76 P. 16 | Or. | 1904
after stating the facts in the foregoing terms, delivered the opinion of the court.
It is contended by appellant’s counsel that this is an action in assumpsit for money secured by fraud and deceit; that the bond given to évidence the loan has been surrendered, the mortgage satisfied, and the contract fully executed ; and that the complaint contains no averments requiring equitable intervention; and, conceding that money voluntarily paid as usury cannot be obtained by course of law, the allegations of the complaint show that such payments were induced by fraud, to recover which an action is maintainable, and hence the court erred in denying plaintiff his constitutional right to a trial by jury. It is stated in the abstract that a copy of the mortgage was made a part of the complaint, but, if so, it has been omitted from the transcript, thereby rendering it impossible to say what rate of interest plaintiff agreed to pay. The statute of this State prescribes the legal rate of interest where none is specified; allows 10 per cent per annum, and no more, by express agreement of the parties (B. & C. Comp. § 4595); and provides that if it be ascertained in any suit brought on a contract that a rate of interest has been agreed upon greater than so authorized, it shall be deemed usurious, in which case the entire, debt, without interest, shall be forfeited to the school fund of the county in which the suit is brought: B. & C. Comp. § 4597. In Balfour v. Davis, 14 Or. 47 (12 Pac. 89), it was held that, to constitute usury, there must be (1) a loan, express or implied; (2) an un
2. It is argued, however, that he was induced to part with his money by the fraudulent representations of the
It is not to be supposed that the interested stockholders should be made parties, for the defendant, having been duly incorporated, thereby became a distinct legal entity (Liggett v. Ladd, 17 Or. 89, 21 Pac. 133), in which the duties and obligations of its members were merged; and, in all controversies involving corporate rights, it occupies toward them the relation of a trustee, to carry into execution their agreements for their mutual advantage, in the enforcement of which, as a building and loan association, it collects the money from and distributes it to them as stockholders: Pomeroy, Eq. Jur. (2 ed.) § 1095. If, by the alleged fraudulent representations of defendant’s managing agent, plaintiff was induced to part with his money, he has a right, in equity, to determine whether or not, according to its rules and regulations prescribed for the government of the members in the class to which he belonged, he paid more than his equal and ratable share of the losses which it sustained, and,if so,to recover the same; but he has no right to such sums as usurious exactions.
The court properly considering the cause as a suit in equity for an accounting in consequence of the alleged fraud, plaintiff had an opportunity to introduce evidence in support of the allegations of his complaint; but, having