287 Mass. 433 | Mass. | 1934
Each of the plaintiffs was a shareholder in the defendant credit union. They gave notice of their intention to withdraw the sums of money which they had paid to the union for their shares and, after receiving a portion in instalments, brought these actions at law to recover the balance. The cases were tried together before a judge of the Superior Court sitting without a jury. The judge found in favor of each plaintiff and made a finding of facts. At the request of the defendant he reported the cases for determination by this court on the pleadings and his findings of fact. The report recites that it presents only two stated questions of law and that the judge’s findings contain all the material facts necessary to the decision of those questions.
The defendant is a corporation organized as a credit union under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 171. In 1928 each plaintiff applied for membership in the union and in that and the following year the plaintiff in the first case paid a total of $1,000 and the plaintiff in the second case a total of $2,000 to the defendant corporation for shares in the defendant corporation which had a par value of $5 per share. Moneys paid to a corporation organized as a credit union for shares may be withdrawn, and on February 26, 1930, the plaintiffs gave due and adequate notice of intention to withdraw all the money that had been paid by each to the corporation for shares, and were told that they would have to wait ninety days. The officers in charge of the defendant’s
After a careful reading of the report we are unable to agree with the present contention of the defendant, that there was no basis for certain of the findings of the judge. This is a report of actions at law, and since it does not appear that the subsidiary findings of fact with permissible inferences therefrom were insufficient as matter of law to warrant the ultimate findings of fact, those findings must stand. Moss v. Old Colony Trust Co. 246 Mass. 139, 143. Commercial Credit Corp. v. Commonwealth Mortgage & Loan Co. Inc. 276 Mass. 335, 340.
The first of the two questions reported is the correctness of the judge’s ruling “that while ‘the amounts paid in on shares ... by members who have withdrawn . . . shall be paid to them in the order of withdrawal . . . but only as funds therefor become available,’ any reliance upon this provision is an affirmative defence to be pleaded and established by the defendant.” The judge found that “No evidence with respect to this matter was offered by the plaintiffs, and the evidence offered by the defendant and any reasonable inference that may be drawn therefrom falls short of establishing that funds were not available on May 26, 1930, to pay the plaintiffs the amounts paid on their shares in the order of withdrawal.” We cannot on the record disturb that finding. It is the contention of the defendant that the portion of § 28 of the statute, which is quoted in the judge’s ruling, puts upon a shareholder, who has exercised the right positively expressed in the defendant’s by-laws to withdraw the amount paid for his shares and who, failing to receive payment, has brought suit, the burden of proving that funds of the corporation had become adequate to pay in the order of withdrawal. Reasonably interpreted we do not think that the statute can be given that effect.
A corporation organized as a credit union under G. L.
The section of the statute here relied on makes no distinction between members voluntarily severing their connection with a credit union and those who may have been expelled, and no distinction between the withdrawal of amounts paid by members for their shares and the withdrawal of amounts placed by them on deposit. As to amounts paid in for either purpose the corporation is an agency for managing the moneys of shareholders. Its general obligation is to pay them in full if the assets are
The promise of the defendant expressed in its by-laws to pay withdrawing members the amount they had paid for their shares was absolute in form with the sole qualification that a notice of ninety days might be required. The plaintiffs have complied with the by-law and with the defendant’s requirement as to notice. We do not think that § 28 of the statute was intended 'to limit the power elsewhere in the statute given to credit unions (§7) to provide the conditions under which in the ordinary course of business withdrawals were to be made. The statute does require that the defendant make payments in the order of withdrawal and as funds become available, and, if it were established that funds were not available, that fact would excuse payment by the defendant for a time, that is, until there were available funds. The order of applications for withdrawal and the availability of funds
The second of the two questions presented by the report is the refusal by the trial judge to give the following ruling requested by the defendant: “A withdrawing member of a credit union cannot obtain an advantage or priority over his fellow members by instituting suit by attachment of the funds and proceeding with suit after liquidation has been voted by the members of the credit union.” The request seems to assume that the plaintiffs have continued to remain members of the union, whereas the effect of the judge’s findings is that they accomplished a withdrawal from membership at the expiration of a period of ninety days following the giving of notice of their intention' to withdraw. The correctness of the findings of fact relating to withdrawal from membership is not presented by the report, which by its terms brings before us only two stated questions of law and by agreement of the parties contains “all the material facts necessary to the decision” of those questions. The plaintiffs’ withdrawal from membership having become effective on May 26, 1930, and it not being proved that funds were not available to pay their claims, they became creditors of the defendant. On the subsidiary facts found by the judge his ruling that their causes of action then arose was correct. See Beacon Hill Credit Union v. Tutun, 278 Mass. 592, 595. Nothing which happened after that time changed that status. A year later the liquidation of the corporation was undertaken by its members under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 171, § 29. That
The defendant has argued before us various matters which are not open on this report. Among other things it has contended that the plaintiffs cannot recover because they did not present their claims to the liquidating committee; that the evidence compelled the judge to find that there were not available funds to pay the plaintiffs because of the requirement that all members applying for the withdrawal of their funds shall be paid in the order of withdrawal; and that the defendant was insolvent. The report was of two stated' questions of law only. It is agreed that the findings of the judge contain all the material facts necessary to determine these questions. It does not purport to contain the evidence or facts upon which other questions, which might have been but were not raised in this report, rest. On a reasonable interpretation of the report we do not think it was intended to present for determination matters here argued by the defendant other than the two specific questions of law. No question can be considered here which was not intended to be reported. Weiner v. D. A. Schulte, Inc. 275 Mass. 379, 384. Crowe v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 242 Mass. 389, 392-393. Churchill v. Palmer, 115 Mass. 310, 313.
Since there was no error by the trial judge in the rulings
So ordered.