Plaintiff appeals from a judgment for defendants, entered upon the sustaining of a demurrer to the complaint without leave to amend. The complaint alleges, in substanсe, that on January 5, 1926, the defendant bank, a California corporation, issued a certain declaration of trust known as the. “Whittier Triangle Syndicate” involving a tract of rеal estate in Los Angeles County as the trust res; that the declaration of trust was issued for the purpose of selling assignments of beneficial interests to the public; that on May 14, 1929, the bаnk issued and sold to the plaintiff a 60/200ths interest in the net proceeds arising out of the trust; that at no time did the defendant bank have a permit from the commissioner of corpоrations to issue or sell the same; and that the assignment of the beneficial interest was therefore void to the plaintiff’s damage in the amount of the purchase priсe.
In the case of
Fox-Woodsum Lumber Co.
v.
Bank of America Nat. T. & S. Assn.,
L. A. No. 14613
(ante,
p. 14 [
In sustaining the demurrer without leave to amend, the trial court gave to this question a negative answer. With its conclusion we are in complete agreement. In light of
*34
our holding in the Fox-Woodsum Lumber Company case,
supra,
we are of the view that in so far as the 1923 amendment of subdivision 3e of section 2 оf the act attempted to place a burden on state banks, which because of other provisions of the act could not then be -imposed upon national banks, the amendment ran afoul of section 15 of article XII of the Constitution for as a direct result thereof national banks as an inducement to the organizers of trusts in which beneficial interests were to be sold were in a position, not available to state banks, to offer unrestricted freedom from the provisions of the Corporatе Securities Act, including the lack of any requirement for a permit. The only conceivable purpose of the 1929 amendment of the section, by which national banks werе brought within the act, was to destroy this obvious inequality and to place both national and state banks, in this particular, on an equal footing. Nor can it be said that this inequality was rеquired by a paramount authority, thus obviating any necessity for uniformity, for the necessary power to regulate national banks in the particular here involved existed at аll times material to this action. (12 U. S. C. A. 248(k) ;
First National Bank
v.
Missouri,
In addition to running counter to the cited provision of our state Constitution, we are of the opinion that the 1923 amendment does violencе to article XIV of the federal Constitution in that it denies to state banks equal protection of the laws. Briefly stated, this latter provision requires that, subject to reasonable classification based upon differences fairly related to the purpose of the legislation, all persons similarly situated must be treated equally by a state. Hоwever, as stated, any such classification must be based upon reasonable differences between the included and excluded classes which have a rationаl connection with the subject-matter of the particular statute in question.
(Connolly
v.
Union S. Pipe Co.,
In other words, the fact that some differencеs exist between the included and excluded classes does not warrant different legislative treatment in respect of matters upon which no distinction between them cаn be found. This is illustrated by the decisions in
Muller
v.
Oregon,
Notwithstanding the existence of certain differences between domestic and foreign corporations, it was held in
Southern Ry. Co.
v.
Greene,
The principle is also recognized in
Smith
v.
Cahoon,
This latter case is closely analogous to the present case in that the manifest purpose of requiring a permit from the commissioner of corporations is to afford the public some protection against the sale of illegal or unsound securities. However, in line with the holding in the case just cited, *36 we are of the view that any differences that may otherwise exist between state and national banks have no rational connection with or bearing on this fundamental purpose. Therefore, while certain differences between these two types of banks may constitutionally form the basis of some legislative classificatiоn between them such differences will not serve to justify the attempted discrimination here involved. State and national banks act in precisely the same manner and in the sаme capacity when issuing beneficial trust certificates. The necessity of protecting the public in the purchase of trust certificates or securities issued by them is just as great when a national bank is trustee as when a state bank is so acting. Any differences that exist between the two types of banks have no connection whatever with thеir relative fitness to sell and issue certificates or securities. Such differences cannot, therefore, be made the basis of a constitutional classification in respect of matters which they do not touch or affect.
Generally stated, the rule is that when discrimination or uneonstitutionality results from a statutory amendment, as is the casе here, it is the amendment which is invalid and not the original portions of the statute.
(Frost
v.
Corporation Commission,
Judgment affirmed.
Curtis, J., Shenk, J., Seawell, J., and Thompson, J., concurred.
