorneys. Otherwise, as the cases say, it would' he hamstrung in any bona fide effort to defend itself. 7. Under such circumstances, an interim-. allowance of attorneys’ fees is proper. The-test is not that of ultimate success or failure in the litigation; it is whether or not the defense or the cause of action, as the-case may be, is, as the district court here-found, conducted in good faith and on reasonable grounds. 8. The district court did not err in directing payment of the attorneys’ fees out of moneys in the registry of the court; and' appellants’ arguments to the contrary are-moot and academic. '9. The pleadings in the Los Angeles,. Action show' that the Los Angeles Bank: was forced into a state of liquidation which liquidation is akin to, but much more drastic tlian in an ordinary receivership. Under such circumstances the corporation, or-' where there is a claim that it no longer ex--ists, a stockholder in a class action, (such as association co-plaintiffs in the Los Angeles Action), must be allowed to litigate the validity of this seizure (under the Board orders above mentioned) and in analogy to receivership and liquidation cases must have the right to look toward the assets of the corporation for fees necessary to resist the seizure and liquidation, this since the test of the propriety of attorneys’ fees in stick situations is not the ultimate success or failure of the litigation since an interim .allowance of fees prior to the conclusion of the suit is proper where proceedings are .conducted in good faith and on reasonable grounds. To deny Wilmington that right, either by intimidating it not to use its own funds or where there is intimidation, by denying it recourse to a fund in court in which it has a proprietary interest, would be a denial of due process of law. During the arguments before the lower court preceding the making of the order here on appeal, appellees contended that the Bank of San Francisco should be regarded as a “constructive trustee” holding assets belonging to the Los Angeles Bank which provides another ground of equitable jurisdiction; that this status of these parties makes it the “duty” of directors of former Los Angeles Bank to resist the wrongful seizure orders of the Board by every means at their power. It will be noted that throughout the contentions of appellees, above noted, great stress is laid upon the nature and purpose of the Los Angeles Action which is yet to be tried. It cannot be doubted that the validity of the demands of Los Angeles for relief must be a major consideration in examining the claims of appellees. They have elaborated these contentions in their briefs to which we now turn. The arguments of counsel for Los An-geles clearly indicate that its complaint was drawn with the purpose of justifying demand of the prayer for a particular form of relief. While one argument of Los Angeles is that the lower court should “scrutinize the activities” of the Commissioner because he omitted to make a “finding” of facts which would justify his three orders, and because his “mode” of exercising the powers conferred on him by law, Home Loan Bank Act, was in defiance of statutory requirements, the real and basic theory underlying, the Los Angeles case is that the three orders reorganizing the Home Loan Banks in the Pacific Coast area (sans this challenge as to procedural steps) were null and void because enforcement of Board orders of this nature must necessarily result .in confiscation of private property and private property rights of Los Angeles and its association member-stockholders. This view of appellees is emphasized throughout this litigation and is based on the assumption that Federal Home Loan Banks possess the fundamental characteristics of private banking institutions and as such cannot be regarded in law as instru-mentalities set up by -Congress to perform public and governmental functions. This concept underlies and is the real basis of the Los Angeles Action, hence it also underlies and characterizes appellees’ case since their claims asserted on this appeal stem from services rendered to Los Angeles and its association-member co-plaintiffs in the main case. Appellants vigorously reject this thesis of appellees. They assert that as a matter of law these banks are public agencies, and arms and instrumentalities of the federal government and this irreconcilable conflict of views injects into the litigation an issue of dominating character and importance. And in reference to the Board this court accepts the view that the Federal Home Loan Bank Board is clearly an agency of the United States and a branch of the Executive Department of the Government, and we so hold. We turn now to the phase of the case where this issue of public versus private character of the banks is discussed by the parties, and to contentions as to whether and to what extent private and proprietary rights were involved when the status of Federal Home Loan Banks in the Pacific Coast area was changed by the three reorganization orders of Administration which abolished the Bank of Los Angeles and created the Bank of San Francisco. III Is a Federal Home Loan Bank a Public or Private Banking Institution? It is crystal clear that Los Angeles posits its main and controlling demand for relief on the assumption that Federal Home Loan Banks must be regarded in law as possessing a private and proprietary character which is not, (and cannot be) stripped away, diluted or diminished by the terms of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act under which they exist and operate. Its arguments déaling with the legal status of such banks are predicated on the theory that when the Bank of Los Angeles was abolished by administrative orders, these orders unlawfully confiscated and destroyed private property and property rights of Los Angeles. See our comments on the fo'rm of the Los Angeles Action in our opinion in the main case, supra, 196 F.2d at pages 345 to 348, inclusive. Such a concept, if sound in 'law, would logically require the conclusion that under the terms of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act not only the legal status of these banks but the corporate control by them over assets in their possession, may not lawfully be challenged, changed or affected by.or under administrative orders of the Board.: Appellees’ arguments leave some doubt as to whether they concede that some administrative controls, under the Home Loan Bank Act, may be validly enforced. ■ However, the orders which abolished the Banks of Los Angeles and Portland and established the Bank of San Francisco are vigorously assailed ás being beyond the powers of the administrative Authority set up by the terms of the Act — this primarily for reasons discussed in this part of our opinion. It is true that one of the grounds advanced in the attack on the orders is that they were (also) arbitrary and capricious and the product of ill-will and malice of Commissioner Fahey. But the fundamental thesis of Los Angeles and one that gives controlling character to its entire case is that the orders are void because they destroyed “private ownership” of the bank by its California member associations (of which its co-plaintiff in the so-called Los Angeles Action the Federal Savings and Loan Association of Wilmington was one). The complaint in the Los Angeles Action leaves no doubt as to the real basis of that action. It charges that the administrative authority made an unlawful “seizure of private property” of Los Angeles when it issued and enforced the three reorganization orders. This alleged “seizure” is characterized as expropriation and confiscation of its private property “without any process of law” — as pure and simple “spoliation.” To meet and thwart this claimed invasion and destruction of purely private property and property rights- it resorted to an action quasi in rem to “quiet title” to the seized private property, under Title 28, § 1655, U.S.C.A., old § 57 the property in question being “the assets and properties” of the former Home Loan Bank of Los Angeles. It assures us that: “A reading of the [Los Angeles] complaint makes it perfectly obvious that all of the elements of the conventional cause of action in equity by an owner out of possession to quiet title, to remove a cloud on title and to regain possession are present. * * * The action is purely and simply an. equitable action quasi in rem to try title as between one who alleges itself to be an owner out of possession — the Los Angeles Bank — and one who alleges itself to be an owner in possession — the San Francisco Bank.” Los Angeles adds the query: . “By just what species of reasoning appellants arrive at the conclusion that the right to hold and deal in property free from unwarranted, interference and spoliation under color of governmental authority is not a legally protected right, is not made clear.” (Emphasis ours.) In the face of these frank avowals it is impossible to misconceive the basic theory and premise upon which the Los Angeles Action rests. If the above noted assumption is basicly sound in law, it would be impossible 'for the Board to formulate an order or orders which would lawfully abolish a Federal Home Loan Bank. The prayer of Los An-geles (which is in harmony with the theory of its pleadings) is convincing proof that it would be denied the real (and only effective) relief it seeks unless the lower court has jurisdiction to enter, and does enter, a decree which, in practical effect, would be a judicial declaration that the former Home Loan Bank of Los Angeles enjoyed the legal status of a privately owned and privately controlled banking institution and that no administration order or orders of the Board could have the effect of abolishing or changing that status. Since the Los Ange-les Action has not been tried, the nature and scope of the controversy must be viewed and appraised by the specific demands made i,n the prayer for relief. The prayer, inter alia, demands a decree that the three Board orders “be declared and adjudged to be null, void and of effect,” and “any and all clouds and purported liens thereby created upon * * * assets or properties of plaintiffs or any of them be removed”; that “the titles and right to possession of plaintiffs and each of them as against defendants and each of them to the assets and properties be confirmed and be declared, adjudged and established to be superior to and be quieted as against all claims or rights asserted * * * under * * * or by virtue of said purported orders * * The court is asked to issue a writ of possession to effect restoration of (claimed) assets to Los Angeles; require execution of all documents necessary to restore Los Angeles to title and possession of its (claimed) assets; and require an accounting of all assets of Los Angeles transferred by the orders. The prayer further demands that defendants be forever barred from asserting any claims whatever against the (claimed) assets of Los Ange-les, and that the decree inure to the benefit of all members and stockholders of Los An-geles Bank. For reference to where prayer of complaint appears, see comment in footnote 22, infra. It is argued by appellees that all of the relief thus demanded in this prayer may lawfully be granted by an equity court despite the fact that the granting of such relief by judicial decree would completely bypass any sort of official action by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. Thus, the orders may lawfully be set aside and nullified as completely as though they were made without a semblance of authority to' be found in the Federal Home Loan Bank Act to make administrative orders of this character. In the last analysis the validity of the claims advanced in the Los Angeles Action must rest upon the legal conclusion that due process of law requires that the “assets and properties” mentioned be held to be the private property of the shareholder association members of the Los Angeles Bank. It is of course obvious that refusal of the court to grant a form of relief which conforms to this theory ‘would strip the heart out of the case of Los Angeles. If we agree with the basic postulate of Los Angeles that purely “private property” was “confiscated without due process or any process of law” by orders which abolished a Home Loan Bank by “reorganizing”’ and “readjusting” banking elements and bank districts in the Federal Home Loan Bank System, we must go further and accept as sound law the inevitable corollary — that the granting of a “charter” (the organization certificate issued to Los Angeles under Section 12 of the Home Loan Bank Act) necessarily resulted in the creation of a private banking institution which thereafter passed (in a large and here undefined area) from under the most important of the administrative and legislative controls set up by Congress in the Federal Home Loan Bank Act. We would also have to conclude that once granted by the Board under the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, a “charter” invested a Home Loan Bank with all of the attributes and characteristics of a purely private corporation and immediately clothed it and all of the properties in its control and possession with all of the protections provided by general law as in a case where a purely private corporate enterprise was involved. Thus it may not be deprived of its corporate existence by any administrative action of the Board because the very act of creating it under terms of the Act automatically gave it a “vested right” to, and a “justicia-ble interest” in, a continued corporate existence as a private banking institution. This is a status which the courts will protect in the manner and to- the full extent demanded by Los Angeles. The noted arguments of Los Angeles can have no other legal meaning, unless we blind ourselves to the dominating and controlling issue presented in the Los Angeles pleadings. We make further comment on this phase of the case at a later point in this part of our opinion. The terms of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act of 1932 provide the only authority for the “creation” of Federal Home Loan Banks which are required to operate within certain bank “districts” designated in Section 1423 of Title 12 U.S.C.A. It is sufficient to state that such banks are brought into existence by formal administrative action of the Board. When “created,” the banks are authorized and required to perform the functions designated in the Act under a so-called “organization certificate”, Section 1432, which document is issued by and under authority vested in the Board. This certificate is evidence of the corporate existence of such banks as an integral part of what is frequently referred to as the Federal Home Loan Bank System. By regulations of the Board these “organization certificates” are to be deemed the “charter” of a bank. The “charter” of the Bank of Los Ange-les was executed by the first directors of the Bank under date of October 13, 1932, and this charter contains, among other things, the following provisions: “2. The location of the principal office of this Bank will be in the City of Los Angeles, State óf California, or at such other city as the Federal Home Loan Bank Board may from time to time determine is suited to the convenient or customary course of business of the institutions eligible to become Members of this Bank. “3. This Bank shall be established in the City of Los Angeles, State of California, in District Number Twelve,, as defined by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, or as may from time to-time be readjusted or modified by said Board. Said District Number Twelve as now defined is as follows: “The States of California, Arizona,. Nevada and the Territory of Hawaii. “7. This Bank shall have succession until dissolved by the Federal Home-Loan Bank Board under this Act or by further Act of Congress.” A true and correct copy of the organization certificate or corporate charter of the former Federal Home Loan Bank of Los Angeles is set forth at length in the printed transcript on the appeal in the main case (No. 12,511) at pp. 4144 to 4149. A true and correct copy of the organization certificate or corporate charter of the former Federal Home Loan Bank of Portland is also- set forth at length in the same printed, transcript at pp. 4149 to 4154. If we agree with Los Angeles and ap-pellees in this case we would also have to-conclude that provisions in the Federal Home Loan Bank Act relating to the “acquisition” of one Home Loan Bank by another, the liquidation of one bank as a result of such “acquisition” under orders or directions of the Board, “payment of the liquidated bank's liabilities,” and “retirement of its stock,” are incidents in the business affairs of these banks comparable in-character to similar transactions in the field of private corporate enterprises and that all such incidents must be governed in all essential respects by the rules of law and common business practices applicable to such transactions in the world of private business. Such a conclusion is irresistible if the former Bank of Los Angeles must be regarded in law as a private banking venture and not as a public banking agency. In argument to the lower court counsel lor the Bank of San Francisco contended that Federal Home Loan Banks really “go into business with the federal government” and that part, or much of their initial capital is frequently supplied by the federal ■government in the early stages of the bank’s existence. Counsel also pointed out to this court and to the court below that at the inception of the Los Angeles Action the federal government owned more than 51% of the. capital stock of the Los Angeles Bank. • At the conclusion of Part one of this opinion we made reference to the “Return” of San Francisco to the order to show cause why the motion of Association to impound the funds claimed by Association should not be granted. In this “Return” (dated March 8, 1948) San Francisco* alleged that: “the outstanding capital stock of San Francisco Bank, as of January 30, 1947, was of the par value of $27,535,100, of which stock of the par value of $15,927,-900 was and still is owned by the United States.” Apparently this assertion is not denied. As an indication -of the continuing financial interest of the federal government in the Bank of San Francisco, it was shown by the testimony of the Treasurer of the San Francisco Bank that during the year 1948 this bank paid large sums of money to the Treasurer of the United States as ■dividends on stock in that 'bank owned by the government. Much controversy was injected into the case by contentions dealing with the problem of whether or not the federal government had a right to “vote” the stock it held in Home Loan Banks, an aspect of this litigation which does not minimize the importance or signifi'cance of the fact that the government is a stockholder in San Francisco, and was a stockholder in the former Bank of Los Angeles. In noting claims of Los Angeles as to the status of Home Loan Banks we do not consider it necessary to set forth the text of the many sections of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act which spell out the completeness of the administrative and legislative controls over Federal Home Loan Banks — it is sufficient to say that the regulatory provisions of this Act reveal an intention on the part of Congress to retain the broadest kind of federal control over the number, powers and existence of these purely legislative creatures. A brief reference to the Home Loan Bank Act will reveal the sweeping and plenary character of these legislative and administrative controls which are made the price of a hank’s very existence — promoters of such banks are charged with full knowledge of this fact. And we assume that such promoters would not contend that private individuals have some sort of “inherent right” (or constitutional right) to organize and thereafter operate a so-called “Federal Home Loan Bank” and exercise any of the statutory powers granted to such a banking institution without receiving a “charter” from the Board and/or without any attempt to comply with the many requirements and regulatory provisions of the Federal Home Loan Bank Act. And see provisions of Section 1441, Title 12 U.S. C.A. on penalties for misuse of title. Furthermore, men do not go blindly into these Home Loan Bank ventures — they assume all of the obligations with all of the legislative and administrative “strings” attached when a charter is granted to them by the Board. Courts may not remain indifferent to the presence of this type of plenary c