69 Conn. 6 | Conn. | 1897
This is a petition by the receiver in the cause above named, for instructions relating to certain questions arising in the performance of his duties. The Superior Court found the facts stated in the petition to be “ true, sufficient; and material,” and reserved the case for the advice of this court.
The material facts alleged may be summarized as follows : The Granite State Provident Association is a Hew Hampshire corporation, which began business on the plan of a building and loan association in the spring of 1888. It consists of about eighteen thousand members. Of this number about seventeen hundred are borrowers, while the remainder are not borrowers; and these two classes are termed “ borrowers ” and “ investors ” respectively. About sixty members of the association, residents of this State, have borrowed money of the association and given mortgages on real estate here to secure the same. By its charter the association carried on business solely on the mutual plan. “ Each person becoming a member subscribed for and took one or more shares, and there was delivered to him a certificate of stock representing the number of shares owned by him. The nominal par value of each share was two hundred dollars. Such a member paid one dollar a month to the association, or twelve dollars a year. Such payments, solely on shares,
On March 18th, 1896, upon the petition of the bank commissioners of the State of New Hampshire, the association was enjoined from doing any more business, an assignee was appointed in that State, and its business and affairs are now being wound up there.
On May 29th, 1896, the petitioner was duly appointed receiver of the association in and for the State of Connecticut, and is now acting as such.
Since his appointment no dues have been paid to him from any of the members, but a small number of the borrowers here have made payments to him equal to the interest and premium on the amount of the loan. A large number of the borrowers here have made no payments to him whatever, and he has been obliged in several instances to pay interest to the holders of the first mortgages, “for the purpose of retaining the interest of the association in the second mortgage held by the contracts of the association.” The mortgages taken by the association on real estate here are now in the petitioner’s hands as part of its assets.
The petitioner prayed for instructions “ in the performance of his duties as such receiver, upon the following questions arising upon the facts hereinbefore set forth: (1) Do all
The first qiiestion is perhaps broad enough in its scope to include matters the decision of which might affect the rights of persons who were not made parties to this proceeding, but if so we must limit it to matters affecting the rights only of such as are parties. Limited in this way the question, in effect, is whether the mortgages held by the receiver upon real estate here, can now be enforced by him for the purpose of collecting the assets and winding up the affairs of the association here; and we are of opinion that this must be answered in the affirmative.
So far as the second mortgages are concerned they provide that upon a certain contingency—the non-payment of dues— which has happened, the mortgages may, at the option of the mortgagee, its successors or assigns, at once be foreclosed. But we do.not rest our answer to this first question upon any provision of this kind, nor upon any breach of the mortgage condition in either the second or the first mortgage; we rest it on the broad ground that the association has been in effect and for all practical purposes prematurely dissolved.
It is now well settled that upon the premature dissolution of an association of this kind, or upon its becoming insolvent and unable to carry out the purposes for which it was created, and passing into the hands of a receiver for the purpose of having its affairs wound up—which is, in practical effect and operation, a dissolution—the borrowing members may be compelled to pay forthwith the balances due from them
The facts in this case clearly show that so far as the present members of the association are concerned, whether borrowers or investors, the association is to all intents and purposes practically dissolved and defunct; and that its existing contracts with the Connecticut borrowers, as expressed in these mortgages, or otherwise, can no longer be carried out. The case, therefore, comes within the established rule in such cases, and the mortgages can now be enforced in the process of winding up.
The second question is whether the receiver can collect the cash premiums, accruing under the terms of the mortgage, after the association went into the hands of an assignee; and we are of opinion that this must be answered in the negative.
The loans in this State were all made on the cash premium plan; that is, the borrower paid each month, in addition to the interest on the money borrowed and the amount due upon his shares, a further sum in cash, called a cash premium, in the nature of a bonus. The agreement of the borrower in an association of this kind, to pay dues, interest, and premium, is made upon the implied condition that the association shall remain “agoing concern.” The premium is,'in effect, a bonus charged to a member wishing to borrow, for the privilege of anticipating the ultimate value of his stock, by obtaining the immediate use of the money his stock will be worth at the end of the period contemplated by the parties to the transaction. Endlich on Bldg. Asso. (2d ed.), § 399. When an association, before that time, becomes insolvent and goes into the hands of an assignee or receiver for
The last question is in form limited to the application of the premiums paid prior to the appointment of the New Hampshire assignee, but in his brief the receiver treats the question as if it related to the application of dues as well as premiums, paid before that time, and we will consider the question as if it embraced both dues and premiums.
With reference to the premiums, the question is whether they shall be applied in favor of the borrower in reduction of the mortgage indebtedness, or whether they shall belong to the association as was contemplated in the agreement. If the association had lived to fulfill the purposes contemplated by the parties to these mortgages when they were made, there is no doubt that the premiums would have belonged to the company, and would not and could not have been applied in reduction of the mortgage debt; but upon the practical dissolution of the association, the weight of reason and of authority leads to the conclusion that no part of the premium should belong to the company, but should be applied in reduction of the debt, because the consideration for the promise to pay premiums utterly fails. “ Upon the basis of all the decisions examined, it may be safely laid down that the clear weight of authority rejects the enforcement of any part of the premium. And in reason and fairness this must be so. The premium is not a payment in advance. The contract concerning it is that it shall be made up by the borrower in the association’s hands, and that, upon his final settlement
Treating the premiums in the case at bar, then, just as the parties in the case do, as premiums in the proper legal sense, and not mere payments of interest under the name and guise of premiums, we are of opinion that the premiums paid prior to the appointment of the New Hampshire assignee, are to be applied in favor of the borrowers as payments upon the money actually advanced to them.
With reference to the dues paid upon the shares prior to the appointment of the assignee, we are of opinion that they should not be applied in reduction of the amount actually advanced to the borrower. The Connecticut mortgagors stand in a double relation to the association: they are members—investors—as well as borrowers. As members they are bound to contribute to the losses and expénses of the common enterprise. If the amount of dues paid in by them as members is credited back to them as debtors^ they will receive in full the amount paid upon stock, while the other members who have not become borrowers may receive only a small percentage of the amount paid in by them. “ The insolvency of a company, as before observed, puts an end to
The Superior Court is advised:—
(1) That the mortgages in the hands of the receiver are now enforceable as against members of the Association. (2) That premiums, after the assignment in March, 1896, cannot be collected. (3) That premiums paid prior to the appointment of the receiver should be treated as payments upon the sum due under the mortgage; and that dues so paid should not be so treated, but, so far as the mortgages are concerned, should be treated as if paid by non-borrowing members. ■
In this opinion the other judges concurred.