State Ex Rel. Crabbe v. Massillon Savings & Loan Co.

143 N.E. 894, 110 Ohio St. 320, 110 Ohio St. (N.S.) 320, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 340, 1924 Ohio LEXIS 345
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1924
Docket18314
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 143 N.E. 894 (State Ex Rel. Crabbe v. Massillon Savings & Loan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Crabbe v. Massillon Savings & Loan Co., 143 N.E. 894, 110 Ohio St. 320, 110 Ohio St. (N.S.) 320, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 340, 1924 Ohio LEXIS 345 (Ohio 1924).

Opinion

Jones, J.

The defendant building and loan association was incorporated March 2, 1923. Its contract for the sale of stock and memberships was made with the Imperial Finance Company on March 31, 1923. The act relied on by the Attorney General as controlling the activities of building and loan companies generally, including the right to enter into the contract in question, was filed with the secretary of state on April 3, 1923, and became an effective law under our Constitution on July 3, 1923. We attach no importance to the amended agreement of June 8, 1923, since *323 it only shortens the time which the finance company had, under the original agreement, to sell the stock memberships.

In defense of its right to make such sales under a contract entered into before the effective date of the law thereafter passed, the building and loan company contends (1) that the act, which became effective July 3, 1923, did not apply to an existing building and loan company which had entered into a contract prior thereto, and (2) that such act, if so construed as to apply to such contract, would be retroactive and therefore in violation of Section 28, Art. II, of the state Constitution, and Section 10, Art. I, of the federal Constitution.

The act of 1923 is found in 110 Ohio Laws, at page 62, and amends and supplements prior provisions of the Ohio law relating to building and loan companies. The title of the act reads: “For the better regulation, management and inspection of building and loan associations,” etc. Section 9645, as thus amended, provides that: “No commission or fee shall be paid to any person, association or corporation for selling such stock.” And Section 9649 provides that “no initiation or membership fee shall be charged” for stock issued to members. However, the argument is now being urged that nowhere in the amended act are terms employed showing an intent upon the part of the Legislature to make it applicable to associations which entered into a contract for the sale of its stock and memberships prior to the date of its passage and prior to the date when it became an effective law; that, if there should be any doubt about it, the court should not so con *324 strue the amended act as to make it retroactive and therefore unconstitutional. In the amended act there appears to be no exception of existing corporations, while its terms are sufficiently comprehensive to embrace all building and loan associations, whether formed before or after the passage of the act. The title of the act covers all associations, while the terms of Sections 9645 and 9649 seem to apply generally to any association, whether existing when the amended act became effective or formed thereafter. The fact that some 17 original sections of the building and loan code, and other sections thereof inconsistent with the provisions of the amended act, are expressly repealed by the latter, furnishes indubitable proof that all such associations were covered by the later act. It is our opinion that the amended act of 1923 was intended to and does apply to building and loan associations then existing, and to the future activities of such associations, including their power to sell stock or memberships therein.

Long before this association was organized, Section 2, Art. XIII, of the Ohio Constitution, provided: “Corporations may be formed under general laws; but all such laws may, from time to time, be altered or repealed.” When the defendant- obtained its charter, it obtained it subject to the conditions provided in the quoted section of our Constitution. However, we are confronted with the argument that this was an existing contract which the Legislature of Ohio had no right to impair by retroactive law under the provisions of Section 28, Art. II of the state Constitution, which provides: “The general assembly shall have no *325 power to pass retroactive laws, or laws impairing the obligation of contracts;” and that the amended act likewise violates Section 10, Art. I, of the federal Constitution, which provides that no state shall pass a law impairing the obligation of contracts. The salient features embodied in the contract between the building and loan company and the Imperial Finance Company are that the latter is given the exclusive right to sell the shares and memberships of the former, and is to receive the sum of $4 for each membership sold. The agreement recited that the finance company was to sell 20,000 shares and 20,000 memberships; that no stock was to be sold except accompanied by the sale of a membership. Independent of the Ohio constitutional provision giving the right to the Legislature to alter or repeal corporate law from time to time, undoubtedly the state had the right to supervise and control, in the exercise of its police power, the functions and activities of these corporations created by it. That the state recognized that such powers were necessary is shown by the adoption of what may be denominated as a building and loan code. The various sections of the building and loan act disclose that the franchises obtained by these associations remain under the direct control of the state and its agents; that the inspection and examination of their various activities, and a regulatory power over issuing stock, receiving deposits, borrowing money, and investing funds, are lodged in the state. As is well known, those who become members of such associations by subscribing to stock therein comprise a large number of people, many of whom *326 are represented by small savings which are often utilized for the purchase or erection of homes. And it was for the purpose of correcting and controlling the probable abuse of power, in respect thereto, that the Legislature entered into the field of regulation.

The contract in question not only gave the exclusive right to the finance company to dispose of 20,'000 shares of the association’s capital stock, but apparently required the finance company to sell 20,000 memberships in connection therewith. The advantage to the finance company and disadvantage to the building and loan company that might accrue are apparent. Naturally the finance company would seek, under its contract, to sell to various subscribers but a single share, while under the constitution and by-laws of the association it would seem that a subscriber could obtain any number of shares for a membership fee of $5. These facts are referred to only for the purpose of confirming the view that these building and loan associations are subject to the exercise of the legislative police power. Although the fact does not appear in the petition, were we to give consideration to the annual report of this association, filed with the department a short time before this suit was brought, this method of contracting for the sale of stock and memberships might result in the serious impairment of its financial standing.

“By virtue of its police power, the state may regulate building and loan associations. * * * In the exercise of this power, various statutes have been passed relating, among other things, to the incorporation of such societies, to their pow *327 ers,” etc. 9 Corpus Juris, 923. Iu this case the state seeks to oust the buildiug and loan company from its claimed right or franchise to sell its stock and memberships in contravention of the statute, after July 3, 1923.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 N.E. 894, 110 Ohio St. 320, 110 Ohio St. (N.S.) 320, 2 Ohio Law. Abs. 340, 1924 Ohio LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-crabbe-v-massillon-savings-loan-co-ohio-1924.