delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1928 and 1929 appellant purchased prepaid shares of the appellee, a New Jersey building and loan association, paying the par value of $200 per share. At that
On April 22, 1932, these statutes were amended in four respects: (1) “total receipts” of an association, one-half of which were required to be used for the payment of withdrawals and which had not been previously defined, were defined as income on authorized investments, dues on shares of the association which were pledged with it to secure loans, and repayments from loans; (2) if in any one month the funds required to be payable for withdrawals were insufficient to pay all requested withdrawals, withdrawing members were to receive $500 each in the order of priority until the fund for withdrawals was exhausted; (3) no withdrawals were to be paid if the funds available for payment of matured shares were insufficient to pay all matured shares, the payment of which had been requested within thirty days after maturity; (4) so long as the funds of an association were applied as required by the amendment, no member who had filed his withdrawal notice should have a right to sue for the withdrawal value of his shares. 2
Minor amendments, not pertinent here, were added in 1936 and in 1937 the statutes, as they stood in 1936 with some immaterial changes, were carried into a general revision of New Jersey’s statute law.
On August 17, 1932, after the passage of the 1932 amendment, appellant filed a written notice of withdrawal with respondent. In 1939, he brought this suit against respondent for the withdrawal value of his shares, claiming that, in so far as any of the amendments referred to altered the statutes in existence at the time of purchase of the shares, the amendments were unconstitutional violations of the contracts clause of Article I and the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The allegations show that the Association was solvent at the time of notice of withdrawal and has remained solvent. The trial court dismissed appellant’s complaint. The Court of Errors and Appeals affirmed. 123 N. J. L. 356;
The ruling was based squarely on the constitutionality of the Act of 1932. The later acts were not referred to in the opinion except by pointing out that the Act of 1932 would be found in the 1937 revision. The case is here on appeal under § 237 (a) of the Judical Code. As this section gives a review to this Court only of state statutes held' valid by the highest court of a State against an attack for repugnancy to the Constitution of the United States, we
The New Jersey statutes concerning the regulation of building and loan associations reach back many years prior to the purchase of these shares. Beginning in 1903 general regulatory acts were passed at intervals with sections directed at the mode of withdrawal. 5 The form of these statutes and the judicial notice by the Court of Errors and Appeals in the Bucsi case of the importance to the State of New Jersey of building and loan associations makes clear that in dealing in 1932 with the problem of withdrawals the legislature was faced with the threat of wrecked associations and the consequent further depression of real estate values throughout its area. While the Act of 1932 now under review was not emergency legislation, the dangers of unrestricted withdrawals then became apparent. It was passed in the public interest to protect the activities of the associations for the economic welfare of the State. It is also plain that the 1932 act was one of a long series regulating the many integrated phases of the building and loan business such as formation, membership, powers, investments, reports, liquidations, foreign associations and examinations. We are dealing here with financial institutions of major importance to the credit system of the State. 6
In
Home Building & Loan Association
v. Blaisdell
10
this Court considered the authority retained by the State over contracts “to safeguard the vital interests of its people.” The rule that all contracts are made subject to this paramount authority was there reiterated. Such authority is not limited to health, morals and safety.
11
The cases cited in the preceding paragraph make repeated reference to the emergency existing at the time of the enactment of the questioned statutes. Many of the enactments were temporary in character. We are here considering a permanent piece of legislation. So far as the contract clause is concerned, is this significant? We think not. “Emergency does not create [constitutional] power, emergency may furnish the occasion for the exercise of power.”
15
We think of emergencies as suddenly arising and quickly passing. The emergency of the Depression may have caused the 1932 legislation, but the weakness in the financial system brought to light by that emergency remains. If the - legislature could enact the legislation as to withdrawals to protect the associations in that emergency, we see no reason why the new status should not continue. When the 1932 act was passed commercial and savings banks, insurance companies and building and loan associations were suffering heavy withdrawals. The liquid portion of their assets were being rapidly drained off by their customers, leaving the long term investments and depreciated assets as an inadequate source for pay
This power of the State to protect its citizens by statutory enactments affecting contract rights, without a violation of the contract clause of the Constitution, is analogous to the power often reserved to amend charters. Under this reserved power, it is held that the relations between a stockholder or certificate holder and the corporation may be varied without impairing the contract existing between the corporation and its stockholder or member. 17 The contract rights considered in Coombes v. Getz 18 arose from a contract between a third party and the corporation. And the power reserved against the corporation and its members was deemed to be ineffective against a stranger to the reservation.
Appellant relies upon
Treigle
v.
Acme Homestead
Association
19
as a determinative precedent in support of his argument that the withdrawal arrangements between the association and appellant were contractual and secure from impairment by the statutory exercise of the paramount police power of the State. In that case statutory changes as to the right of withdrawal, similar to these involved here, had been made after the purchase of the shares. The enactment in the
Treigle
case occurred after notice of
It is to be noted that this Court was careful to point out in the Treigle case 20 that where the police power is exercised “for an end which is in fact public” contracts must yield to the accomplishment of that end. 21
Certainly the protection of building and loan associations against the catastrophe of excessive withdrawal is, today, within legislative power.
Separate consideration of the objection to the legislation under the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment seems wholly unnecessary.
Affirmed.
Notes
Laws of N. J., 1925, c. 65, § 52.
Laws of N. J., 1932, c. 102.
Cf.
Bucsi v. Longworth B. & L. Assn.,
119 N. J. L. 120;
Cf. Carpenter v. Wabash Ry. Co., ante, p. 23.
Bucsi
v.
Longworth B. & L. Assn.,
119 N. J. L. 120, 124;
Hopkins Federal Savings Assn.
v.
Cleary,
Dillingham
v.
McLaughlin,
Stockholders
v.
Sterling,
Rast
v.
Van Deman & Lewis,
Stone
v.
Mississippi,
Sproles v. Binford,
Union Dry Goods Co.
v.
Georgia P. S. Corp.,
Marcus Brown Co.
v.
Feldman,
Home Bldg. & L. Assn. v. Blaisdell, supra. 426.
Cf.
W. B. Worthen Co.
v.
Thomas,
Wright
v.
Minnesota Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
Id., 197.
Cf.
Indiana ex rel. Anderson
v.
Brand,
