Idaho Savings & Loan Association v. Roden

350 P.2d 225, 82 Idaho 128, 1960 Ida. LEXIS 192
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1960
Docket8808
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 350 P.2d 225 (Idaho Savings & Loan Association v. Roden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Idaho Savings & Loan Association v. Roden, 350 P.2d 225, 82 Idaho 128, 1960 Ida. LEXIS 192 (Idaho 1960).

Opinion

*131 McQUADE, Justice.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in its favor wherein the trial court held a portion of Idaho Code, Title 30, chapter 13, unconstitutional. Plaintiff takes the position the trial court should have declared unconstitutional those provisions requiring the plaintiff to secure insurance of its accounts through the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation.

The trial court made detailed findings of fact which coincide with the complaint, which are as follows:

The plaintiff is a savings and loan association, an Idaho corporation, incorporated July 31, 1956, confining its business activities to this State, having its home office in Twin Falls, Idaho, and branch offices in Boise, Idaho Falls, and Pocatello, Idaho. As of January 31, 1957, the plaintiff had received the vestment accounts: following share in-

Boise, Idaho $673,181.53

Idaho Falls, Idaho 353,902.59

Pocatello, Idaho 23,784.60

Twin Falls, Idaho (Part of the savings share accounts listed for the Boise office were obtained through the Twin Falls office by an employee of plaintiff in Twin Falls.)

Plaintiff has continued to operate a savings and loan business at each of these locations since January 31, 1957, and has substantially increased its savings share accounts, investments in first mortgages, and government securities. On March 4, 1958, the savings share accounts totaled $3,463,892.44.

On March 22, 1957, plaintiff’s stockholders had an investment in paid-in capital stock, leases, office furniture, equipment, U. S. government securities, notes secured by first liens on real estate, Federal Home Loan Bank notes, and Federal National Mortgage Association stock.

The amount of permanent, paid-in, guaranteed capital stock issued for benefit of shareholders increased from $25,000 on January 31, 1957, to $100,000 on October 1, 1958. As a further protection, all employees are covered by a fidelity bond *132 against fraud and embezzlement in the amount of $200,000 for each occurrence.

Plaintiff cannot remain in business if it is not permitted to make loans on real estate more than 50 miles from its home office in Twin Falls, the mortgage loan market within this radius not being large enough to absorb the proceeds from sale of savings shares received by all four offices.

Plaintiff first applied for insurance of accounts in the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation March 15, 1958. In its application, plaintiff submitted an economic need survey for each of its four offices, a reserve agreement, a dividend agreement, and an advance deposit for membership in the Federal Home Loan Bank.

In this application, plaintiff protested a restriction in the agreement required by the Federal Home Loan Bank, to the effect the applicant would not make any loans beyond 50 miles from its principal office. The application was returned by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board on the ground the instrument had been altered.

In a second application, the plaintiff attached a note stating it was making loans more than 50 miles from its home office; this application also was returned on the ground it had been altered.

The only State-chartered savings and loan association insured with the Federal agency on March 22, 1958, was First Security Savings and Loan Association, Inc., doing business in Pocatello. In November, 1957, there also existed in Idaho an uninsured savings and loan association, the First Security Savings and Loan Association, Incorporated, a Utah corporation, which conducted business in Moscow, Lewiston, Boise, Idaho Falls, and Nampa, Idaho. First Security Savings and Loan Association, Inc., and First Security Savings and Loan Association, Incorporated, proposed to the Federal Home Loan Bank that the two corporations be merged and through this merger obtain insurance of accounts for new branch offices in Boise and Lewis-ton, the other offices then being closed. These applications were denied on the ground the Boise and Lewiston offices were too far removed from the proposed home office in Pocatello.

The 50-mile loan radius restriction in the National Housing Act, 12 U.S.C.A. § 1701 et seq., was in effect at the time I.C. Title-30, chapter 13, was amended. This restriction is not an ironclad limitation.

On March 22, 1958, in addition to the Idaho Savings and Loan Association and the First Security Savings and Loan Association, a Utah corporation, there existed the Meridian Building and Loan Association, which did not have insurance of accounts with the Federal agency. The Meridian Building and Loan Association was incorporated March 13, 1911; it has sold paid-up savings shares and has made loans secured by real estate since that time r *133 for the last 15 years the Association has maintained an office in Meridian, Idaho, and has been continuously engaged in the business of operating a savings and loan association since the date of its incorporation.

According to the 1958 Fourth Annual Edition, Directory of American Savings and Loan Associations, the Meridian Savings and Loan Corporation had assets of more than $100,000. As of 1957, the Meridian Savings and Loan Association had no more than 18 fully-paid shareholders, and, of these, seven members held 85 to 90 per cent of the outstanding shares.

The trial court made this following finding of fact:

“That there is no reasonable basis for making a distinction between savings and loan associations that have been in continuous business for less than a 15 year period prior to March 22, 1957, and those savings and loan associations that have been in continuous business for more than 15 years prior to March 22, 1957.”

Upon such finding, a portion of the judgment declared the law in that respect void and ineffective.

Idaho Code, Title 30, chapter 13, among its several provisions, required that Idaho savings and loan associations insure their accounts with the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation as a condition precedent to doing business in the State of Idaho, or to the continuation of doing business in the State of Idaho.

Idaho Code, § 30-130IQ, subsection 2, exempted corporations which had been in continuous operation for a period of more than 15 years from the requirement that they procure insurance of accounts with the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation.

The trial court entered a judgment holding I.C., § 30-1301Q, subsection 2, void and ineffective, quoting the void and ineffective portion, to wit:

“ * * * except such as shall have been in continuous operation for a period of more than fifteen years prior to the effective date hereof * * * ”

in that it violated the Idaho Constitution, Article 1, secs. 1 and 2, and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
350 P.2d 225, 82 Idaho 128, 1960 Ida. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/idaho-savings-loan-association-v-roden-idaho-1960.