Haspel v. McLaughlin-Lyons

38 Pa. Super. 334 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1909

Opinion by

Beaver, J.,

The defendant joined a building and loan association, of which the plaintiff is the receiver, in February, 1892, and took out five shares of stock in the seventh series, which she continuously held until the last meeting of the association in February, 1904. The association, on April 2, 1904, made an assignment in due form to one Robbins, who refused to act as assignee or accept the trust. Subsequently, November 7, 1904, the plaintiff was appointed receiver for the association and was subsequently directed by the court to proceed to collect all moneys due the association by appropriate legal proceedings. The receiver, finding among the assets of the association a mortgage of the defendant for $1,000, issued a scire facias thereon, which has beén twice tried. At the first trial the trial judge refused an offer on the part of the defendant to show the withdrawal value of her shares by the seventeenth annual report of the society and also the statement made to her at the time of her last payment of dues by the secretary and the surrender of her 'certificate of stock. At this trial a verdict was directed for the plaintiff. A new trial was granted, on the ground that the testimony rejected should have been received and, on the second trial, it was allowed, but a judgment again *336directed for the plaintiff for the balance of mortgage and interest, giving due credit for the amounts of principal and interest paid on account of the mortgage, but refusing to allow the withdrawal value of the stock held by the defendant as a credit upon the mortgage, as claimed by her, by virtue of a conversation between her and the secretary of the association and the delivery of her book, in which were credited her chargés and payments of monthly dues, interest and the payments directly on account of the mortgage, and her certificate of stock, without an assignment.

The general subject is discussed by our Brother Henderson in Haspel v. Moffitt, 32 Pa. Superior Ct. 344, in which the authorities pertinent to the case at that time were quite fully discussed. It is therein said: “The association is insolvent and the authorities all hold that after the insolvency of a building association there cannot be an appropriation of the value of shares to a mortgage debt. The subject is fully discussed in Strohen v. Franklin Saving Fund, etc., Association, 115 Pa. 273. . . . The rights of the stockholders were fixed by the insolvency of the company. Payments made on the stock could not afterward be applied to the indebtedness. The equities of other stockholders forbid this. The payment of dues is, of course, indirectly a payment on the loan. Such payment adds to the value of the stock, and in that way produces a fund out of which payment of the debt is to be made when a sufficient amount for that purpose has been paid in on stock contributions. But this is a very different thing from paying on the mortgage debt. There is a double obligation of the borrowing stockholder. He must pay his mortgage according to its terms, and in addition pay his stock contributions, interest, etc. Payment of the mortgage does not relieve the stockholder from liability for his stock contributions, unless it is expressly so agreed when the money is borrowed or before insolvency; nor can payments on stock be applied to a loan, except by such agreement.”

Assuming that all that is claimed by the defendant was said to the secretary of the association, .and all that he said in reply is absolute verity, and assuming further that the secretary had *337authority to bind the association, it does not seem to us, in view . of the assignment which was made six weeks after the alleged conversation took place, that an appropriation of the stock at its withdrawal value could be used at that time toward the payment of the mortgage. The meeting at which the conversation occurred was the last meeting held by the association. The next step in the winding up of its business was the assignment. This was evidence of insolvency or of the eve of insolvency, so as to render the appropriation, even if it had been made, inequitable and invalid.

It was held in Johnston v. Elizabeth B. & L. Assn., 104 Pa. 394, that the “declarations of the secretary of a corporation as to the amount due on a mortgage held by it are not admissible in evidence in a suit on the mortgage, unless it be shown that the secretary had authority to bind the corporation by such admissions. It is not sufficient to show that as secretary he had charge of the books and accounts of the corporation.”

It was not shown, nor was there an effort to show, that the secretary had any authority to bind the corporation by a statement such as he is alleged to have made to the defendant in this case, nor does the testimony, in our view of it, amount to an appropriation by the defendant. According to her testimony, after stating that she had given the book, with $10.00 therein for the payment of her dues to Mr. Carroll, the secretary, she said: “ A. He handed me back the change and told me that I was clear in the society, and he looked over his books and he looked over mine. Q. What is that? A. He told me I was clear of the society, and he looked over his books and looked over mine. Q. What did he say? A. He told me he would send me my papers and bring everything satisfactory to me, and for me to pay no more into the society — I was through — and I didn’t go there any more until I got notice from Mr. Lewis'about a year or so after this.” There is no allegation that the defendant assigned her stock to the association or that she said or did anything which indicated an intention on her part to make an appropriation of the value of her stock toward the payment of the mortgage. Even if this had been so, as already shown, such an appropriation after the insolvency — and we take it the rule is *338the same, if attempted on the eve of insolvency — would have been invalid. Whether the statement of the secretary meant that, because of the insolvency of the company, she was through with it and should pay no more money, or what the interpretation might be, it is very clear from all the facts of the case, under very numerous authorities, that the declaration of the secretary did not bind the society and that an appropriation actually made by the defendant and accepted and assented to by the secretary could not affect the interest of the other shareholders adversely.

In Kurtz v. Campbell, 218 Pa. 524, affirming the case of Kurtz, Appellant, v. Campbell, 31 Pa. Superior Ct. 516, which was decided upon the authority of York Trust, etc., Co. v. Gallatin, 186 Pa. 150, and Erthal v. Glueck, 10 Pa. Superior Ct. 402, it was held that: “A borrower from a building and loan association has the right to elect to treat all past and future payments of dues on the stock as credits on the bond and mortgage, and to direct the officers of the association so to appropriate and credit the same. In such a case it is immaterial that the appropriation was made in the assignment of the stock rather than on the bond and mortgage, when the assignment of the stock was concurrent with the delivery of the bond and mortgage, and the whole constituted one transaction. The insolvency of the association does not affect an appropriation made prior thereto.” In that case the Supreme Court said: “This case is clearly within the rule of York Trust, etc., Co. v. Gallatin, 186 Pa. 150. The majority of the court are of opinion that on principle that case was erroneously decided, but as it has stood on the books for nine years and many contracts have been made in reliance on it, the principle of stare decisis should prevail and the authority of that decision should not now be disturbed.”

In this case, however, there is no direct evidence of an appropriation by the defendant. It was not made to nor acquiesced in by any officer of the corporation who had authority to do so, and even if it had been so the associátion was on the eve of making an assignment and was undoubtedly insolvent at the time.

*339Practically the only assignment of error here is in the direction of the trial judge of the court below to the jury to find a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1,343.47. The statement, however, furnished by the plaintiff clearly shows that the defendant had credit for all payments made by her on her book which were deducted from the amount of the mortgage, leaving the balance, which with interest was the amount of the judgment. We find no error in directing the judgment for the plaintiff, nor in the amount for which it was entered.

Judgment affirmed.

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