110 Ky. 4 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Opinion ojp the court by
Reversing.
Appellee' Wood became a member of tbe Globe Building & Loan Company by subscribing for twelve shares of. stock, and in October, 1894, borrowed $1,200, for which he executed his note, and to secure the payment thereof pledged the shares of stock, and executed a mortgage to the company upon a lot of land in Mt. Sterling, the mortgage being duly recorded. In March, 1895, Wood sold the property to appellee O’Rear, the consideration recited being “'that the second party pay to the Globe Building & Loan Company of Louisville, Ky., the loan of $1,200 the first party owes to said company, less the sums heretofore paid by said first party, which loan the first party has the option to pay in monthly payments, and1 which loan is secured by a mortgage on the lot hereinafter described, and said second party assumes? and agrees to pay to W. H. Holt two notes of $144 each, and the interest thereon, which notes are secured by a lieu on said lot and other valuable considerations.” There appears to have been no formal transfer from Wood to O’Rear of the stock in the company, but on April 15, 1895, appellee O’Rear addressed to the company the fallowing letter: “Dear Sirs: I will máke the payments, so long as I own the property, of the $19.20 per month on the J. C. Wood stock, on which he has the loan secured by rnort
The trial court seems to have allowed credits for all sums paid by either of the appellees named, and appellant claiixis that this was error, in so far as credit was allowed for the suxn of $7.20 per month which the company carried to its account of dues upon the stock, and this> stock account, it is insisted, is to be kept inviolate for the purpose of paying the expenses of the company, the losses incurred,-and the cost of liquidation, except in so far as the court under whose care the liquidation is being coxiducted may be able to determine what proportion, if any, of said .stock account will certainly not be' needed for those purposes. No question of fact is presented. Tbe controversy is entirely upon questions of law, and on the conclusions, which are to be drawn from the facts shown.
Waiving the question whether the issue is sufficiently presented as to the power of the company to make an assignment, and its insolvency as a .basis to justify making the assignment, there would seem to be little doixbt that, under proper circumstances, a building and loan company can, under the law of Kentucky, liquidate its business by the agency of a voluntary assignment. We find nothing in the statutory provisions -as to -building and loan companies which seems, either directly or by implication, to prohibit their making voluntary deeds of assignment. On tthe contrary, under section 855, Kentucky
When wm come to consider whether a building and loan association is- so insolvent as to justify making an assignment for the benefit of its creditors, it is manifest that we must apply a somewhat different rule from that applicable to an ordinary corporation whose business is almost entirely with outsiders. In one sense a building and loan company has little, if any debts, owing to outsiders. If -we are restrained from considering any obligation of the company except such as are due to outsiders, it is scarcely possible that such a company could become insolvent. But it does incur obligations to its stockholders, the
There is no analogy, as is suggested by appellees, between the usury contracted for on loans by building and loan associations and that which is collected by banks. The banks deal in short-time loans, with a limited class of people engaged in business, and who depend on the banks for the accommodation necessary to carry it on. A refusal to pay the current rate of usury demanded by the banks would be an effectual bar to further accommodation, and in a vast majority of cases would necessitate the withdrawal of the customer from business. The stockholders of a building and loan company who borrow from the funds» of the company have, as a rule, but one transaction with the company. When, from any cause, the contract fails to be carried cut, there is no expectation of future favor, and consequently no fear of future denial. It may be safely assumed that, after the delivery of the opinion in the Simpson case, 41 S. W., 570, there would not be one ease in a hundred thousand fore
It appears that, in the brief period before the assignment, notice had been given' for the withdrawal of stock to the withdrawal value of $90,000, $50,000 of which was collectible on the date of the assignment, unless advantage were taken of the provision above referred to in section 860, which would undoubtedly have increased the haste of the stockholders to withdraw. There was a panic among the stockholders, and a scramble among the non-borrowers to withdraw from the association. The treasury was practically empty. Dividends had been declared upon the assumed profits of the concern, which were in a great measure based upon the usury' which the decision in the Simpson case put an end to. In the ease of non-borrowing members, these profits had been declared from year to year, to hasten the maturity of the stock, and had been withdrawn, or were being sought to be withdrawn, by the withdrawing members. In the case of borrowing members, these assumed profits had also been declared, and had been carried to the credit of stockholders to aid in maturing stock, and in thereby canceling the indebtedness secured by its pledge. By a stroke of the pen, the basis df.this assumed profit was swept away. It is now contended that all of this loss, present and prospective, should have been apportioned among the stockholders remaining in the association, and charged up to reduce the withdrawal or book value of the stock, but that the company should have continued in business, notwith
As to the receivership, it may be said that, if this condition of affairs did not amount to insolvency, there would be no justification for it, assuming, what is shown by the evidence .in this cáse-, that the affairs of the corporation were honestly administered, though, up to' the date of the Simpson opinion, upon a mistaken basis. By pursuing the other course, the inevitable result would have been that every dollar that came- into the treasury would have been absorbed by the non-borrowing members, with the result of ultimate insolvency, and of casting the entire burden of the management of the company, its expenses and its losses, including losses which had occurred upon the stock of members who had withdrawn before the Simpson opinion, upon the borrowing members, and in -addition the cost of administering the estate as an insolvent one. We do not regard this* as- a proper course, on account -of its manifest lack of equity to the borrowing stockholders. On the contrary, we believe it not only to have been the right of the directory, but its duty, under the circumstances which -appeared in this case, to take-measures for the equitable administration of the assets of the concern as an insolvent one. The company had been organized and created for certain specific objects. Those objects had been entirely frustrated, and' it w-as impossible for it to meet its obligations. It could not pay the amounts due to withdrawing members, nor obtain funds to lend its stockholders, and therefore could not mature- its stock. We are therefore -of opinion that, as a building and loan company, it was insolvent, and the assignment was properly made.