289 Mass. 339 | Mass. | 1935
This is an action of contract brought by a cooperative bank established and operating under G. L. c. 170 to recover from the original maker of a mortgage note a deficiency remaining unpaid after foreclosure of the mortgage and application to the amount due of the proceeds of the foreclosure sale. On August 9,1926, the defendant borrowed $5,000 from the plaintiff (hereinafter called the bank) and gave to the bank a real estate mortgage for that sum in the statutory cooperative bank form and a
There was a finding for the bank. The defendant claims that.she is not liable, and summarizes her reasons substantially as follows: (1) Because the cancellation of the original shares without her consent “released her as it destroyed the cooperative relation necessary for a debt to such banks”; (2) because by the sale of the equity of redemption subject to the. mortgage the defendant was placed in the position of a surety whose rights have been prejudiced by the “destruction of her collateral” and by the change in the terms of the original mortgage obliga
In order to deal with these defences, it is necessary first to inquire into the purpose and to ascertain the true construction of the last two paragraphs of G. L. c. 170, § 29, under which the bank acted. These paragraphs were inserted in the law governing cooperative banks by St. 1912, c. 623, § 27. The intent' was to provide a simple and inexpensive method by which a borrower, whose shares by reason of payment of dues and accretion through dividends had acquired a substantial value, could apply that value on account of his loan, reducing the loan by the value of the shares, and at the same time could take out new shares in reduced number proportionate to the unpaid balance of the reduced loan. The result of this procedure is to reduce the monthly payments required from the borrower and at the same time to extend the time when the loan will finally be paid by the maturity of the shares pledged to secure it. The plan is of advantage to a considerable class of borrowers who have acquired a substantial equity in their properties by payment of dues on the shares originally pledged, but who, through misfortune or otherwise, find it difficult or impossible to continue the monthly payments at the larger amount originally fixed. Before this change in the law there was no provision by which this result could be brought about without paying off the original loan in its entirety and apply
The construction which we give to G. L. c. 170, § 29, overrides the defences based upon cancellation of the original shares without consent of the defendant, upon alleged interference with the defendant’s rights as a surety and upon any novation in 1929. Section 29 leaves the defendant liable for the balance of her original note in spite of the “Agreement for Reduction of Loan.” We do not intimate whether or not there would be anything in these defences apart from that section. That section was in force when the defendant signed the original note and mortgage, and she is bound by it.
There is nothing in the record which requires a finding that there was a novation in 1926 when the original shares were transferred to Carella. It was not a necessary inference that the bank agreed to look to Carella alone and to release the defendant from her note. Stowell v. Gram, 184 Mass. 562. Owen Tire Co. v. National Tire & Rubber Co. 244 Mass. 522.
There was no requirement of law that the bank should give twenty-one days notice to the defendant under G. L. c. 170, § 32. We think such notice could have been given to Carella as the owner of the shares then pledged for the loan. Lowell Co-operative Bank v. Dafis, 276 Mass. 3, 7. It is doubtful whether the defendant intends to argue that no such notice was given to Carella. If that point is open to the defendant at all, it must be under her request numbered 16, specification “f,” which reads, “That the plaintiff has failed to comply with the provisions of G. L. c. 170.” Request numbered 16, of which specification “f” is a part, is a request for a ruling upon all the evidence. Under such requests specifications are required by Rule 27 of the District Courts (1932). Specification “f” is insufficient under the rule. Chapter 170 of the General Laws is a complete codification of the statute law relative to cooperative banks. It contains
The action is not barred by any statute of limitations. The defendant’s original note was payable in instalments. The loan as a whole did not become due and payable until after the shares pledged as collateral had been forfeited, their value credited and a balance struck as required by G. L. c. 170, § 32. Section 32 is not, as the defendant contends, a statute of limitations.
There is nothing in the defendant’s claim of merger. There was no error in admitting Exhibits 3 and 4.
We have examined all questions open on the record and argued by the defendant, and we find no error.
Order dismissing report affirmed.