69 A. 114 | Md. | 1908
The question presented by this appeal is in a certain sense a corollary to the one determined by us in the case of the present appellees against John W. Woodland reported in
We are asked in the present appeal to go a step further and say that if the payments of interest, premiums and dues, made to the same association by one of its shareholders under a mortgage given by him to it, exceed the amount of the mortgage debt and interest and the association become insolvent he is entitled, in the liquidation of its assets, to be repaid such excess in full before the other shareholders receive anything on account of their shares; or, in other words, that, as to such excess, his relation to the association is to be regarded as having been changed from that of shareholder to that of creditor.
The issue now before us arose as follows. After the decision in Woodland's case the appellees as receivers in the further liquidation of the assets of the association, allowed to each shareholder indebted to it upon mortgage credit on his mortgage debt for all payments of interest premiums and dues made by him to the association up to the date of the receivership. It happened that the total payments thus made to the association by a number of these borrowing shareholders, including the present appellants who received a loan of $2,500, exceeding the amounts due on their respective mortgages, and as to such excess they were treated by the auditor as shareholders and allowed the same dividend (15 per cent) thereon as was allowed to the other shareholders upon the amounts which had been paid into the association by them. The appellants excepted to the auditor's account allowing this dividend insisting that they were entitled to be treated quoad the excess amounting to $891.01, of their payments over their mortgage debts and interest as creditors of the association and to receive payment thereof in full. Their exceptions having been overruled and the account finally ratified they appealed from the order of ratification.
There is no dispute as to the facts of the case and the record contains an agreement that reference may be made to Woodland's case for the contents of the certificate of incorporation and by-laws of the association. As in that case we stated the history and character of the association and the general scheme of its operations we deem it unnecessary to *447 repeat them here. It is sufficient for the purposes of this case to say that the association was a mutual building association having both full paid shareholders who received dividends at eight per cent on their stock and installment shareholders who received no dividends, and that the question before us concerns only the rights of installment shareholders. The consideration of that question will be simplified by treating the installment shareholders as composed of two divisions, borrowers and non borrowers, whose rights and relation to the association were in all respects the same except in so far as those of the borrowing shareholders were modified by the new relations assumed by them as mortgagors. Or to state the proposition in a different form, the non borrowing members stood simply to the association in the relation of shareholders, while the borrowing members occupied the dual relation to it of shareholders and mortgagors.
Under the scheme of the enterprise all of these installment shareholders were required to pay monthly dues to the association at the same rate upon each share of their stock until all of the stock became of the par value of $100 per share but the borrowing shareholders were required as such to make further and additional monthly payments to the association equal to interest at the rate of six per cent per annum on their mortgage loans and a like amount as premium on their loans. Section nine of the by-laws of the association provides that "borrowers who desire to release their mortgaged property by paying all of their indebtedness to the association may at any time on application to the association, be allowed to do so." As the interest and premium are payable only with respect to the mortgage debt, if the borrowing member were at any time permitted to pay off his mortgage debt his obligation to continue those payments would cease but unless he withdrew from the association he would still remain liable for the payment of his monthly dues until the maturity of his shares, both as a matter of law and by virtue of by-law No. 21 which provides that "the shares of a borrower who has repaid his loan shall be released and may be *448 withdrawn or continued until maturity sharing in full profits." He would in that event cease to hold the dual relation of mortgagor and shareholder to the association but would be remitted to the rights and obligations of a shareholder only.
The foregoing propositions are predicated upon the assumption that the association continues to be a solvent and going concern. If however insolvency and liquidation of the association supervene, as they have done in the present case, the contracts of the association not only with its mortgagors but also with its shareholders as originally contemplated become impossible of performance and are destroyed and the rights and liabilities under both classes of contracts must be settled in the ordinary way upon equitable principles. We have already determined the right of the mortgagor under such circumstances to receive credit on his mortgage debt for all dues, interest and premiums paid under his mortgage up to the establishment of the insolvency of the corporation in the cases of the Low St. Bldg. Ass'n v.Zucker,
The application, of the principles relied on in those cases, to the facts of the present one requires us to hold that the appellants were entitled to credit on their mortgage debt for so much of the dues, interest and premiums paid by them to the association during the life of the mortgage as were requisite to satisfy the mortgage debt and interest, but when by such credit the mortgage was satisfied and extinguished they were ipsofacto relegated to the position and rights of shareholders in reference to the residue of the payments so made by them, if, as in the present case, such residue did not exceed the amount paid by them as dues, exclusive of interest and premium. We draw this distinction between the several classes of payments because, as we have already said, the payment of the dues although secured by the mortgage was primarily incident to the appellants relation of shareholders in the association while *449 their obligation to pay interest and premium sprung primarily from their relation of mortgagors or debtors to it.
Under these circumstances the auditor was right in allowing the appellants only the same rate of dividend, upon the $891.01 excess of their total payments over their mortgage debt and interest, which was allowed to the other installment shareholders upon the amount of dues paid into the association by them and the learned Judge below committed no error in overruling the exceptions and finally ratifying the account. We must therefore affirm the order appealed from.
Order affirmed with costs.