125 Ark. 192 | Ark. | 1916
Appellee is a corporation, domiciled at the city of Little Rock, engaged in business as a building and loan association according to the plan peculiar to that character of business. Its business is governed by certain by-laws, and it issues stock from time to time in series to be matured by payment of monthly dues of the members and the accumulation of interest from borrowers. Maggie G. Abrams, one of the appellants, took stock in the Association and borrowed money on the stock and mortgaged certain real property in the City of Little Rock to secure the payment of the loans. Her husband, C. W. Abrams, who is also one of the appellants, joined in the execution of the mortgages. There were five loans, aggregating $7,600.00 made during the period of about two years from 1904 to 1906. Mrs. Abrams failed to meet her monthly payments, and appellee instituted this action in the Pulaski Chancery court on April 12,1912, against C. W. and Maggie G. Abrams, to foreclose the mortgages.
Appellants appeared in the action by their attorneys and filed an answer and joined in a request for the appointment of an accountant to state the account between the parties, and pursuant to that stipulation the court appointed H. W. Hexmegin, an expert accountant, as special master to state the account. The master filed his report, to which exceptions were made by appellants but subsequently withdrawn, and the Chancery Court on-June 2,1913, rendered a final decree in favor of appellee for recovery of the sum of $8,800.79, which was the amount reported by the master, and decreed foreclosure of the mortgages.
On August 6, 1913, which was during the same term of court at which the decree was rendered, appellants appeared by attorneys and filed a petition to set aside the decree and re-open the cause for further hearing. No formal order is found in the record- setting aside the decree, but it is evident that such an order was made,'for there were further proceedings had in. the court from time to time and the final decree rendered November 24, 1915, recites the fact that the decree of June 12, 1913, had been set aside by an order of the court rendered on October 4, 1913. At any rate the decree was treated as having been set aside, and there is no point made here against the further consideration of the cause. Further testimony was heard by the chancellor and in the last decree the amount of recovery was fixed by the court at the sum of $6,852.00, as of the date of the original decree (June 2, 1913), together with the additional sum of $295.00 paid out by appellee in taxes, insurance and other expenses since the date of the original decree, making the total sum of $7,147.00, with interest from June 2, 1913, which the court decreed to be a lien on the mortgaged property.
Mrs. Abrams in her answer denied that she owed any balance on the mortgage debts except a comparatively small sum, but the expert accountants, whose testimony she relied on, figured the balance of the indebtedness to be a large sum, but somewhat less than the amount found by the court. Mrs. Abrams also disputed the correctness of some of the loans and claimed that she had made large payments on the loans for which she had received no credit, but the court found against her on those issues of fact, except as to certain payments on monthly dues aggregating the sum of $238.00. The record is voluminous and involves an examination of the somewhat intricate statements of the master and other accountants who testified, and there is a conflict in the testimony of the witnesses — Mrs. Abrams on the one side and the secretary of the appellee association and other witnesses on the other side — and upon consideration of it all we are unable to discover any error in the findings of the chancellor upon the issues of fact. The chancellor’s findings seem to be in accord with the preponderance of the evidence, or at least they are not against the preponderance of the evidence.
It appears from the testimony adduced by appellee that the stock issued to Mrs. Abrams was cancelled and re-issued from time to time because of the fact that she became delinquent on the dues, and in order to prevent a foreclosure it was necessary to reissue the stock so as to cover the delinquency. Mrs. Abrams now objects to that procedure, but the evidence is sufficient to warrant the finding that it was done for her benefit and that she consented to it. We find nothing in the decree which is prejudicial to the interest of appellants. They owe at least the amount decreed against them, and so far as concerns their appeal there is no reason for disturbing the decree.
There is, however, a cross-appeal which raises other questions, particularly the method adopted by the court in fixing the „terms of the settlement between the parties. It is contended by counsel for appellee that the court adopted a method of settlement which is contrary to that in vogue among building and loan associations and contrary to the weight of authority as expressed in decisions of the courts of the country. In Roberts v. American Building & Loan Association, 62 Ark. 572, this court declared the following rule for settlement in cases' of foreclosure of building and loan mortgages: “Ascertain the amount of stated dues and interest which will become due during the future existence of the corporation (the particular series of stock), as estimated; then find the principal which, with interest for the supposed time, will amount to the dues and interest already calculated; this will be the present value of the anticipated payments; to this principal add the arrearages due, and the fines for the time between the date of default and the entry of the decree of sale.”
It is argued by counsel with much earnestness that this rule is not only against the weight of authority on the subject, but that it works an injustice to the other holders of stock in the series, in that it gives the delinquent borrowing stockholder the benefit of anticipated profits of the series, whereas the borrower who refuses to pay should be excluded from participation in the profits. They contend that the more equitable rule would be to charge the borrower with the sums originally borrowed with unpaid interest up to the date of foreclosure, and then give credit for dues paid, with interest from the respective dates of the payments up to the time of the foreclosure, and that the difference between those two sums should represent the correct amount due by the borrower. It is urged that this method of settlement gives the borrower the full benefit of his payments with interest at the same rate which he has contracted to pay. In other words, that it is fairer to all the parties to the contract to merely give the delinquent borrower interest on his payments instead of allowing him to participate in future profits.
There is much force in the contention of counsel on this phase of the case, but we are of the opinion that the rule established in the Roberts case, supra, is not without justice and merit, and since it has been established by the decision of this court it ought not to be disturbed. It has, in other words, become a rule of property. . The rule thus announced preserves the mutuality in the contract, and in that way follows out the common building and loan association plan. It is said that this ignores the possibility of future losses, but we apprehend that the matter of losses is always taken into consideration in estimating the date of maturity of the series. This method of settlement takes nothing from the persistent stockholders that is conferred by their contract. It is contended also that the rule of the Roberts case has been disregarded in subsequent decisions of this court, but we do not think so. The cases of Hough v. Maupin, 73 Ark. 518, and Taylor v. Clark, 74 Ark. 220, have laid down a different rule, but those cases related to settlements in insolvent corporations where a different rule necessarily prevails.
This rule does no violence to the by-laws of the Association, and therefore does not constitute the making by the court of a new contract for the- parties. The parties have a right to stipulate in advance what the terms of settlement shall be in the event of foreclosure, and a by-law on- the subject would constitute the contract. But there is no by-law of appellee association providi g for terms of settlement in case of foreclosure. There is a by-law fixing the terms of withdrawal for borrowing stockholders,.but.counsel for appellee contend that that was not designed as a provision for settlement with a defaulting borrower and would not be a jfist rule for-that class of stockholders. We agree with counsel that that by-law has no application to settlements with a defaulting borrower. So we have np express provision in the contract between the parties on this particular subject, and it becomes necessary for the chancery court to fix the terms of settlement which are found to result from the contract, and we believe it to be not an unjust method to follow the rule laid down in the Roberts case.
Our attention is called to the fact, however, that in the Roberts case the computation made under the rule was to figure the interest for the whole of the unexpired time in ascertaining what woul’d be the present value of the aggregate amount of the dues and interest for the future period. It is argued that that computation is not consistent with the rule thus announced, and that it works out an unfair result for the reason that the payments of dues and interest were to be made in monthly installments, and that in estimating the present value of ' the aggregate amount that fact ought to be considered as the basis of the computation. We think that counsel are clearly right in that contention, and that it would do violence to the contract itself to compute the interest for the whole estimated period of the future life of the series of stock.
A very simple illustration makes the injustice of any other view apparent. If one entered into an obligation to pay a certain aggregate sum in monthly installments, covering a period of years, it would be unjust to figure the present" value upon a basis of the payment of the whole amount at the end of the period instead of in installments.
We do not consider the erroneous computation made in the Roberts case as a part of the rule itself, so as to become a rule of property, and since it is called to our attention we do not hesitate to correct it and to declare that in making the computation the interest should be computed for the average time of the payments, which would be one-half of the estimated future period. If the court had observed that method of computation, the decree should have been for the sum of $7,545.04, as of June 2, 1913, with the sum of $295 paid out by appellee since the date added, instead of the sum of $7,147.00 as decreed by the court. The court adopted the date of the original decree as a convenient one from which to compute interest on the amount found to be due, because of the fact that the estimates of the accountants brought down the sum to that date. No complaint hasbeenmade of the adoption of that method of entering the decree.
The decree of the chancellor is therefore, on the cross-appeal of appellee, reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to enter a decree in favor of appellee for the sum of $7,545.04, as of the date of the original decree, June 2, 1913, with, the addition of $295 paid out since then, and to decree a foreclosure of the mortgage to satisfy the debt.
It appears, however, that appellee has in writing released from the mortgage fifty feet off the west end of the two’ lots embraced in the mortgage, leaving the area of the property 100 by 100 feet, but that the chancery court erroneously declared an existing lien in appellee’s favor on 100 by 110 feet. This error should be corrected in the decree to be entered on remand of the cause. It is so ordered.