The information herein is filed by the attorney-general on his own relation, in the name of the state, under section 9 of the attorney-general act (1 S. & C. 89).
It is not charged in terms that the defendant has done or committed acts which amount to a surrender or forfeiture of its corporate rights, privileges, and franchises; nor is a judgment of ouster from all its corporate lights, privileges, and franchises expressly demanded. The general charge is, that'the defendant has in the past, and does now, unlawfully assume and usurp certain franchises and privileges *95not conferred upon it by law, and has and does exceed the powers conferred upon it by law.
Under this general charge there are several specifications <of matters particularly complained of, and separate pleas have been filed to each specification. By these our in-, •quiries will be guided, and, they will be considered and disposed of in their order.
The first specification is that the corporation (defendant) •unlawfully allows certain of its members to hold in their ■own right, respectively, more than twenty shares of its •stock. The plea to this specification is (1), a denial of the fact; and (2) a disclaimer of the right to allow to its memtbers the privilege named.
The inhibition in this respect is found in the second proviso of the 2d section of the act under which the defendant is incorporated (S. & S. 194, 195), and is as follows : “ No person shall hold more than twenty shares in any such association in his own right.” This provision is nowhere expressly or impliedly qualified in this or any other act relating to the subject. j
This issue of fact is found for the state upon the testimony of the secretary of the association, who says from April, 1872, to March, 1875, Erank McWhinney was the •owner in his own right of twenty-four shares of stock that •stood in his own name on the books of the association. It appears that a portion of this stock was obtained ~by McWhinney in connection with the purchase of certain real estate from another member of the association, who had taken a loan on the stock, and secured it by mortgage on the premises purchased, and that the stock was transferred to him by the mortgagor in performance •of a part of the contract of purchase. It is assumed in .argument that the fact of acquiring the additional stock in connection with the purchase of real estate, rendered the stock transaction unobjectionable, or at least excusable. This is a mistake. The corporation had nothing to do -with the real estate contract between its members, and .could not control it. It could, however, have controlled the *96transfer of stock upon its books, and should have refused to allow any member to acquire and hold in his own right stock in excess of the number of shares limited by law.
It also further appears from the testimony of the secretary that the “ I. O. O. Eellows,” which means, as we understand it, a lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, is the owner of thirty shares of stock in its own right, upon which it has taken a loan for the full sum of $6,000, less the premium paid. This, as to the excess over-twenty shares, is clearly illegal and unauthorized.
This issue of fact being found for the state, and it further appearing that in the latter instance the defendant is still offending, its disclaimer in this respect will not be heeded.
The second specification charges that the corporation has used and does now unlawfully use its moneys and funds (1) in buying orders and bonds and in discounting notes, mortgage securities, and commercial paper; (2) in doing a general banking business with its funds; and (3) that it had been and is now loaning its funds to persons other than its members and depositors, and discounting notes, orders, and securities for such other persons.
The plea to this specification is (1) a denial that it has exercised banking privileges ; (2) a disclaimer of the right to do so ; and (3) “ that the loans made by it and the bonds, etc., purchased have been merely temporary investments of surplus money ; and that it has long since ceased to make any such loans, purchases, or discounts, or any such investments.”
This plea does not deny that the defendant had been unlawfully using its funds as charged in this specification, except the allegations as to its having been doing a general banking business ; and it is evasive in this, that, while it says that it has “ long since ceased to make any such loans, purchases, or discounts,” it does not disclaim the right and authority to do so. The only issue, therefore, that is made on this specification, is upon the charge of doing a general banking business." Upon the testimony this issue is found for the defendant.
*97It is shown that the great bulk of its money has been used in making loans to members upon their stock in the manner contemplated by the law-under which the association is organized; and the unauthorized acts mentioned belovV are not of such a character as to render it obnoxious-to the charge of doing a general banking business.
The matters charged as unlawful, in the first and third subdivisions of this specification, may be considered and disposed of together. The testimony shows that the corporation, in the past, has been loaning its money to members, depositors, and persons other than members or depositors, upon their promissory notes, at the uniform rate of twelve percent, interest per annum; and also in buying and discounting orders, bonds, and promissory notes, at the same-usurious rates of interest, from members and depositors, and persons other than members or depositors; and also-that it still is so dealing with its members and depositors;but not with persons other than members or depositors.
The first section of the law (S. & S. 194) declares the purpose of associations incorporated under it to be the-“raising of money to be loaned among the members, and depositors of such corporation, for use in buying lots or houses, or in building or repairing houses, or other purposes.” The declared purposes here are plain and unmistakable; and this association, by the provisions of its constitution and1 by-laws, has, upon paper, kept itself strictly within the-purposes declared, without attempting to bring into action any óf the latent powers that may repose in the phrase,, “ or other purposes,” with which the enumeration closes.
There is no countenance to be given to the idea that associations incorporated under the act above referred to can be used by capitalists as instrumentalities for obtaining more than the legal rate of interest on their money by depositing it with the association, and having it used in modes foreign to the declared purposes of their organization.
The first proviso of the second section of the act is not *98an authority to take interest in excess of the legal rate, opon loans of money to members or depositors, where there is no competition for precedence in the loans — of which more will be said in considering the fourth specification. Nor is it an authority to purchase or discount commercial paper at usurious rates of interest; but only this — that the dues, fines, and fremiums paid by members and depositors upon loans taken on their stock, in addition to the legal rate of interest on such loans, shall not make the loans so taken usurious. It is by these means only that the corporation can demand or receive anything in addition to the legal rate of intei’est upon its loans. Finding, as we do, that the matters charged in this specification, and not denied or disclaimed by the plea, are unauthorized, judgment for the state must follow.
The questions disposed of under the second specification also determine, in the same way, those sought to be raised by the third specification.
The gist of the charge in the fourth specification is that the corporation refuses and declines to loan its funds to the members thereof, for the purpose of building homesteads, etc., as provided by law, to their great damage.
The plea to this specification (1) denies-the charge, and (2) “ says that it is now, and always has been, ready to loan to its members, in accordance with the laws of the land, and the rules and regulations adopted for its government by the members of said association.”
The secretary of the association, in answers to questions touching this issue, says : “ On the twelfth of January, 1875, the board fixed the premium (on loans) at not less than twenty dollars per share. The order still stands' on the minutes, not repealed.” . . . “ Frank McWhinney (who is shown to have been a member at the time) publicly bid off some stock, there being no competition, and the board afterward refused to let him have the loan on his bid, because it was a premium less than twenty dollars per -share, to which he consented.”
From this testimony, the exact character of the contro*99versy between the state and the corporation, arising under this specification, very plainly appears. The corporation refuses to let its members have loans upon their stock, unless the premium bid for the loan is at least twenty dollars per share.
V In justification of this, the corporation, by its plea, appeals to the law and its constitution and by-laws.
The declared purposes of the law in creating these associations has been already shown, and need not be repeated. The enumeration of their powers is contained in the second section of the act (S. & S. 194), and is as follows: “ Such corporation shall be authorized and empowered to levy, assess, and collect from its members such sums of money, by rates of stated dues, fines, interest on loans advanced, and premiums bid by members or depositors for the right of precedence in taking .loans, as the corporation, by its by-laws, shall adopt.”
■ All the means by which the corporation is authorized to raise revenue are here indicated; but our inquiry has reference only to the “ premium ” mentioned.
The right of members and depositors to contend for precedence in taking loans, aud to have such right of precedence, as between themselves, determined by the amount of premium bid, is inferentially, but clearly, recognized; the mode of exercising the right is to be prescribed by the constitution and by-laws (which here mean the same thing) of the corporation; which has been done by article XI of the constitution of this association, which reads as follows :
“Sec. 1. Each share of stock shall entitle the holder to one loan notexceeding two hundred dollars, upon approved security, subject to the regulations of the board of directors.
“ Sec. 2. "Whenever there is money on hand to be loaned, the preference for one loan shall be sold to the member ■who offers to pay the most for it, or the highest premium for such preference; the purchaser may then elect to take as .many more loans on the same terms as he has shares of *100stock in the association, or until all the money then on-hand is loaned.”
These provisions seem to be in harmony with the spirit and declared purposes of the law.
The most valuable right that a member acquires by virtue of his membership is that of obtaining a loan of money with which to procure a home, with the privilege of repaying the same in weekly installments. This right, so distinctly given by the statute, and again asserted in first section above quoted, which is the work of all the members of the association, can not be destroyed or abridged by the board of directors, under the power of regulation given by the latter clause of the section. This power has reference' to the prescribing of reasonable rules as to the time, manner, and place of exercising the right of demanding loans, and also to the prescribing of the kind of security that will be required, aud the formalities to be observed in executing and tendering it for approval.
That this power of regulation does not authorize the board of directors to regulate the amount of premium to-be paid by a member for a loan, or to refuse loans to members otherwise entitled to them, except upon the payment of minimum premiums, fixed by the directors, is made clear by the provisions of the second section of article 11 above quoted. This section imperatively provides that money on hand to be loaned shall be sold to the member (or depositor) who will pay the highest premium for the preference in taking the loan. This is the only mode-known to the law by which the premium upon loans can be fixed or determined. It is a matter of voluntary action on the part of members and depositors in bidding for the-precedence. Their own discretion determines the amount of premium they will pay for the precedence. When the competition is great the premiums bid may be above what prudence would dictate,but of this the bidder is the sole judge.. When there is little or no competition, and a member bids a merely nominal premium for the precedence, and there is-no higher bid by any other member or depositor, he is en~ *101titled to the loan at such nominal premium, and the board of directors can not refuse it if sufficient security is properly tendered.
The action of the corporation through its board of directors in fixing the premium upon loans at not less than twenty dollars per share, and refusing to grant loans unless the premium bid was equal to or in excess of this sum, was and is arbitrary and unauthorized ; and it appearing that the corporation is still offending in this respect, the judgment must be for the state.
There is a good deal of testimony before us in the form ■of depositions, of which no notice can be taken, as it relates to matters other than those charged in the information, to which charges our inquiries are limited. 23 Ohio St. 445.
Judgment is entered on the several findings as follows:
1. That the defendant be ousted from the assumed right of allowing any member of the association from holding more than twenty shares of its stock in his own right.
2. That the defendant'be ousted from the assumed right of using its funds in making loans to members or depositors upon their promissory notes, at rates greater than the legal rate of interest, in addition to the premium bid for the right of precedence, or in purchasing or discounting notes from such members or depositors at usurious rates of interest; and also from using its funds in loaning the same to or in purchasing and discounting notes from persons ■other than its members or depositors upon any terms.
"3. That the defendant be ousted from the assumed right •of fixing a minimum premium upon loans, and refusing to grant loans to members or depositors unless the premium bid equals or exceeds the amount thus fixed.
Judgment accordingly.