1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES 2 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X 3 DIRECTOR OF REVENUE OF : 4 MISSOURI, : 5 Petitioner : 6 v. : No. 99-1792 7 CoBANK ACB, AS SUCCESSOR TO : 8 THE NATIONAL BANK FOR : 9 COOPERATIVES : 10 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -X 11 Washington, D.C. 12 Tuesday, November 28, 2000 13 The above-entitled matter came on for oral 14 argument before the Supreme Court of the United States at 15 11:13 a.m. 16 APPEARANCES: 17 JAMES R. LAYTON, ESQ., State Solicitor, Jefferson City, 18 Missouri; on behalf of the Petitioner. 19 DAVID C. FREDERICK, ESQ., Assistant to the Solicitor 20 General, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.; on 21 behalf of the United States, as amicus curiae, 22 supporting the petitioner. 23 RICHARD A. HANSON, ESQ., Chicago, Illinois; on behalf of 24 the Respondent. 25 1 1 C O N T E N T S 2 ORAL ARGUMENT OF PAGE 3 JAMES R. LAYTON, ESQ. 4 On behalf of the Petitioner 3 5 ORAL ARGUMENT OF 6 DAVID C. FREDERICK, ESQ. 7 On behalf of the United States, as amicus curiae, 8 supporting the petitioner 14 9 ORAL ARGUMENT OF 10 RICHARD A. HANSON, ESQ. 11 On behalf of the Respondent 19 12 REBUTTAL ARGUMENT OF 13 JAMES R. LAYTON, ESQ. 14 On behalf of the Petitioner 43 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 2 1 P R O C E E D I N G S 2 (11:13 a.m.) 3 CHIEF JUSTICE REHNQUIST: We'll hear argument 4 next in Number 99-1792, the Director of Revenue of 5 Missouri v. CoBank ACB. 6 Mr. Layton. 7 ORAL ARGUMENT OF JAMES R. LAYTON 8 ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONER 9 MR. LAYTON: Mr. Chief Justice and may it please 10 the Court: 11 In 1933, when Congress authorized the 12 organization of banks for cooperatives, it implicitly 13 authorized the States to tax them. That authority became 14 effective for each bank when it retired the Government 15 shares. The National Bank for Cooperatives paid taxes to 16 Missouri until 1995, but according to the Missouri supreme 17 court the bank's tax liability ended in 1985. That court 18 failed to recognize the bank's exemption from taxes is and 19 always has been provided by statute, and that staute, now 20 12 U.S.C. 2134, exempts from taxation only the bank's 21 notes, debentures, and other obligations, not its income. 22 In deciding what section 2134 means, the 23 Missouri supreme court erred in three respects. It 24 transformed a technical and conforming amendment into a 25 significant change in the Farm Credit Act, it made that 3 1 transformation by adding to the plain language of the 2 statute, and it turned the statute into something that is 3 incongruous to the rest of the Farm Credit Act. 4 Before 1985, the statute provided that CoBank 5 and its predecessors would always pay taxes on real and 6 tangible personal property and, at any time when the 7 Government did not own shares, they would pay other taxes 8 to State and local governments and perhaps even to the 9 Federal Government. The question arises here as to what 10 happened in 1985, and the position being taken by CoBank 11 is that in 1985 suddenly they were freed from all taxes, 12 and yet that is not what the statute said in 1985. 13 There was a technical and conforming amendment 14 that appeared in title 2 of the 1984 -- 5 act. Title 2 15 was the part of the act that was dedicated to making the 16 Farm Credit Administration an arm's length regulator for 17 the farm credit system, something more akin to what we see 18 at the FDIC and other bank regulators in the Federal 19 system. Title 1 of that act also included conforming 20 amendments. Title 1 dealt with the credit corporation 21 which CoBank cites here as a new vehicle for investment 22 into the farm credit system. 23 The second point that the Missouri court erred 24 on is transforming the plain language by adding to it. 25 The plain language of the statute is simply that this 4 1 entity is exempt from taxation as to its notes, debentures 2 and other obligations. Ever since 1933, the entire scope 3 of the exemption given to the banks for cooperatives has 4 been contained in statutes. 5 The only thing that anyone can point to in the 6 statute today that goes beyond notes, debentures, and 7 obligations is the reference to this entity as a Federal 8 instrumentality, but this Court has at various times 9 suggested or, in fact, held that Federal instrumentality 10 does not have the kind of meaning that CoBank ascribes to 11 it. 12 QUESTION: It has, I take it, been described as 13 such by statute from the very beginning. 14 MR. LAYTON: From the very beginning, Your 15 Honor, and that's significant, because even in 1933, what 16 rights or ablities a Federal instrumentality had was 17 unclear. Certainly -- 18 QUESTION: But don't we have -- isn't the 19 statute -- as I understand the statute, it used to say, 20 your bonds are exempt and your income is exempt as long as 21 the stock's being held by the Board of Governors. 22 MR. LAYTON: That's right. 23 QUESTION: All right. Now, they get rid of the 24 second part because nobody holds the stock any more. 25 MR. LAYTON: That's right. 5 1 QUESTION: All right. So we're left with the 2 first part. 3 MR. LAYTON: That's right. 4 QUESTION: And what you rather briliantly say 5 is, ha-ha, that means McCulloch clicks in. 6 MR. LAYTON: Well -- 7 QUESTION: And since McCulloch clicks in, since 8 it doesn't say it doesn't, they're exempt anyway as a 9 Federal instrumentality. 10 MR. LAYTON: Well, I think that's what they say. 11 That isn't what we would say. 12 QUESTION: Right. Right. That's what they say. 13 MR. LAYTON: We would say that they're not -- 14 QUESTION: Exactly, right. 15 MR. LAYTON: That's right, and this Court, and 16 in fact Congress has never suggested that there could be 17 this kind of a hybrid provision for exemption. In each of 18 the instances where we have a financial institution that 19 seeks an exemption from taxes, Congress has either defined 20 the whole scope of that exemption, or left it blank. 21 QUESTION: All right. Now, given that's their 22 argument, and given we're left with the remnant, why 23 doesn't McCulloch click in? 24 MR. LAYTON: Well, first off that -- the 25 McCulloch -- well, McCulloch holds that a Federal 6 1 instrumentality cannot be taxed discriminatorily and in 2 fact goes beyond that to say you can't import -- impose 3 certain kinds of taxes. McCulloch, however, does not 4 suggest that anything that might be labeled a Federal 5 instrumentality qualifies. 6 QUESTION: One obvious reason -- one obvious 7 reason would be because they're not a Federal 8 instrumentality. That's A. 9 MR. LAYTON: That's A. 10 QUESTION: Now, is there a second argument 11 lurking here, that -- 12 MR. LAYTON: Yes. 13 QUESTION: That's what I'm -- 14 MR. LAYTON: That McCulloch is restricted to an 15 instrumentality of the type that this Court addressed in 16 the New Mexico case, and we can see the comparison fairly 17 bluntly here. 18 The Second Bank of the United States was run by 19 presidential appointees. The Federal Government owned 20 20 percent of the shares in that bank, and that bank 21 performed governmental functions, not just functions in 22 which the Government had an interest, but it actually 23 issued currency. It did things that the Government itself 24 must do. In that sense, the Second Bank of the United 25 States was a little like the Red Cross that this Court 7 1 addressed in the Department of Employment case. Again, 2 presidential appointees run the Red Cross, and that entity 3 fulfills treaty obligations that the United States assumed 4 under the Geneva Convention. 5 The -- CoBank mentions the Rural Telephone Bank 6 in their brief. Well, the Rural Telephone Bank has a 13- 7 member board of directors. Seven of them are appointed by 8 the President of the United States. The Governor of the 9 Rural Telephone Bank is appointed by the Secretary of 10 Agriculture, and there is a direct appropriation from 11 Congress in a -- over a 10-year period of -- or 20-year 12 period of $600 billion for the Rural Telephone Bank. 13 By contrast, here we have an entity that from 14 the beginning has been controlled by a board of directors 15 that is appointed by its voting shareholders, which did 16 not include the United States. That is, by the borrowers. 17 It has always been a private entity, quite distinct from 18 the things that we see in McCulloch. 19 So what's the distinction from McCulloch? 20 McCulloch holds that if you have something that is an 21 instrumentality of the type that is the Second Bank of the 22 United States, then in fact there is, absent any 23 congressional language, immunity. 24 QUESTION: Well, I guess on the side of your 25 opponent is the fact that these banks were created to 8 1 perform an important governmental function by extending 2 reliable credit to farmers at the lowest possible cost. 3 MR. LAYTON: And that's certainly true. 4 QUESTION: Right? I mean, that was an important 5 governmental interest. 6 MR. LAYTON: Yes. 7 QUESTION: And by subjecting them to taxation, 8 it's going to drive up that cost. 9 MR. LAYTON: Well, it may or may not drive up 10 that cost. It's interesting to look a little at the 11 history of what happened here. In 1933 -- 12 QUESTION: Assuming it does -- 13 MR. LAYTON: Assuming it does, assuming that it 14 does drive up the cost, then that would certainly affect 15 the ability of these entities to fulfill that interest in 16 which the Government has an interest, yes, it would. 17 QUESTION: Is that enough, then, to exempt them 18 from that interest? 19 MR. LAYTON: No, it is not. It is not. If that 20 were enough, then anything that Congress creates within 21 its power and says it has a governmental interest could be 22 exempted, or inherently exempted from State tax. 23 QUESTION: Would you amend your answer to say, 24 anything the Government calls an instrumentality? 25 MR. LAYTON: Well, no. I don't know that the 9 1 Government has to call something an instrumentality in 2 order to give it the exemption under that approach. 3 Again, instrumentality doesn't have a meaning that is 4 precise as CoBank wishes that it did. 5 QUESTION: Did the statute in McCulloch say -- 6 use the term, instrumentality of the United States? 7 MR. LAYTON: No. There was no statute in 8 McCulloch that referred to a tax exemption, and that is 9 one of the distinctions. 10 QUESTION: No, I mean, but the statute creating 11 the Bank of the United States. 12 MR. LAYTON: As far as I know, it did not. 13 QUESTION: Did it call it an instrumentality of 14 the United States? 15 MR. LAYTON: No. 16 QUESTION: My recollection is that it didn't. 17 MR. LAYTON: I -- there's no mention in the case 18 suggesting that it did, and that matters in the sense 19 that -- well, not just that it didn't use that phrase, but 20 there's no exemption statute at issue in McCulloch. That 21 is, Congress, when it created the Second Bank of the 22 United States, didn't say, okay, you have the following 23 exemptions from State and local taxes, but that's what 24 Congress at least since 1916, when it started the farm 25 credit system, has done consistently for the financial 10 1 entities within the farm credit system. 2 QUESTION: Mr. Layton, there's a reason that the 3 other side gives for the exemption of the debt 4 obligations, because, they say, those obligations are held 5 not in the hands of CoBank but in the hands of the 6 lenders, so you need an exemption so that those lenders, 7 who are private and not government instrumentalities, 8 won't be taxed. 9 MR. LAYTON: Well, it's curious that they make 10 that claim in a brief where they also cite the Memphis 11 case in section 742 of, I beileve it's title 31, which, if 12 this entity is part of the United States, that is, if this 13 bank of cooperatives has the inherent authority that they 14 ascribe to it, then 742 would cover them, and this 15 provision would be superfluous in 2134. But it doesn't 16 cover them, because they are not an instrumentality of 17 this sort, and Congress has defined the scope of their 18 authority. 19 In 1928, this Court in the Shaw v. Gibson- 20 Zahniser Oil case, just a few years before the 1933 act 21 that created the Bank for Cooperatives, pointed out that 22 there are instrumentalities of the United States that do 23 not have exemptions unless Congress gives them an 24 exemption, and then 5 years later Congress in this 25 instance defines what the exemption is, and what CoBank 11 1 and what the Missouri supreme court have done is to say, 2 well, that definition by Congress doesn't really matter. 3 The third point that I mentioned was that it 4 turns the statute into something in Congress with the rest 5 of the Farm Credit Act. That is, in each instance in the 6 Farm Credit Act, where Congress has created an entity that 7 is even -- that is analogous to this particular one, 8 Congress has said, okay, here is the kind of exmeption 9 that you have from State and local taxes. It always is a 10 comprehensive statement, and does not leave room for some 11 kind of an argument that there is an additional exemption 12 based on some kind of inherent immunity, and in each 13 instance it permits taxation of real property and in many 14 instances taxation of tangible personal property. 15 And one of the differences that occurred in 16 1985, according to CoBank, is all of a sudden the statute 17 changed from allowing State and local governments to tax 18 tangible personal property to including only a real 19 property exemption which they ascribe back to the dicta in 20 McCulloch. 21 In fact, there may be a problem with tangible 22 personal property. I'm not sure how much of that CoBank 23 would be likely to foreclose upon, but the same statutory 24 language is used for the production credit associations, 25 and it is easily understood that there would be tractors 12 1 and other equipment that they would foreclose upon that 2 would justify the need for a provision for taxation on 3 tangible local -- tangible personal property. 4 QUESTION: Do we have some cases that say that 5 if you call it a technical amendment, then we can go back 6 behind the intention of the Congress as, treat it as 7 something of a different order than a straight-out 8 repealer? 9 MR. LAYTON: No. There are a couple of cases 10 cited in our brief that stand for the proposition that we 11 don't expect Congress to use technical amendments to make 12 this kind of a change, but neither of them actually says, 13 yes, we can then go back behind the language to determine 14 what Congress did. 15 But here you don't have to go behind the 16 language to committee reports or something like that. 17 Just look at what the language was. If Congress wanted to 18 do what CoBank now says they did, all they had to do was 19 eliminate the last sentence in the prior statute. That 20 is, the sentence that said, okay, here's the point at 21 which the State's authority to tax begins. 22 If that had been the scope of the -- of 23 Congress' action, just eliminating that last sentence, 24 then except for the tangible personal property question 25 CoBank would have today exactly what they wanted, but that 13 1 sentence says, okay, the exemption that we are giving you 2 in the prior sentence -- that is, you don't have one until 3 we give it to you. The exemption we are giving you in the 4 prior sentence is going to apply only to a certain point. 5 And when Congress acted here, they took out not 6 just the, okay, it applies at a certain point, but 7 exemption that they had given, and so today there is no 8 exemption in the statute, and the banks for cooperatives 9 are responsible for paying taxes to State and local 10 governments. 11 If there are no further questions, I'll reserve 12 the rest of my time for rebuttal. 13 QUESTION: We'll hear from you now, Mr. 14 Frederick. 15 ORAL ARGUMENT OF DAVID C. FREDERICK 16 ON BEHALF OF THE UNITED STATES, AS AMICUS CURIAE, 17 SUPPORTING THE PETITIONER 18 MR. FREDERICK: Thank you, Mr. Chief Justice, 19 and may it please the Court: 20 Our position is that banks for cooperatives 21 under the Farm Credit Act are not exempt from State income 22 taxes for two reasons. We think the Court should confine 23 its decision to an analsyis of the text of the Farm Credit 24 Act, and not go beyond it to discuss or address the 25 constitutional issues relating to Federal 14 1 instrumentalities. 2 Under the text of the act itself there are two 3 reasons why banks for cooperatives are not exempt from 4 State income taxes. First, as the State counsel noted, at 5 section 2134, the first sentence itself just addresses an 6 exemption for notes, debentures, and obligations. That 7 provision contrasts with two other provisions of the Farm 8 Credit Act that specifically give State income tax 9 exemptions for other entities of the farm credit system. 10 12 U.S.C. 2023 provides an exemption from State income 11 taxes for farm credit banks and provides expressly that 12 Congress intended for those entities to be exempt from 13 State income taxes. 14 Moreover, 12 U.S.C. 2098 provides an express 15 exemption from State income taxes for Federal land bank 16 associations. It's clear, therefore, that when Congress 17 enacted this statute, and it amended it over a 50-year 18 period, it knew precisely how to give the kind of 19 exemption from State income taxes being asserted by 20 respondents in this case and chose not to do so. 21 Secondly, the history behind this provision, as 22 the Stte counsel made perfectly clear, does not support 23 respondent's position. Between 1933 and 1985, the text 24 itself provided for the exemption from State income taxes 25 only in any part of a year in which the Government owned 15 1 stock. That ended in 1968. From a period between 1965 2 and 1968, the Government retired all of its shares of 3 stock in banks for cooperatives. 4 So as of 1968, and this is reflected in the Farm 5 Credit Administration's annual report, banks for 6 cooperatives were not exempt from Federal and State income 7 taxes. When Congress made its amendment nearly two 8 decades later, in the 1985 Farm Credit Amendments Act, 9 there was no Government ownership in any banks for 10 cooperatives. These were completely privately owned for- 11 profit entities and, as such, would have been subject to 12 State income taxes throughout the entire period. 13 Now, the last point that I'd like to make is 14 that the Court should not reach out to opine about 15 instrumentality status generally. This -- the Court 16 consistently under the Farm Credit Act has looked at the 17 text of the act to determine the scope of exemptions from 18 taxation, and that's true in all of the cases that have 19 been cited by the parties under the Farm Credit Act. It 20 should not use this case to opine broadly about what 21 instrumentalitiy status means for several reasons. 22 First, Congress uses the term, instrumentality, 23 in a broader range of contexts, and even in this case and 24 in this statute itself, has used it to describe not only 25 the organizations that are being used to facilitate 16 1 Congress' purpose, but also the financial instruments 2 themselves. Section 2023, which is the Farm Credit Bank 3 tax exemption provision, describes the notes themselves as 4 the instrumentalities of the United States, and so by 5 making a decision about what instrumentality status means, 6 the Court could end up having -- could create unintended 7 consequences that would affect the taxable status of 8 instrumentalities throughout the Government. 9 QUESTION: Well, maybe Congress has already 10 created that confusion by using the term inconsistently. 11 MR. FREDERICK: Mr. Chief Justice, that is 12 certainly an area that Congress would certainly want to 13 address. The question, though, is, by using that term, 14 and I would give a second reason, and that's that Congress 15 imposes certain obligations on agencies and 16 instrumentalities that are apart from tax questions, 17 reporting obligations for data to the Secretary of 18 Commerce, encouraging -- 19 QUESTION: Yes, but Mr. Frederick, isn't it true 20 that for purposes of deciding this case, if we have to 21 -- if we rule in your favor and the favor of the 22 petitioner, we must decide that the mere fact that it's 23 labeled an instrumentality is not sufficient to give a tax 24 exemption? 25 MR. FREDERICK: No, Justice Stevens. What the 17 1 Court would say is that use of the instrumentality 2 language by itself would not render the rest of the tax 3 exemption language in the Farm Credit Act surplusage, and 4 the Court would say that Congress defined the scope of the 5 tax exempt status of these particular instrumentalities by 6 expressly dealing with tax exempt status, and that's how 7 the court did it in the First Agricultural Bank case in 8 1968, when it addressed a very similar question for the 9 national banks, and there the Court said, we're going to 10 look at the text of the statute to determine the scope of 11 the exemption and not reach -- 12 QUESTION: Well, we would at least have to say 13 that the mere fact they have used the term instrumentality 14 is not sufficient to overcome the statutory argument. 15 MR. FREDERICK: That's correct, where there is 16 express tax-exempt language given by Congress. I mean, 17 even in McCulloch itself the Court said that it was up to 18 Congress to decide how it wanted to exercise its powers 19 under the Necessary and Proper Clause. 20 QUESTION: So is it your principal submission 21 that we should look at the act in its pre-1985 status? 22 MR. FREDERICK: Well, we think that the '85 23 language which is present here is, in and of itself, 24 sufficient, but it is also supported by the history of the 25 statutory evolution from 1933, which makes perfectly clear 18 1 Congress did not intend for these entities to be tax- 2 exempt when the Government did not own shares in them. 3 If the Court has no further questions, I have 4 nothing further. 5 QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. Frederick. 6 Mr. Hanson, we'll hear from you. 7 ORAL ARGUMENT OF RICHARD A. HANSON 8 ON BEHALF OF THE RESPONDENT 9 QUESTION: Your opponent said that your client 10 continued to pay taxes to the State of Missouri from, 11 what, 1985 to 1995, is that correct? 12 MR. HANSON: Perhaps I could clear that up, Your 13 Honor. In the first place, the bank was not formed until 14 1989, so that we obviously didn't have any liability prior 15 to that date. 16 QUESTION: How about from 1989 to 1995? 17 MR. HANSON: The bank did, in fact, pay tax, and 18 fairly promptly, beginning with the year 1991 filed refund 19 claims to recover that tax. I would submit that to the 20 extent that they were slow in making those claims, it 21 might have had something to do with the fact that the 22 entire farm credit system had more serious problems to 23 worry about in the late 1980's which was, frankly, its 24 survival. 25 One point that all parties seem to agree upon, 19 1 and certainly the Court's opinions make this clear, is 2 that the question of whether or not an entity is entitled 3 to immunity as a Federal instrumentality is up to 4 Congress. The Court said that in the New Mexico, the -- 5 Missouri said that in their briefs, the Solicitor General, 6 of course, said the same thing. 7 What we now have here, we would submit, is a 8 case where congressional designation as a Federal 9 instrumentality somehow carries less weight than a 10 judicial determination of Federal instrumentality. 11 QUESTION: Well, the question is was there 12 really any congressional determination, considering that 13 when one thing we know for sure from '68 to '85, Congress 14 meant these entities to be subject to income tax, and they 15 were. What happened in '85? What Congress meant is far 16 from clear. 17 MR. HANSON: Well, let me go through the history 18 briefly of the banks for cooperatives, because I think 19 that answers your question. They were formed in 1933. At 20 that time, if you look at decisions like James v. Dravo 21 Corporation, to be a Federal instrumentality meant -- and 22 I don't think there would have been any dispute, that you 23 were exempt from Federal income tax absent an affirmative 24 authorization. The banks were, and the Farm Credit Act 25 was then in 1971 completely recodified and Congress again 20 1 affirmatively, not merely carry-over, but affirmatively 2 said, the bakns for cooperatives are -- continue to be 3 federally-chartered instrumentalities of the United 4 States. That's 1971. They did that at a time when the 5 Federal Government owned no stock in that entity, and they 6 said the resaon -- 7 QUESTION: But there was still a provision for 8 the Government to come back and use -- 9 MR. HANSON: To invest in the stock. 10 QUESTION: Yes. 11 MR. HANSON: What changed in 1985 is that the 12 form of potential Government investment changed, and it 13 changed not because of some sense of a difference in the 14 structure of these entities, it changed because Congress 15 determined that a centralized entity, the Farm Credit 16 Capital Corporation, could serve a number of warehousing 17 and centralized financing functions, and it would then 18 become the entry point for Federal investment. 19 So what we have is, in effect, instead of the 20 money going directly to the bank for cooperatives, it 21 would go to the Capital Corporation, which would then 22 provide it to the banks for cooperatives, and I would 23 submit that that's -- 24 QUESTION: The infusion would be a loan type -- 25 MR. HANSON: It would be a loan, and if you look 21 1 at the statute, it's a subordinated loan. It's 2 subordinated to all of the debt of the system. It's 3 subordinated to the capital provided by the members. 4 QUESTION: It's still not up -- 5 MR. HANSON: It's still not equity, I would 6 agree, but if you -- I mean, if you were trying to value 7 the debt versus the equity and compare their security and 8 their claims on the assets, I think you would find that 9 there very little distinction. 10 QUESTION: You only tax the income-earned 11 equity, don't you? I mean, basically the income of the 12 bank is -- the income goes to the equity holder, doesn't 13 it? 14 MR. HANSON: The income goes -- the income of 15 the bank is used for four purposes, and these are provided 16 in the statute. The first purpose is to -- and I'll do 17 this in the context of 1991, which is the first year 18 before the Court. The first use is to rebuild the capital 19 of the bank, because you can't function as a lender 20 without capital to provide security to your bond holders. 21 The second use -- and this is all set out in 22 section 2132 with respect to BC's. The second use is to 23 rebuild loss reserves, or to make sure that loss reserves 24 are adequate. These are both things that are necessary 25 for the bank to function. 22 1 The third use, of course, in these years is to 2 pay back the Government loan and, as we indicated in our 3 brief, the Bank for Cooperatives National Bank and its 4 successor, CoBank, paid back something like $300 million. 5 None of those things actually affect earnings. 6 QUESTION: No, but I mean, my point is simply, 7 if I own your bank -- you might be very nice -- I would 8 expect the State to tax the income, but if the Government 9 owns the bank, probably it wouldn't, and that's what the 10 statute seemed to say. And then in '85 the Government 11 doesn't own the bank any more. It lends money to the 12 bank. Well, so, why would you expect the State not to be 13 able to tax the income? It isn't the Government's any 14 more. 15 MR. HANSON: But it's not the bank's income, 16 either. 17 QUESTION: Whose is it? 18 MR. HANSON: It is the members' income. 19 QUESTION: All right. 20 MR. HANSON: That's the very nature of a 21 cooperative. I mean, a cooperative is -- 22 QUESTION: What was the fourth purpose? You 23 said there were four -- four things that -- 24 MR. HANSON: The fourth would be, and this is 25 because we are a cooperative, would be a distribution to 23 1 our member borrowers according to the business they did 2 with the bank, not according to their capital, and as this 3 Court pointed out in Kiowa County, the purpose for that 4 distribution is not a purpose to return an investment to 5 the borrower. It's to reduce the cost of his loan, 6 because one of the fundamental missions of the farm credit 7 system, again as this Court has recognized, is to provide 8 loans for farmers at the lowest possible cost. 9 QUESTION: If your client had never been 10 financed by the Federal Government, the fact that it had 11 those priorities for distribution wouldn't entitle it to 12 any sort of a tax exemption, would it? 13 MR. HANSON: No, but I think they make the point 14 that the bank itself is not a for-profit entity. It is a 15 cooperative. 16 QUESTION: Why does that bear on its tax 17 immunity? 18 MR. HANSON: Well, it bears on why Congress 19 would give the bank a designation as a federally-chartered 20 instrumentality of the United States. The mission of the 21 farm credit system -- it's set out in the statute, it's 22 been recognized in your cases, is to provide secure and 23 adequate lending to agricultural borrowers at the lowest 24 possible cost. 25 QUESTION: All right, but the lowest possible 24 1 cost argument would not have washed before the '85 2 amendment, because before the '85 amendment it was very -- 3 as I understand the statute it was very explicit. That 4 even though you could reduce the cost by rendering the 5 bank nontaxable, you would only -- or the bank's income, 6 you would only do that if the United States was in part an 7 owner. 8 MR. HANSON: Right. 9 QUESTION: And once the United States dropped 10 out, we didn't care whether it made the loans more 11 expensive. Why would there be a different policy in 12 effect now from the policy in effect then? Why did we 13 become -- why did Congress become more sensitive to cheap 14 loans after '85 than before? 15 MR. HANSON: Well, I don't think Congress was 16 any less sensitive. If you go back to 1933, when the 17 banks were formed, it was obviously the Depression, and 18 Congress did what the Court acknowledges that it does. It 19 balanced the interests of a Federal program to provide 20 secure and adequate and inexpensive financing to farmers 21 with the fact that the States were also suffering from the 22 Depression, and so the compromise that was struck in 23 Depression conditions was, you can't tax these entities as 24 long as there's a Federal investment, but we will let you 25 tax them when that investment is retired. 25 1 As Missouri itself put it in its brief, they 2 said, you know, if the Federal Government has an 3 investment in the bank -- an investment here cannot 4 realistically turn on whether it is equity or debt. I 5 mean, in either case, as I suggested earlier, the terms 6 are such that it's a Federal claim. They said the States 7 ought to be understood to have to stand aside until that's 8 paid back. 9 What changed in 1985 is, Congress recapitalized 10 the system. 11 QUESTION: Okay, but Congress was saying before 12 1985, as long as we are an owner, our interest comes 13 before the State interest. 14 MR. HANSON: Yes. 15 QUESTION: That isn't necessarily a cheap loan 16 policy. It's a favor-the-United States policy. 17 After 1985, the United States says, we're not 18 going to be owners any more. Therefore, there's no need 19 to favor the United States, and therefore there's no need 20 to provide a nontaxable policy. At each time, before '85 21 and after '85, the United States' policy with respect to 22 the effect of the cost of borrowing on borrowers, on this 23 analysis, would be exactly the same. 24 MR. HANSON: Right. 25 QUESTION: The only thing that's changed is, we 26 1 don't have the United States in an equity position to 2 favor any more, therefore there's no need to provide for 3 nontaxability. 4 MR. HANSON: Well, I mean, certainly there's 5 nothing in the legislative history that suggests that that 6 analysis was undertaken. I'm not saying that Congress 7 might not have thought it through that way, but going back 8 to what Justice Breyer was asking me about the profits and 9 income of a bank, there is no source to pay back the 10 United States, except the income. 11 QUESTION: No, my question is actually the same 12 as Justice Souter's, that -- 13 QUESTION: No, go ahead. 14 QUESTION: I'm probably just going to put it in 15 a slightly different way, but -- you have three sentences 16 in this statute. 17 MR. HANSON: Right. 18 QUESTION: The first sentence that says no, no 19 tax on bonds, all right. The second said, no tax on 20 income, and the third one said, sentence 2 applies only 21 when we're -- the Government's an investor. 22 MR. HANSON: Right. 23 QUESTION: All right. Now, just out of 24 curiosity, let's suppose that was still the statute. 25 We're back in '84. Why can the State tax a bank's income 27 1 even where the Government doesn't have an investment? 2 MR. HANSON: They clearly could under the 3 statute, because -- 4 QUESTION: No. What do you mean, it clearly 5 could -- wait -- 6 MR. HANSON: I apologize, Your Honor. 7 QUESTION: That's -- the point is, the statute 8 doesn't say, it can't. The statute nowhere says that it 9 can or it can't. What the statute says is, it can't as 10 long as the Government has an interest. It doesn't say 11 what happens when the Government interest disappears. All 12 it says is that the preceding sentence exemption doesn't 13 apply when the Government interest disappears. That's 14 what my version says. It says, the exemption provided in 15 the preceding sentence shall apply only when the 16 Government is an owner. 17 MR. HANSON: That's correct. That's what it 18 says. 19 QUESTION: All right. Now the Government isn't 20 an owner. Therefore the preceding sentence doesn't apply. 21 Why doesn't McCulloch apply? 22 MR. HANSON: Well, and the answer is that the 23 legislative history from 1933 -- 24 QUESTION: Fine. 25 MR. HANSON: -- makes it very clear. 28 1 QUESTION: What you're saying, there's a 2 negative implication. 3 MR. HANSON: That Congress was very clear about 4 that. 5 QUESTION: Fine. Now, once you say there was a 6 negative implication before, why doesn't that same 7 negative implication exist after '85, from the first 8 sentence, unless there's something in that '85 history 9 that shows that what they wanted to do was restore 10 McCulloch, and my reading is there isn't a word on that, 11 but you're prepared to say it wasn't the statute before 12 that wiped out McCulloch. 13 You're saying what wiped out McCulloch before 14 was a negative implication from the statute, and so my 15 question is simply, why isn't that negative implication 16 still there, just as strong as it ever was, unless, of 17 course, you can point to a reason? Now do you see my -- 18 you see where I'm going? 19 MR. HANSON: I understand where you're going. 20 QUESTION: Yes. That's what I'd like the answer 21 to. 22 MR. HANSON: Well, and let me qualify part of my 23 answer, is that the statute has been understood by -- it's 24 never been construed by this Court, but it's been 25 understood by a number of State courts and -- consistent 29 1 with what Congress said. They said, what we are writing 2 with that third sentence is, not that we -- we won't tell 3 you what happens when there's no ownership, but we are 4 telling you affirmatively that you become taxable. 5 Now, was it artful language? Perhaps not. So I 6 don't think it's fair to say that the exemption -- that 7 the taxability previously existed by negative implication. 8 I think it was statutory and, of course, the answer, what 9 happened in 1985 was, the statute was repealed. Now, both 10 the exemption, I agree, and the negative implication. 11 One thing here that I think the Court needs to 12 focus on, and it's a major point made by the State and by 13 the Solicitor General, is they -- citing Rosello and cases 14 like that, they say, well, the farm credit banks have an 15 exemption, and the farm -- the Federal land bank 16 associations have an exemption, and you don't have an 17 exemption therefore, and I grant that that's a perfectly 18 valid rule of statutory construction. 19 But I think it's fair to say that someone ought 20 to at least offer a reason why it makes sense that 21 Congress would discriminate against -- differentiate. 22 They're not discriminating -- differentiate between a bank 23 for cooperatives which makes loans to an agricultural 24 cooperative or production credit association which makes a 25 loan to a farmer. It's also a property, but it's 30 1 otherwise identical, and a Federal land bank association 2 makes the same loan, and they've clearly granted a 3 statutory exemption in the one case but not the other. 4 Now, you know -- 5 QUESTION: Well, why doesn't that text take care 6 of it? If you take the position that there's no inherent 7 exemption for this kind of organization, that you have 8 three organizations, and for two of them Congress has 9 provided expressly your income is exempt, and for one of 10 them it hasn't, so why isn't the assumption just from the 11 text that two of them have it and one of them doesn't? 12 MR. HANSON: Well, I mean, I think Congress is 13 normally presumed to legislate on a rational basis and 14 have a reason for what it's doing. My point is, and 15 particularly from -- 16 QUESTION: I thought in the tax area Congress 17 could shed its grace where it will. 18 (Laughter.) 19 MR. HANSON: Well, I certainly agree with Your 20 Honor on that point, but 1985 -- and there is this change, 21 and we pointed it out in our brief, that when the banks 22 formed in 1933 and through 1971, in effect they were a 23 stand-alone element in the farm credit system. They 24 issued their own bonds. They made their own loans. They 25 were liable only for their own bonds and for their own 31 1 operations. 2 From 1975 through 1985 the entire system became 3 interlocking in terms of issuance of bonds and liability 4 therefore, and the operation of all the banks, so -- 5 QUESTION: You say the entire system. What are 6 you referring to? 7 MR. HANSON: Well, I'm talking about the major 8 legs of the farm credit system, the -- what were 9 originally the Federal land banks and are now the farm 10 credit banks, the production credit associations, and the 11 banks for cooperatives. Those have always been the three 12 lenders. 13 But in 1985 CoBank is -- or, National Bank for 14 Cooperatives -- I'm sorry, 1989 -- is no longer simply 15 liable for its own operations. It doesn't issue its own 16 bonds. Its taxability doesn't affect only it. Now it 17 affects everybody else, because if Missouri can tax it, it 18 has less income to put into the pool to pay back the 19 Government. 20 QUESTION: That's all true, but are there some 21 other kinds of banks that are very similar that Missouri 22 can't tax? You're not saying there's some other very 23 related kind of bank that Missouri cannot tax? 24 MR. HANSON: I don't believe so. 25 QUESTION: No. 32 1 MR. HANSON: I mean, the national banks, which, 2 of course, have always been viewed and designated as 3 Federal instrumentalities, the statute now tells you what 4 to do. The other types of lending institutions, you know, 5 in the first place they're not designated as federally- 6 chartered instrumentalities. Again -- 7 QUESTION: Well, isn't the obvious answer to 8 your question, what -- you say, well, the Government's 9 thought was, while we're the owner, Missouri can't tax us, 10 but once we're no longer the owner, because we don't own 11 stock, then it can, and if that raises the price of 12 credit, so be it. I mean, isn't -- that's what it seems 13 to say. 14 MR. HANSON: Well, then I guess I would -- 15 that's one way of looking at it, but it seems frankly 16 implausible to me. I mean -- 17 QUESTION: What about the other two -- 18 MR. HANSON: -- because the Government -- I'm 19 sorry, Justice Scalia. 20 QUESTION: I thought you were done. Finish it. 21 MR. HANSON: The Government -- and again, 22 this -- part of the problem that we have with this is, we 23 recognize that there were distinctions made between the 24 banks. The Federal land banks, which were originally 25 capitalized -- 33 1 QUESTION: It seems implausible -- you were 2 finishing your answer. It seems implausible to you 3 because? 4 MR. HANSON: That Congress would make that 5 determination with respect to the banks for cooperatives, 6 but it wouldn't make that determination with respect to 7 the other banks. 8 QUESTION: Are the other banks -- this was my 9 question. Does the Government own stock in the other 10 ones? 11 MR. HANSON: It does not own stock in the other 12 banks. It originally capitalized the Federal land banks, 13 which had been before this Court numerous times. But -- 14 QUESTION: So you could not explain the 15 difference on the ground that the Government is a 16 participating investor in the others -- 17 MR. HANSON: No, and -- 18 QUESTION: -- in a formal sense, whereas it is 19 not here. 20 MR. HANSON: Those statutes -- their statutory 21 exemption continued after the Government's stock was 22 retired. It was not made conditional, as the banks for 23 cooperatives exemption was, as it appears to us, because 24 when the banks were formed in 1933, that was a political 25 calculation that Congress made. They said, the States are 34 1 desperate for revenue, and while we need to accomplish 2 this program, we're willing to make this accommodation. 3 QUESTION: But the accommodation didn't kick in 4 for 35 years. 5 MR. HANSON: That's right. It did not kick in 6 until the late 1960's, and that accommodation -- 7 QUESTION: Kind of one-sided compromise. 8 MR. HANSON: Well -- I mean, partly that goes to 9 the nature of farming. You offered to buy the bank, and I 10 suspect I have members who would happily sell it to you. 11 But -- 12 QUESTION: But it does show the Government was 13 willing to treat CoBank differently then, and there's no 14 resaon to believe tht Government isn't willing to treat it 15 differently now, just as then you say the other 16 instrumentalities, even though the Government was no 17 longer a participating investor, would continue to have 18 their exemption, that was not the case for CoBank. 19 MR. HANSON: That's correct. 20 QUESTION: So it's always been treated 21 differently for -- 22 MR. HANSON: There is that differentiation. But 23 it comes -- it all comes down to 1985, and did Congress 24 change the rules, and we suggest that the law before 1985 25 was, we are exempt as long as the Federal Government has 35 1 an investment, and technically in the stock of the bank, 2 and I understand that. 3 In 1985, Congress says, we have to provide a 4 line of credit to this entire system to keep it from 5 falling. It managed in 2 years to lose 40 percent of the 6 capital it had accumulated over 7 years. 7 And not only are we going to do that, but we're 8 going to make the whole thing interlocking in terms of how 9 it functions, and we're doing all of this because the bank 10 is critical, because the commercial banks will not lend to 11 agriculture in times of stress -- Congress said that in 12 1633 in '87 -- and because the farmers are suffering from 13 interest rates that they have to pay to the farm credit 14 system, which in large part was a function of the cost of 15 borrowing in the capital markets, because the capital 16 markets had lost confidence in the banks, so we had -- 17 QUESTION: Congress said all this in a technical 18 and conforming amendment, but nothing to suggest that they 19 meant to do anything more than get rid of the obsolete 20 provision that referred to the Government's ownership. 21 MR. HANSON: Well, you know, the State has 22 suggested that that is the reference in the committee 23 report which describes this change, and we would submit 24 that's not true for two reasons. 25 First, as we pointed out in our brief, the 36 1 committee report refers to a version of the bill which did 2 not, in fact, establish -- it did not, in fact, repeal the 3 second sentence. It repealed only the third. I 4 understand that's a two-edged sword, but they say it's 5 only a technical and conforming amendment when what 6 Congress was doing was repealing only the third sentence 7 of the act, which would leave us with a complete 8 exemption, so I don't know that you can prove too much -- 9 I don't know if I'm being clear about that. 10 QUESTION: But what puzzles me is if the tax, 11 the State tax was on from '68 to '85. If Congress was 12 saying, stop, States, you would expect that to be 13 something that people would stand up and take notice of, 14 and yet there's not anything explicit to suggest that 15 Congress meant to take away from the States the tax 16 authority that they had for this and the -- what is it, 17 the PCA's as well? 18 MR. HANSON: Yes, it was, basically. 19 QUESTION: That it meant to take that away from 20 the States. 21 MR. HANSON: Well, I think there are two answers 22 to that, and first is, as we've pointed out, you know, 23 this legislation started out, as legislation does, with 24 hearings and worrying about governmental regulation, and 25 farmers complaining about the cost of borrowing, and by 37 1 the time it got into the system in November, the question 2 was whether or not you could save the farm credit system, 3 because it turned out that it was basically hemorrhaging 4 money. 5 And Congress, the bill was introduced on, I 6 think, the 20th of November, and it was signed by the 7 President on the 18th of December. I mean, this went, 8 bang, bang, bang. It was described in the Wall Sreet 9 Journal as legislating on the fly. They were, you know, 10 as the Wall Street Journal would be very offended by that. 11 But -- so you have -- you have a lot of very 12 high priority concerns that Congress was trying to deal 13 with and articulate and explain, and then you've got this 14 State tax exemption which I'm -- and liability, which is 15 clearly important to Missouri, I've no doubt about that, 16 but on a list of priorities, I doubt that it was very high 17 when Congress was concerned -- as the comments on the 18 floor indicate, they're worried about losing the entire 19 system, and -- but I think the second point, and again, in 20 19 -- I know I'm repeating about this point, but in 19 -- 21 prior to the change, the statute said that the bank was 22 exempt as long as the Federal Government owned stock in 23 the bank. 24 After 1985, if you accept our interpretation, we 25 are saying that the bank is exempt because the Federal 38 1 Government has reinfused capital, admittedly in a 2 different form, but certainly not financially, 3 economically different, and in a form for which the banks 4 were liable, so that I would submit that the only 5 difference between the circumstances in 1984 and 1986, if 6 you will, is that in the first place Congress was being 7 explicit, and in the second place Congress was relying 8 upon -- 9 QUESTION: If you look at -- 10 MR. HANSON: -- that designation. 11 QUESTION: I mean, that's why -- not everyone 12 agrees, but I like to look at legislative history, and you 13 would have expected, given -- even cooperative banks at 14 that time, they'd have lawyers who were doing this, and if 15 they thought that in removing words that grant an 16 exemption the intent was to give an even bigger exemption, 17 I would certainly think somewhere somebody would have said 18 something. 19 MR. HANSON: Well, I don't understand, and 20 I've -- we've never accepted this notion that somehow we 21 have a bigger exemption. 22 QUESTION: No, equal to. 23 MR. HANSON: I'm sorry, Your Honor, but -- well, 24 not even equal, because previously we were exempt from 25 Federal income tax. Subsequently we're not exempt from 39 1 Federal income taxes, and in -- I mean, and that's fairly 2 significant. 3 Now, you can say, well, doesn't that undercut 4 the notion of lending at the lowest possible cost? The 5 answer is, I think the Government is sort of indifferent 6 whether it gets its money -- in paying back the loan 7 whether it gets its money from taxes or gets a loan 8 repayment, and in fact the banks were never truly exempt 9 from Federal tax because they were -- even when they were 10 exempt from Federal income tax the statute imposed a 11 franchise tax based on net earnings, which is functionally 12 equivalent, so in that sense the status quo was 13 maintained, and I think that's our argument. 14 The status quo was maintained. The design was 15 maintained. The facts changed, and under the 16 circumstances, and given the pressure Congress was under, 17 I think it's entirely rational that they would look at 18 this -- I mean, the bill came out of the House on the 6th 19 of December. It was passed, completely changed and passed 20 by both Houses on the 10th. 21 I think it's -- you know, it's asking a bit much 22 to expect a nice, detailed explication of all the 23 provisions. 24 QUESTION: Could you go to the reason for the 25 tax, the Federal income taxability? Is it taxable under a 40 1 special statute that says, CoBank, pay Federal income 2 taxes now, or is it taxable simply because there's no 3 express exemption for CoBank? 4 MR. HANSON: It is -- it's taxable because the 5 Internal Revenue Code provides that it would be taxable 6 absent an express exemption, and there is none, so it's -- 7 entities have always been subject to -- 8 QUESTION: Does the code refer specifically to 9 this bank? 10 MR. HANSON: No. The code refers to Federal 11 instrumentalities and tells you how to -- 12 QUESTION: Okay. 13 MR. HANSON: -- that they are exempt -- I'm 14 sorry, that they are taxable absent an express exemption 15 in the income tax law. It's 501(c)(1). 16 So -- you know, so the presumption, the pattern 17 is opposite for a Federal tax. You're taxable unless 18 there's a statutory exemption. 19 Here, and I'd like to simply conclude by where I 20 started. If you look at the New Mexico decision which 21 Missouri relies upon at length, and you go to page 736, 22 and I pick this out -- this is illustrative. You were 23 talking about whether those particular Federal contractors 24 were exempt from State tax, and you said, the Court's 25 other cases describing the nature of a, quote, Federal 41 1 instrumentality. 2 That is a term of art. It's been a term of art 3 since Justice Marshall first coined it in McCulloch v. 4 Maryland, and the one attribute that's always been 5 associated with a Federal instrumentality in this Court's 6 cases is an exemption from State taxation absent a waiver. 7 I mean, I've looked -- I can't claim that I -- this is 8 complete. 9 The Court has never held that an entity which is 10 a Federal instrumetnality is taxable in the absence of an 11 affirmative congressional authorization, whether you're 12 talking about the Department of Employment, you're talking 13 about New Mexico, you're talking about Graves, you're 14 talking about James v. Dravo, never, at least not that we 15 can find. 16 That term carries with it that attribute, and we 17 submit that Congress, in designating us a federally- 18 chartered instrumentality, consistent with what we do -- 19 they didn't do it haphazardly -- intended precisely the 20 same designation, and we would suggest that that also fits 21 with the overall goals of Congress in passing the 1985 act 22 and rescuing the farm credit system and trying to give the 23 agricultural borrowers some relief from high interest 24 rates. 25 It seems to us it all fits together, and what 42 1 the State is literally saying is, well, we want to act 2 like the law didn't change, that there was no repeal. 3 Well, there was a repeal. The law did change, and the 4 question is, did Congress intend that we become taxable 5 without regard to the Federal investment, or did they 6 intend that we become exempt under the McCulloch rule, and 7 those are basically the choices facing the Court. 8 If there are no further questions -- 9 QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. Hanson. 10 MR. HANSON: Thank you, Your Honor. 11 QUESTION: Mr. Layton, you have 7 minutes 12 remaining. 13 REBUTTAL ARGUMENT OF JAMES R. LAYTON 14 ON BEHALF OF THE PETITIONER 15 MR. LAYTON: I'll note first that I believe that 16 the banks for cooperatives were subject to Federal income 17 tax prior to 1985, but I'd also note the franchise tax 18 that counsel referred to. 19 In the 1971 act in section 4 it sets out a 20 franchise act that could be as high as 25 percent of net 21 income for the banks, but interestingly, that franchise 22 tax applied so long as the Government holds shares in the 23 bank, and that the Government didn't hold any shares at 24 that point, and there was obviously an incentive, given 25 that franchise tax, not to allow the Government to pick up 43 1 any shares in your particular bank. 2 I should note also that although the National 3 Bank for Cooperatives was formed in 1989, it was the 4 merger of other banks for cooperatives, and there have 5 been banks for cooperatives operating in Missouri for 6 many, many years prior to 1989. 7 Turning to the legislative history, if, indeed, 8 we have to get to the legislative history, the history 9 does talk about the reasons for the 1985 act, and one of 10 the things that's there is a note that the banks for 11 cooperatives themselves were healthy. This was not 12 prompted by a problem with the banks for cooperatives. It 13 was prompted, as Mr. Hanson accurately said, by a system- 14 wide problem. 15 That is, there may have been -- there were other 16 entities within the bank, the farm credit system that were 17 having enough problem that it was bringing down the 18 ability of the entire system to sell bonds, and yet the 19 argument being made here is that because some other entity 20 had a problem and Congress created a system-wide remedy, 21 that is a remedy that would provide Federal financing to 22 the system as a whole, and never to particular 23 institutions, that somehow these banks for cooperatives 24 attained a new exemption. 25 Before, they only had an exemption when they had 44 1 Federal investment. Afterward, according to CoBank, they 2 all have an exemption even if no one has a Federal 3 investment, and the most that's likely is that some 4 production credit association or someone else would have 5 an investment, and yet somehow they get this exemption 6 back. They also -- the -- 7 QUESTION: Mr. Frederick, what is the effect of 8 Congress' calling an institution a Federal 9 instrumentality? I'd always thought that the primary 10 reason they do that is precisely to exempt it from State 11 income tax. 12 MR. LAYTON: Well -- 13 QUESTION: What other effect does it have? Why 14 would you enact a statute that says, you know, the Red 15 Cross, or whatever it is, is a Federal instrumentality? 16 MR. LAYTON: I think one reason is to ensure 17 that that entity -- in the tax context one reason is to 18 ensure that that entity cannot be subjected to 19 discriminatory taxation. 20 Missouri, for example, could not pass a tax that 21 was restricted to the income of federally charter -- or, 22 excuse me, of cooperative banks that serve cooperatives, 23 farm cooperatives. Because the only one that exists is 24 this instrumentality, that would be aimed at a Federal 25 instrumentality and would be a discriminatory tax and it 45 1 would be illegal, becuse that is a Federal 2 instrumentality. There may be other reasons as well, but 3 certainly that is one impact of use of that term. 4 The change that is alleged to have come about in 5 1985 is not just to remove the connection between the 6 Federal investment and the bank that is asserting the 7 exemption, but also to remove the temporal aspect. That 8 is, before, the exemption only was in place while the 9 Federal investment was in place. 10 At the time in 1985 there was 5-year sunset 11 provision on the credit corporation through which the 12 funds that Mr. Hanson spoke of would be channeled, and yet 13 the exemption that he asserts is one that would exist 14 indefinitely. That's inconsistent with the legislative 15 history and with the language of the statute. 16 CoBank poses the question as to why 17 differentiate between production credit associations and 18 banks for cooperatives on the one hand and other 19 institutions such as land banks on the other, and we 20 shouldn't have to ask that question, because Congress made 21 that determination in 1933. There has always been a 22 distinction. We're just discussing today what the 23 distinction now is. 24 But there are a couple of possible reasons for 25 Congress to have made that distinction. One is simply 46 1 temporal. In 1933 we were in the Depression era, and not 2 only was there a problem with the farm credit, with credit 3 for farmers, but there was a problem with banks generally, 4 and so here Congress was setting up some institutions that 5 would compete with commercial banks that themselves were 6 failing throughout rural areas in the United States, and 7 Congress set up a system that said, okay, for the time 8 being, we will give you an advantage over your commercial 9 competitors, but only for the time being. At some point 10 it's going to go back to where you do not have that extent 11 of commercial advantage. Sure, you can still issue 12 obligations that will be tax-free, but you won't be able 13 to avoid tax entirely. 14 Another reason that there may be a distinction 15 is that the land banks that Mr. Hanson referred to lend, 16 as I understand it, based on the farmer's land as 17 collateral, and there has always been a feeling in 18 Congress that we don't want to take the land away from the 19 farmers. That is distinguishable from the question of 20 lending based on their crops, which is what a production 21 credit association would do, or based on the equipment and 22 land that is held by a cooperative that may be producing 23 or processing the crops or otherwise providing services 24 for the farmers. There is a distinction. 25 It's worth noting that today betwen two-thirds 47 1 and three-quarters of agricultural lending in the United 2 States is done by entities outside of the farm credit 3 system, and those entities must compete on the grounds 4 that Congress set forth, and not on the grounds that can 5 be divined by some reference to past history. 6 If there are no further questions, I thank the 7 Court. 8 CHIEF JUSTICE REHNQUIST: Thank you, Mr. Layton. 9 The case is submitted. 10 (Whereupon, at 12:07 p.m., the case in the 11 above-entitled matter was submitted.) 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 48