73 Mo. App. 551 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
The plaintiff is a corporation organized as a building and loan association. (R. S. 3889, ch. 42, art. 9.) In June, 1895, the plaintiff loaned to the defendants, F. W. McCabe, Q-. W. Noble and Ella Noble (who were stockholders of the association) $3,000, for which they executed and delivered to the plaintiff their promissory note. The note was to be satisfied by the payment of sixty monthly instalments of $60 each. To secure the note the makers executed a deed of trust on certain real estate. Contemporaneous with the delivery of the note and deed of trust and as a part of the same transaction and for the purpose of furnishing other and additional security for the payment of the note, the payors therein, together with their codefendants James A. and T. J. Miller, as sureties, entered into a bond in the penal sum of $3,000. The bond contained the following conditions: “That if the principals aforesaid shall well and truly pay said note hereinbefore described according to its tenor, then said bond and obligation to be void; but if the
The plaintiff also tendered the note for cancellation. The defendants interposed a general demurrer, which the circuit court overruled. They refused to plead further and final judgment having been entered they appealed to this court.
The contention of the defendants is that the bond sued on is absolutely void for the reason that the statute prohibits the plaintiff from accepting personal security for a loan. This contention must depend upon the construction of section 2811 of the statute under which the plaintiff is organized. The section reads as follows:
“Every such corporation shall only lefid its funds on real estate security, or on the security of its own shares of stock, such loans being made upon the terms and conditions and in the manner which shall be specified by its .by-laws. No loans shall be made on shares of stock to an amount exceeding the instal-ments actually paid on such shares.77
.It is sometimes difficult to tell whether the words in the charter of a corporation are intended to create a prohibition or a limitation merely. In the present case if it was the purpose of the legislature to absolutely prohibit the officers of building and loan associations from taking personal security for loans, then the bond in suit can not be made the foundation of an action. This intention, however, must be manifest or clear.
But on the other hand, if the requirement to take real security was directory only, then the statute created a limitation, and the taking of personal security would be regarded only as an excessive or undue exercise of corporate powers. Now, what was the object of the
In the case of Bank v. Mathews, supra, the defendant resisted the foreclosure of a mortgage of real estate upon the ground that the national banking law prohibited the plaintiff from accepting real estate as security for a loan. The court disallowed the defense, holding that the intention to render the act void must be clear, and that as the statute did not expressly declare the security to be void, the presumption was that congress did not so intend.
In Gold Mining Co. v. Bank, supra, the plaintiff in error was sued on an overdraft. It defended on the ground that the loan was greater than the national banking law allowed the bank to make to a single individual. This defense was likewise disallowed.
■In the case of Littleworth v. Davis, supra, the trustees of a school'loaned school money on real estate security. The statutes of Mississippi expressly provided that such loans should be made on personal secur
< ¡There was a loan irregularly made. The power to loan is conferred; the mode is regulated. If a corporation make a contract altogether outside of the purpose of its creation it is void because it had not power over the subject in reference to which it acted. But if it contracts with reference to a subject within its powers, but in doing so exceeds them, the person with whom it deals can not set up such violation of its franchises to avoid the contract.”
In the case of Bank v. Hammond, supra, the charter of the bank provided that loans should be secured by mortgage.
Held that personal security taken on a loan of the bank would be enforced.
It is useless to multiply authorities. The decisions are uniform in holding that any kind of security which has been taken to secure a bona fide debt will be enforced, unless it is manifest that the legislature intended to render the transaction void. The strong disposition of the courts is to hold parties to their contracts.
Our conclusion is that the circuit court did right in overruling the demurrer. - The judgment will therefore be affirmed.