Johnston v. Grosvenor

McAlistee, J.

Complainant, on July 13, 1895, filed this hill to enjoin the sale of certain real estate in the city of Memphis, which had been conveyed by her to Chas. N. Grosvenor, trustee, by trust deed,, to secure a certain loan of money due the Clerk’s Building Association of Memphis. The theory of the bill is that upon a fair settlement with said building association, she is not indebted to it in any amount. Complainant further charges that, about 1886 said association ceased to do a building and loan business, for which it was organized, and since that time has virtually been in liquidation : that it had few, if any, meetings of its stockholders or directors, and had no organized board of directors or official place of business, and had long since ceased to be a going ‘ concern. It was further charged that when complainant subscribed for her stock she was assured it would reach a par value, probably in eight, and certainly in ten, years; that her two notes aggregated $1,800, but that she had received thereon less than $900; that she had paid into said association double the, amount she had received, and yet it was claimed by said association she still owed it $1,304, with interest, since October, 1893.

Complainant further alleges that said association *356is only entitled to collect the actual amount received by her, with interest, less whatever complainant may have paid into its treasury on account of dues, interest, or otherwise. Complainant prayed that said association be required to answer fully and give the amount of its capital stock in 1884 and now; that it report its assets and liabilities; that it state its present officers, when it had its last meeting of stockholders, and who 'was present at such meeting; that it show its income and expenses, its withdrawing stockholders and the amount paid each, and that her notes be brought into Court and canceled.

The defendants answered the bill admitting that complainant was owner of nine shares of the capital stock of the par value of $1,800, but averring that she had been paid thereon the sum of $1,-340, the premium on said two loans being $460. The answer admits that at the time Mrs. Johnson ceased paying, in November, 1890, all of the non-borrowing members liad withdrawn, or had given notice of withdrawal, excepting three, and all borrowing members had done likewise save four.

It is admitted that the association has not made a loan since 1886, but it is averred that it has, nevertheless, continued to use its corporate franchises, and has been receiving the monthly payments of' dues and other debts. Respondent denies that Mrs. Johnston was assured that her stock would reach par in eight or ten years. It denies *357that it has no legally organized hoard of directors, or that it has long since ceased to he a going concern. Respondent denies all the material allegations of the bill.

Proof was taken, and upon the hearing the Chancellor decreed in favor of the defendant association, and ordered a reference to the Clerk to ascertain and report amount due on the principles stated in Hargo v. Rogers, 8 Pickle, 35. The Clerk reported the sum of $1,280 due from complainant, excluding all payments made hy her on the stock. Accordingly the report was confirmed, the injunction dissolved, and the trustee ordered to sell the property for the satisfaction of said decree.

Complainant appealed and has assigned errors.

The first assignment is that the Chancellor erred in holding that this case was controlled hy the principles announced in Hargo v. Rogers, and that, said decree was clearly erroneous in not giving complainant credit by, dues and payments on stock.

The second assignment is that the association, having held no meetings, made no loans, ceased to do business and abandoned its organization since 1886, it was error in the Chancellor to hold complainant liable for more than she actually received from said association, and in refusing to give her credit by all sums paid, whether , as dues or interest, or otherwise.

The third assignment is that the Chancellor was *358in. error in decreeing a foreclosure of the first deed of trust, because the same was barred by the statute of ten years.

The fourth assignment is that the Court erred in refusing to permit complainants to file an amended and supplemental bill, etc.

The facts necessary to be stated are the following: In 1884- complainant subscribed for seven ■shares of the stock of said association, of the nominal value of $200 per share, making $1,400. In 1885 she subscribed for two additional shares, making $400. Under the by-laws of the company, she was required to pay for this stock at the rate of one dollar per share, per month, making nine dollars per month on the whole stock. In April, 1884, complainant, by competitive bidding, borrowed of said association, on seven shares of her stock, the sum of $1,400 (less the premium of $350), for which she executed a deed of trust on two store houses on Poplar street, in Memphis, to Chas. N. Grosvenor, trustee.

Complainant was expected to continue the monthly payments of dues, and 6 per cent, interest, upon the $1,400, until such payments, augmented by the interest of the borrower in the profits to be earned by the association, should reach the valuation of $200 per share. It appears that Mrs. Johnston’s- subscription was to a series issued eight months prior to that time, and it became necessary for her to pay the arrearages on that stock, *359.amounting to $56. This amount, together with the •insurance, and other items of expense, were deducted from her loan. The account stood as follows: Amount to be loaned, $1,400; premium on ‘7 shares, at $50 per share, $350; net result to Mrs. Johnston, $1,050. The statement given her by the Secretary, and pasted in her pass boot, shows that this money was paid out to and for .her, as follows:

Memphis, Tewh., April 29, 1884.

■Seven shares of stock, September to May, ’87.$ 56 00

■■Cost of abstract. 53 00

'One month’s interest. 7 00

Recording trust deed. 3 00

Paid Handworker for investigating taxes. . 5 00

Raid Trezevant .■ 21 00

'Cash handed you this day. 500 00

$ 645T0

Amount your credit loan.$1,050 00

Amount paid you. 645 00

Amount still due you.$ 405 00

Mrs. Johnston admits that she received the $500, and we find that the other .items stated in her pass book, and which were paid out for her, were proper charges.

The sum of $405 was retained by the Secretary, as indemnity, against delinquent taxes on this property, which Mrs. Johnston agreed to pay. It further appears that in March, 1885, Mrs. *360Johnston subscribed for two additional shares, and borrowed upon them, at a premium of $55 per share, netting' her- the snm of $290, which she received in cash. Complainant makes no complaint in her bill about the second loan. She executed her note for $400 — the nominal value of the two shares of stock, and also a second mortgage to Grosvenor, trustee, on the Poplar street property. It further appears that the taxes on the property, for which the $405 was retained, were not paid by Mrs. Johnston,, and that current taxes were being neglected. Complainant was in possession of the property and receiving the rents until 1895, when a receiver was appointed.

The tax abstract on file shows an indebtedness of about $800 for taxes, interest and penalties.

The association, through its secretary, rendered the following statement, showing how said $405 had been disbursed, to wit:

Paid W. A. Collier, complt’s attorney.$131 85

Dues and interest. 77 00

S. & C. taxes, 1884. 22 10

T. D. taxes, 1885. 47 00

People’s Insurance Go. 27 25

W. L. Parker. 23 20

Dues and interest. 76 00

$405 00

The only items of this account challenged by Mrs. Johnston were those of seventy and seventy-*361six dollars, respectively relating to dues and interest. She claimed she had paid these items herself, and her contention was sustained by the Master, and she was allowed this credit.

It appears that after these two loans had been running, between five and ' six years Mrs. Johnston, ceased to make any further payments, and at the date of the filing of the bill it was claimed she owed $1,300. Her last payment was made in Uo-vember, 1890.

It appears the company owes no debt, excepting a balance of $2,900, due to thirteen nonbor-rowing shareholders, who have been paying their monthly contributions, looking to the expected maturity of their shares for reimbursement.

It is admitted that the company’s resources have been exhausted, and this debt against Mrs. Johnston is its only asset. The company owes no money to outside parties, and is not insolvent in that sense, hut it is admitted this is immaterial for the purpose of ascertaining the mode of settlement.

It is claimed by counsel for Mrs. Johnston that she has paid back more money than she received.

She received on first loan.$3,050 00

She received on second loan. 290 00

Total.$1,340 00

It is shown by her pass book that she paid back, on

*362Pirst loan.$ 987 00

Slie paid back on second loan. 204 00

Total.$1,191 00

But $622 of these payments were made on stock. The rule laid down in Hargo v. Rogers, 8 Pickle, 35, excludes any credit on mortgage debt of payments made as dues on stock. But such payments stand to credit of borrower on books until time for final adjustment, when all stockholders, borrowers and nonborrowing, will be paid pro rata from the fund for ultimate distribution.

It is next insisted that the deed of trust sought to be foreclosed is barred by the statute of ten years. The deed of trust was executed in 1884-, and no foreclosure was sought until 1895. McElwee v. McElwee, 13 Pickle, 649; Romells v. Jacobs, 16 Pickle, 397. A conclusive answer to this position is. that no definite time is fixed iu this deed of trust for the maturity of the debt. It is true the note secured by the trust deed is dated in 1884, and is payable one day after date, but under the scheme of building and loan associations it was not expected that the note would be paid, or the debt mature at once. The agreement of the mortgagor is to make his monthly payments until the stock matures, and he undertakes to secure the payment of a series of small sums during an indefinite period.

“Since a building association loan is intended *363not to be repaid, but to be extinguished by the maturity of the borower’s stock, it does not fall due until that event occurs, unless there is a default in the payment of dues, interest, or other charges, or the association becomes insolvent, , or is dissolved, thus creating a breach of the contract, and consequently the mortgage given to secure the loan cannot be foreclosed except upon the happening of one of these events, for if the stock matures without default the loan and mortgage are ipso facto extinguished, and there can be no foreclosure,” etc. Am. & Eng. Decisions in Equity, Vol. 5, page 264, note 10.

It is not pretended in this case there was any default in the payment of dues and interest by the mortgagor until .November, 1890, nor is it shown that the association became insolvent prior to 1888, nor that the borrower’s stock had matured. The attempted foreclosure in pais of this mortgage was made in 1895.

It is next insisted that this association had become insolvent in 1886, and had abandoned its corporate functions and purposes. The argument is then made that complainant was thereby released from any further liability as a member, either for payment of dues, or interest, or loan. The law on the subject, is “that the insolvency of a building association, wdiich is that condition of its affairs in wdiich. it is unable to pay back to its members the amounts paid in by them, respect*364ively, dollar for dollar, puts an end at once to its operations, and as it thus prevents the stock from maturing and extinguishing the loans, according to the contracts between the association and its borrowing members, constitutes a breach of those contracts, and on the one hand excuses the borrowers from all further liability for the payment of dues and fines, and on the other renders the mortgages given to secure the loans due and enforceable at once, without regard to their terms, even though payable in installments, and the receiver can proceed to collect them, etc. 5th Am. and Eng. Decisions in Equity, page 278, note 20, citing many authorities.

Under the title, “Effect of Dissolution, or its Equivalent upon Membership Duties and Borrowers’ Obligations,” at Article 523, Mr. Endlich says:

“A dissolution, strictly speaking, of the association, of course, at once putting an end to all its corporate business, .terminates the liability of members to continue the prescribed regular stock payments. Where that dissolution occurs in a contemplated course of events, no serious question can arise as to its effect upon the rights or duties of any class of members, but where it occurs prematurely the case is different. Eor the purpose of discussion of the questions thus arising, no distinction need be made between the dissolution properly and technically so called, and one practically resulting from the agreement of members or the insolvency *365of the association. In every case the effect npon the members is to stop at once any liability for further regular payments.
liThe dissolution of the building association necessarily puts an end, not only to- its capacity to receive, from time to time, his small payments, but also to the possibility of their being turned to account, for his benefit, by means of the system of investment and reinvestment peculiar to the building association scheme. The main feature ■which has made his undertaking bearable, and in reliance upon -which he has been induced to assume its obligations, is thus taken away, and it follows as an inevitable consequence that he cannot be held to its precise terms. ITis duty to make regular stock payments, a ' duty incident to membership only, ceases, for the. stock itself is destroyed, there being no longer a corporation as to whose stock it can figure, and the membership •dies with the corporation. So far as the mortgage was given to insure the performance of this membership duty, the obligation is abrogated by the destruction of the stock and the society. The imposition of fines, a species of liquidated damages, due the society, under its system of mutuality for the neglect of a membership duty, must, of necessity, fall away when the membership is gone, when there is none who can justly claim the ■damages, and when their exaction would be nothing more nor less than the enforcement of penal*366ties not countenanced by the law. The agreement to pay a premium for the loan, justified upon the basis o.f strict mutuality, and bearable by reason .of the length of time allowed for its liquidation, and, by the fact that it would, according to the intent of the contract when entered into, be in part made up by profits upon the stock payment and interest discharged by the borrower during the projected continuance of the association, as well as by similar payments made by other borrowers during the like period and the gains and accumulations of the entire corporate business to the day of its contemplated termination, must, when that mutuality is taken away, and all the other elements embraced in the terms of its assumption removed, fail for want of a proper consideration, at least it fails in part.
“The insolvency of the company, as before observed, puts an end to its operations as a building association. To a certain extent, it also- ends the contract between it and its members, respectively, and nothing remains but to wind it up in such a manner as to do equity to creditors and between the members themselves.
“The liability to pay monthly dues or fines or interest, on the amount advanced cannot extend beyond the existence of the association. ... It would be most inequitable to oblige one party or those holding by assignment his interest, to continue to make the payments required of him by the con*367tract, while the other party had incapacitated itself from carrying out the provisions made in the same contract for ascertaining the extent of the mutual obligations of the parties and for securing the performance thereof on its part.”

In Am. and Eng. Enc. Law, 2d Ed. Vol. 4, page 1081, it is said, viz.: “All authorities agree that on the premature' abandonment of the enterprise, from .whatever cause, the original contract between the association and the borrower cannot be carried out, and that neither party is therefore bound to a literal fulfillment.”

What, then, is the application of these principles in the present case? Counsel for the association states that it makes no claim of solvency, but denies that its organization has been abandoned. The record discloses that the association was incorporated in 1875, and down to 1884 issued fourteen different series "of stock. It matured many of them and paid out thousands of dollars to stockholders. It had done an active business down to' 1886, when it made its last loan.

The income of the association from dues and interest payments began to decline from September, 1885. At that date the secretary claims there were 1,133 contributing shares outstanding, but Readmits the income from dues was only. $751 in September, 1888, the income from said source was reduced to $545, in 1889 to $264, in 1890, when *368complainaint ceased paying, the income was $150, In 1888 all the officers and directors of the association had either withdrawn or given thirty days’ notice of withdrawal. • Under the charter of the association, members not advanced, are entitled to withdraw their contributions and profits upon giving thirty days’ notice of their intention to do so.

No fraud or bad faith on the part of. the officers or directors of the company is shown, although charged and reiterated many times in the brief.

Complainant continued to pay her dues and interest regularly until November, 1890. At the time she ceased paying all of the nonborrowing members had withdrawn' or had given notice of withdrawal, excepting three, one of whom owned ten shares, and continued to pay thereon until J uly, 1892; another, owning five shares, paid until December, 1891; and a ’ third, owning five shares, ceased to pay thereon in January, 1893. It is further shown that four borrowing members continued to pay dues and interest after Mrs. Johnston stopped, aiid three of them have since been paid in full, while 'the fourth has received nearly his full quota. At the date of the answer filed herein there were thirteen unpaid nonborrowers, owning ninety-three shares of stock, upon which partial payments had been made, leaving due them about three' thousand dollars ($3,000). It ap*369pears that the only assets of the association are the mortgage loan against this complainant, and a lot worth about $300, bought in under a foreclosure.

It appears that in October, 1888, the board of directors, passed a resolution that all delinquents for dues or interest be placed in the hands of the attorney for collection, and under this resolution the attorney has since acted as liquidator of the association, collecting assets and distributing them in accordance with the charter and by-laws of the association, faithfully and efficiently. Prior to 1887, the attorney had been paid a salary of $50 per month. In 1887 it was ' reduced to $20 per month, and in 1888 the salary was discontinued altogether. The salary of the secretary was also stopped at that date, and no salaries have been paid since 1888. While the association had not made a loan since 1886, it has, since that time, been receiving monthly payments and collecting other debts due it and paying off its unsatisfied borrowers.

We are constrained to believe, from the foregoing facts, that this association was insolvent in October, 1888, and had practically abandoned the business for which it was incorporated. At that date it virtually went into liquidation, and there was no further obligation upon members to continue the payment of dues and interest, since in*370solvency would prevent the stock from maturing and extinguishing the loans according to contract.

The complainant was under no obligations to. pay dues and interest . after October, 1888, but she continued to pay until November, 1890, ignorant of the true financial condition of the company. The insolvency of the association was. known to its officers and unknown to the complainant. She was not liable for dues and interest after October, 1888, and is now entitled to recover said amounts, with interest, or to have them credited on her mortgage loan. In the statement, of account by the Clerk and Master, the complainant is charged with interest on her mortgage loan ■ from the time it was made. This is, of course, proper, under the Hargo rule. It is con- ■ ceded by the counsel for the association that complainant is entitled to share in the distribution of' amount due on her mortgage loan, but it is insisted she must first pay balance due, and after expenses and attorney’s fees are collected, she will, get her pro . reda of this fund.

We think she is entitled to this pro rata before expenses of collection are deducted, and this, amount will be credited on balance due by her.

On the basis indicated the account will be recast. There was no abuse of the Chancellor’s discretion in refusing to permit the amended and supplemental bill, to be filed. The original bill herein was filed July, 1895, and the answer-*371August, 1895, while the amended hill was not offered until January, 1900. The costs of the appeal will he paid hy the building association. The costs of the Court helow will remain as taxed hy the Chancellor.