Old Dominion Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Colony Savings & Loan Ass'n

249 S.E.2d 167, 219 Va. 586, 1978 Va. LEXIS 216
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 22, 1978
DocketRecord No.780634
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 249 S.E.2d 167 (Old Dominion Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Colony Savings & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Old Dominion Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Colony Savings & Loan Ass'n, 249 S.E.2d 167, 219 Va. 586, 1978 Va. LEXIS 216 (Va. 1978).

Opinion

COCHRAN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Old Dominion Savings and Loan Association filed an application with the State Corporation Commission in 1977 to establish a branch at 6926 Peters Creek Road, N. W., near the City of Roanoke, in *587 Roanoke County. The application was opposed by Colony Savings and Loan Association, First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Roanoke, Peoples Federal Savings and Loan Association, and Southwest Virginia Savings and Loan Association (protestants). After conducting a hearing, the Commission entered an order denying the application. Old Dominion has appealed, contending that the Commission’s ruling was contrary to the evidence and without evidence to support it.

The controlling statute, Code § 6.1-195.48, pursuant to which Old Dominion filed its application, provided in part as follows:

“No savings and loan association may establish a branch office, except that the Commission, when satisfied that the public convenience and necessity 1 will be served thereby, may authorize an association to establish a branch or branches, . . . .”

In the order denying the application it was stated that a majority of the Commission (one Commissioner not participating) was “not satisfied” that the public convenience and necessity would be served by establishing the proposed branch “and does not so find”. Thus, the Commission in effect ruled that Old Dominion had failed to carry the requisite burden of proof. The Commission’s opinion, containing an analysis and evaluation of the evidence, affirmed the conclusion that the evidence failed to satisfy the Commission that the application should be approved.

There is no question as to the financial stability of Old Dominion. With its main office in Winchester, branches in Winchester, Purcellville, Woodstock, Harrisonburg, Staunton, Waynesboro, and Christiansburg, and assets of $86.1 million as of December 31, 1976, it has had an impressive record of growth and increasing profitability. Old Dominion has demonstrated that it can assume the investment risk required to establish the proposed branch.

*588 At the hearing before the Commission two witnesses testified for Old Dominion and two for the protestants. Robert B. Dale, Jr., Old Dominion’s Executive Vice-President, testified that the proposed branch would be located in a well-developed and heavily traveled section of Roanoke County, north of the City of Roanoke. Because of the steady growth of the area he anticipated that the branch would attract enough customers from Botetourt County and the northeast portion of Roanoke County to ensure success. 2 He did not expect the branch, which would not offer any service not presently available in the area, to affect significantly the existing savings and loan associations.

Dr. Charles Meiburg, Director of the Tayloe Murphy Institute of the University of Virginia, testified as an expert witness for Old Dominion. Meiburg asserted that the growth rate of the Roanoke Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area (SMSA) was consistent with that of the state as a whole, that savings deposits in the area had shown steady growth, and that the prospects were good for continued growth, primarily in Roanoke and Botetourt Counties. He characterized the area as a “deficit area” in respect to availability of mortgage money, because approximately 25 percent of such money was being supplied by lenders outside the area. He found only two savings and loan association offices within the service area of the proposed branch, and both were operated by the same association. Because of the growth rate and changing residential patterns of the area, it was Meiburg’s opinion that the public convenience and necessity would be served by the proposed branch, and that the branch would not cause undue harm to existing lending institutions.

Old Dominion also relied upon the report made by the Commission’s staff economist recommending approval of the application. The economist reported that the proposed service area was heavily traveled and highly developed, that competition among local savings and loan associations was not acute, that mortgage interest rates in the Roanoke area were generally one-quarter of *589 one percent higher than those in other metropolitan areas, and that a new association “might” stimulate competition.

Dr. James R. Marchand, a consulting economist employed as an expert by the protestants, testified that the Roanoke metropolitan area had a lackluster record of demographic and economic growth in comparison with other SMSAs within the state. He asserted that, while there was strong competition for savings deposits between the savings and loan associations and commercial banks in the area, the savings and loan associations were less successful in competing with commercial banks in this area than in the other SMSAs. Thus, the Roanoke area savings and loan associations had the lowest proportion (33.2 percent) of total area savings deposits of any of the SMSAs and the Roanoke SMSA had the smallest population per financial institution office of any of the seven SMSAs in Virginia. Despite the large increase in financial institution offices between 1970 and 1975, however, the Roanoke SMSA ranked second in the state in savings deposits per office.

Marchand was of opinion that the primary service area 3 described by Meiburg as including all of northeast Roanoke County and three magisterial districts in Botetourt County 4 was too large. Marchand believed that geographical constraints would make it “costly time-wise” for many residents to get to the branch from distant parts of the proposed service area. He stated that the site of the proposed branch had formerly been occupied by a branch bank that had attracted only four hundred sixty-some thousand dollars in deposits during the period of approximately two years that it remained open. Marchand testified that in terms of population growth, household formation rates, growth in housing and housing values, and employment levels, the Roanoke SMSA was “among the bottom SMSAs” in the state. Noting that in the Roanoke SMSA there was a large number of financial institutions operating 81 commercial bank offices, 18 savings and loan association offices, and 11 mortgage company offices, it was his opinion, from the savings deposit and mortgaging point of view, that there was no *590 need for another savings and loan office in the north to northeast section of Roanoke County.

Raymond B. Firestone, President of the Roanoke Valley Board of Realtors and a lifelong resident of Botetourt County, was actively engaged in business in the primary service area of the proposed, new branch. He testified that the area was “more than adequately served” by existing lending institutions, and that mortgage money was readily available.

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Bluebook (online)
249 S.E.2d 167, 219 Va. 586, 1978 Va. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/old-dominion-savings-loan-assn-v-colony-savings-loan-assn-va-1978.