68 N.J. Eq. 183 | New York Court of Chancery | 1904
Complainants, as receivers in liquidation of a building and loan association, file this bill to foreclose a mortgage given by members of the association on procuring a loan from the association. The defendant Patrick J. Nevins became a member, taking out twenty-seven and one-half shares, on which one dollar per share was payable for one hundred months, which payments were, under the by-laws, to be withdrawn and the shares canceled when the net investment, together with an equitable share of the profits, amounted to $200. A loan of $5,500 was. applied for by Nevins and his wife upon property belonging to both, and was granted, and the bond and mortgage now in question were executed and the shares of stock were assigned to the association as collateral security for the loan. A premium of $22 per month was bid for the loan, and the bond which was given in the penal sum of $11,000 was conditioned for the payment for one hundred months of $27.50 per month (the monthly dues), $27.50 per month as interest on $5,500 at six per cent., and $22 per month as monthly premium — in all $77 per month — and after the one hundred months the payments of interest were to be continued until the maturity of the shares. No express provision for the payment of the principal sum is contained in the bond and mortgage, except in case of default in payments on the part of the mortgagors, a condition which is not involved in this case. The defendants, upon receiving the principal of the loan (which is admitted to have been $5,000 instead of $5,500), made the monthly payments of $77 until the association went into liquidation. The whole amount of the monthly payments made on account of the premium is $682. In reference to bonds and mortgages of _ this character, given by borrowing members of such associations, which afterwards become insolvent, it may be considered as settled law that the insolvency works a rescission of the contract, and that the sums borrowed become immediately due and payable, regardless of the terms of payment fixed by the contract. Weir v. Granite State Association, 56 N. J. Eq. (11 Dick.) 234, and eases cited at p. 238 (Reed, Vice-Chancellor, 1897); Endl. Build. Assoc. § 523; Lewis v. Clark, 129 Fed. Rep. 570, 574 (C. C. A. 1904).
Under the general management of these associations the premiums paid by installments are usually considered as earned when paid, and are treated as part of its funds on hand as assets belonging to the association, out of which provision may be made for dividends and for the payment of shares on withdrawal. This method of treating the premiums paid in installments as earned is recognized, I think, as a lawful method by the general law (P. L. of 1903 p. 476 § 51), which provides that the gross premiums on loans received by the association are not to be treated as profits wholly earned, but are to be apportioned over a period fairly estimated for the maturity of the shares, and for that period, in decreasing proportion, are to be carried on as an unearned profit. If the premiums are considered as wholly subject to the contingency of the ultimate regular maturity of the shares, then it would seem to be clear that until maturity the entire premium account must be carried as a lia