278 Mass. 592 | Mass. | 1932
This is a bill in equity brought by a banking corporation, organized under G. L. c. 171, now
The defendant in his answer set up a claim in set-off of deposits made by the defendant with the plaintiff and of shares in the plaintiff corporation owned by the defendant, for which he made demand on December 12, 1930.
The master found that the plaintiff has been organized for about ten years and since 1926 has conducted its business under the statute of that year to which reference has been made. The purposes for which it was incorporated are stated in art. 1, § 2, of its by-laws as follows“This credit union is wholly cooperative in purpose, having been organized solely for the promotion of thrift among its members by the accumulation of their savings in small amounts, and the loaning of such accumulations to its members for provident purposes at a moderate rate of interest.” The business which the defendant did for the plaintiff was mostly the collection of notes. It was found by the master that the amount in which the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff was $2,356.18, subject to his counterclaim for fees, disbursements and services. He found that the fair value of the services rendered by the defendant to the plaintiff amounted to $1,530, and his disbursements aggregated $709.52, so that on this part of an accounting there was due the plaintiff a balance of $116.66.
The defendant was found to have to his credit as a shareholder of the plaintiff sixty shares with an aggregate par value of $300, and the sum of $20.35 on deposit to his credit. The bill was filed February 17, 1931, and the answer on the twenty-fifth day of the same month. On May 19, 1931, the plaintiff voted to liquidate and a committee was appointed for the purpose. This action was taken upon the recommendation of the bank commissioner. The plaintiff objected to the taking of any testimony on the question of shares and deposits standing in the name of the defendant with the plaintiff, on the ground that he was not entitled as matter of law to a set-off of these shares and deposits, but the evidence
The by-laws of the plaintiff provide that money paid in on shares may be withdrawn on any day when payments on shares may be made, but the directors have the right to require a shareholder to give ninety days’ notice of intention to withdraw. They also provide that deposits may be withdrawn on any day when the plaintiff is open for business, but that directors may require a depositor to give sixty days’ notice of his intention to withdraw the whole or any part of the deposit. The pass book held by the defendant contained the printed words, “Shares may be withdrawn only upon written application, and the Credit Union reserves the right to withhold payment for thirty days from date of application,” and also the words, “Money may ordinarily be withdrawn on demand, but the depositor may at any time be required by the credit union to give notice of an intended withdrawal not less than thirty days before a withdrawal is made.”
The master found that the directors passed no vote requiring shareholders to give ninety days’ notice of withdrawal, nor did they vote to withhold payment for thirty days after the application for withdrawal of shares or to require depositors to give either thirty or sixty days’ notice of their intention to withdraw deposits. Sometimes when the amounts to be withdrawn were large, small payments were made and promises looking to the future given. The master was unable to find upon the evidence that the credit union was insolvent on December 12, 1930, or at any time thereafter. The withdrawal slips sent by the defendant to the credit union on December 12, 1930, covered all but $5 of his share account and all of his deposits, and in accord
There is nothing in the record to control the finding that the plaintiff has not been insolvent at any time. A vote to liquidate even if passed by the requisite number of shareholders would not require such a finding. Cases which have considered the rights in set-off of depositors in insolvent institutions need not be considered. Where there is no appeal from an interlocutory decree confirming a master’s report and overruling exceptions thereto the only question for our determination is whether on the record and the master’s report the decree is proper. Sousa v. Manta, 267 Mass. 246, 249. Hermanson v. Seppala, 272 Mass. 197, 199. The plaintiff contends that to permit the defendant to set off his shares would be in violation of St. 1926, c. 273, § 29, which provides that “At any meeting specially called for the purpose, the members, upon recommendation of not less than two thirds of the board of directors, may, by a two thirds vote of those present and entitled to vote, vote to liquidate the corporation. A committee of three shall thereupon be elected to liquidate the assets of the corporation under the direction of the commissioner, and each share of the capital stock . . . shall be entitled to its proportional part of the assets in liquidation after all deposits and debts have been paid.” But the plaintiff has failed to prove any valid vote to liquidate and the vote, if valid, was not passed until more than three months after the date when by the terms of
Decree affirmed with costs.