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Wills v. Paducah Building & Loan Association.

CASE 28-ACTION BY MRS. WILLS AGAINST THE PADUCAH BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE CANCELLATION OF A MORTGAGE, CONSOLIDATED WITH AN ACTION BY THE ASSIGNEE OF LOAN ASSOCIATION FOR A SETTLEMENT OF THE ASSIGNED ESTATE.

Wills v. Paducah Building & Loan Ass'n.

APPEAL FROM M'CRACKEN CIRCUIT COURT.

JUDGMENT REFUSING TO CANCEL MORTGAGE AND MRS. WILLS APPEALS.

AFFIRMED.

BUILDING AND LOAN

ASSOCIATIONS-RIGHTS OF BORROWING STOCK

HOLDER--CREDIT BY PAYMENTS ON STOCK.

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Held: A borrowing stockholder of an insolvent building and loan association, which had made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, was not entitled to credit on her loan for the amount of dues paid on her stock, though she had, before the assignment was made, ceased to pay, and had filed suit seeking to have all her payments applied to the discharge of her debt as the association had been insolvent for some time before she quit paying, and had been endeavoring to wind up its affairs, with a view to liquidation.

HENDRICK & MILLER, FOR APPELLANT.

This record shows that Mrs. Wills subscribed for three shares of stock in the Paducah Building & Loan Association, April 3, 1891, and on August 25, 1891, borrowed from said association, $450, and executed her note for $600.

It is alleged in her petition and not denied that she paid three dollars per month for the five months of April, May, June, July and August, prior to receiving the loan, and beginning with September she paid six dollars per month to March, 1899, making in all $561 paid in monthly installments by her, and applying all these payments at the dates they were made, she has overpaid said note; and on August 18, 1899, she filed her suit in the McCracken circuit court against said association, asking that they be so applied; charging that the whole scheme followed by said association was a device to avoid the usury laws of this State. When this suit was brought the appellee was still a going concern.

The only defense sought to be made by the trustee was that

Wills v. Paducah Building & Loan Association.

the association had become bankrupt and made an assignment; and, disallowing a credit for the stock dues the note was still unsatisfied, and it was sought to enforce the mortgage to satisfy the unpaid balance.

Our contention is, that having filed her petition nearly three months before the assignment of the association, and demanded her note, claiming the benefit of the interest laws of the State, and repudiated all obligation as a member of the company and disclaiming any interest as a member thereof, had thereby ceased to be a member of or stockholder therein, and was entitled to have her payments applied to the extinguishment of her note. We confidently assert that no Kentucky decision can be found in which it is authoritatively held that a party, who, prior to an assignment of an association or while it is a "going concern," has paid into the association in stock dues, premiums and interest, a sum sufficient to satisfy his note and mortgage given to secure his loan, and then ceased to pay. and demanded the application of these payments to the satisfaction of his note, may be denied this right-made to submit to a sale of his property to satisfy the lien, while his stock dues are retained by the association or its assignee or receiver appointed after he made his election to forfeit his stock and dividends therein.

AUTHORITIES CITED.

Peoples' Sav. & Bldg. Assn. v. Denton, 21 R., 148; N. B. & L. A. v. Bybee, 21 R., 1021; U. S. B. & L. Assn. v. U. S. B. & A., 21 Ky., 1763; Savings B. & L. Assn. v. Montjoy, 21 Ky., 1189; U. S. B. & L. Assn. Assignee v. Casseday, 22 R., 726; N. B. & L. A. v. Glover, 22 R., 535; Saturday Nights Savings & L. Assn. v. Moore, 22 R., 766; Reddick Case, 19 R., 1171; U. S. B. & L. Assn.'s Assignee v. Reid, 22 R., 342.

GREER & REED, FOR APPELLEE.

The assignee in his answer herein denies that the payments set up in plaintiff's petition were all paid on said loan, but as the loan was for $450, the first three payments were made on the stock before the loan was made, and of the six dollars monthly payments, only three dollars per month thereof during all of the time was ever paid on the loan and the other three dollars was paid on the monthly dues of the three shares of stock owned by plaintiff, and said answer charges that there is a balance of $327.43 due on the note and mortgage of plaintiff. The record in this case shows that Mrs. Wills is allowed her stock claim for more than it actually was and she is given-more interest on it than she is entitled to.

Wills v. Paducah Building & Loan Association.

AUTHORITIES CITED.

Rogers v. Raines, 18 R., 769; Reddick Case, 20 R., 1720; Globe Bldg. & Loan Assn. v. Wood, &c., 22 R. 1500; U. S. Bldg. & Loan Assn., &c. v. Rowland, &c., 22 R., 1433.

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUDGE HOBSON-AFFIRMING.

On April 3, 1891, appellant subscribed for three shares of stock in the Paducah Building & Loan Association, of $200 per share, face value. She paid on this stock $3.65 for the month of April, and $3 each for the months of May, June, July, and August. On August 25, 1891, she borrowed from the association $450, and executed her note to it for $600. From this time she paid, in addition to the $3 a month on the stock as before, $3 a month interest on her loan, until and including March, 1899: making 91 payments, of $6 each, in addition to the $15.65 paid on the stock before she obtained the loan. After March, 1899, she' ceased to pay. On August 18, 1899, she filed this suit against the association, in which she charged that the arrangement was usurious, and sought to have all her payments applied to the discharge of her debt, alleging that they more than paid the debt. She prayed judgment for the cancellation of the mortgage she had executed to secure the note, and for the recovery of $87.58 as usury which she alleged she had paid over and above the amount of the debt. The association filed a general demurrer to her petition, but no action was taken on the demurrer. In October, 1899, the association made an assignment for the benefit of its creditors, and the assignee was made a defendant to the action. He also filed an action to settle the trust, and the two suits were consolidated. The proof showed that the association was organized about the year 1888; that it had 17 non-borrowing stockholders and 12 borrowing stockholders: that the non-borrowing stockholders, who held about two-thirds of the capital stock,

Wills v. Paducah Building & Loan Association.

had paid in about $4,000, and the borrowing stockholders had paid in about $3,000. It also appeared that, if all the borrowing stockholders were settled with on the basis claimed by appellee, there would only be between $900 and $1,000 of assets to come to the hands of the assignee; all of its money having been let out to its borrowing members. The company had been insolvent for some time before ap pellant quit paying, and had been endeavoring to wind up its affairs. with a view to liquidation. Under these facts the circuit court held that appellant was entitled to credit on her mortgage debt for the monthly payments of $3 each which she had paid on it, but that she was not entitled to credit on this debt, as against the insolvent association, for the $3 a month which she had paid on the stock. The court allowed her to retain in her hands 25 per cent. of the judg ment against her, on the ground that, as she was a stockholder, this much would probably be coming to her on the settlement of the stock account. From this judgment she appeals, insisting that she should have been credited on her mortgage debt by all the money that she had paid.

It is earnestly argued for appellant that she had chosen to cease, and had ceased, to make further payments on her stock some eight months before the assignment by the association to appellee, and that three months before the assignment she had filed her suit to cancel the mortgage, and to recover part of the money she had paid, thereby dislaiming any interest in the association as a member, and demanding the benefit of the usury laws of the State; that thereby her rights were fixed; and that thereafter the association could not, by making an assignment, divest her of rights which by her election she had already acquired. In Reddick v. Association's Assignee 106 Ky., 94, 20 R., 1720, (49 S. W., 1075), this court said: "But looking beyond the

Wills v. Paducah Building & Loan Association.

mere language of the by-laws and the statutes, it is manifest that these withdrawal contracts are provided for with respect to going concerns only. The right of withdrawal is not an absolute one, any more than is the right of the borrowing member to pay his loan by monthly payments until the maturity of his stock cancels his loan. Ordinarily the language of the borrower's contract does not attempt to fix the date of this maturity. He simply agrees to pay until the accumulations of the enterprise shall mature his stock. And these terms all come to nothing when the scheme falls through. The chancellor can not carry on the enterprise when the parties themselves have failed, and the only thing possible is to wind it up on equitable principles." Following this case, the rule has been established that the insolvency of the association negatives the right of any stockholder to obtain a priority over his fellows by giving notice of withdrawal, and that in an insolvent concern a borrowing stockholder is not entitled to credit on his loan for the amount of dues paid on his stock, although the rule is otherwise in a going concern. Association's Assignee v. Reed 110 Ky., 874, 23 R., 342, (62 S. W., 1020); Loan Co.'s Assignee v. Spillman 23 R., 1431, (65 S. W., 444). Though none of the cases decided presented just the question raised here, the principles announced control it. While appellant was a borrower from the association, she was also a stockholder. Her right to apply on her debt what was paid on the stock is only allowed in a going concern on the ground that in such cases the dividends on the stock are presumed to equal her share of the expenses and losses. But in an insolvent concern this presumption can not exist. The rights of the parties in the assets of the insolvent concern must be determined upon equitable principles, when the assets assigned for the benefit of all the creditors are dis

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