100 Tenn. 607 | Tenn. | 1898
The object of this bill is to cancel a mortgage executed to a building and loan association upon the ground that the debt secured has been paid.
It appears from the proof in the record that on September 12, 1891, complainant borrowed of the New Orleans Loan, Building & Sayings Association, a corporation having its domicile in the State of Louisiana, the sum of $500, and, to secure its payment, executed a mortgage on a certain lot in the city of Memphis. The consideration recited in the mortgage was $776.50, but complainant only received $500, the additional $276.50 representing the premium, fees, and interest, to accrue during the pen-dency of the loan, which was to extend over a period of six or eight years.. Complainant executed seventy-eight notes for ’ten dollars and fifty cents each, payable monthly, evidencing the consideration expressed in the deed. Complainant paid to the association twenty-two of these notes as they matured, amounting to $231. He further-paid $30.50 as dues, 'and at the time the trouble arose with the association was in no default on any account.
In 1893 complainant was notified by said association that it had gone into liquidation, and suggesting- that, with., complainant’s consent, it would transfer its claim against him, as well as the security
Complainant further alleges that defendant association, at the time of entering into this contract, had not filed its charter, as required by the Act of 1891, and hence the contract was illegal and void. It is then shown that defendant company had complied with the Act of the Legislature passed May 10, 1895, validating the contracts of foreign corporations by filing its charter, as required by the original Act. The Act approved May 10, 1895, validated all contracts entered into by foreign corporations, provided such corporation had filed a copy of its charter
The defendant, as already stated, filed its charter under the provisions of this Act, and likewise caused the charter of the New Orleans Loan, Building & Savings Association to be recorded in this State.
Complainant files this bill for a settlement with defendant company under the second section of the Act of 1895, and claims that he has already paid back to the company more than the amount bor
The defendant association denies the allegations of the bill in respect of the relations established between the New Orleans Loan, Building & Savings Association and the New South Building & Loan Association 'in the disposition of loans and securities made by members of the former association. Defendant insists that it agreed with the new Orleans Loan, Building & Savings Association, when the latter went into liquidation, that it would make loans to all borrowers who were willing to accept such loans and pay off their mortgages held by the former association, provided a certain number of subscribers to their stock was obtained; that such subscribers were furnished, and defendant company thereupon made loans to such borrowers as made application, upon sufficient security. It is insisted that each loan was an original transaction, entirely independent of the loan made by. the former company, and that defendant company received no benefit whatever from the money theretofore paid to the said New Orleans Loan, Building & Savings Association. Defendant company' claims that it loaned to complainant, Neal, on the building and loan plan, the sum pf §500, to enable him to pay off his mortgage to the former company, which had become insolvent, and accepted a new mortgage as security for said loan. It admits that it retained the old
A large volume of proof was taken, and, on the final hearing, the Chancellor was of opinion that the two mortgages were separate and distinct transactions, and that the payments made by complainant, in the mortgage executed to the old company, could not be credited on the second mortgage. The Chancellor denied a settlement under the building and loan plan, but decreed a settlement on the basis of the Act of 1895, charging complainant with the $500 check and interest thereon at six per cent., and crediting him with amounts and interest paid on second mortgage. Complainant and defendant both appealed.
Complainant assigned as error—
(1) That the Chancellor found that the two transactions with the two associations were separate and independent of each other;
(2) That the Chancellor erred in not finding that the note and mortgage executed by complainant to defendant was without consideration and void;
(3) That the Chancellor erred in not finding that the check given by defendant company to complain-, ant for. $500 was a mere matter of form, and that no money actually passed;
(4) The Chancellor erred . in not finding in. favor
(5) That the Chancellor erred in adjudging one-half the costs against complainant.
The defendant assigned as error the action of the Chancellor in decreeing that Sec. 2, Ch. 119, Acts 1895, applies under the facts in this case, and that settlement should be made thereunder instead of upon the building and loan plan, as set out in the mortgage and note executed to defendant company. The Chancellor, as already stated, decreed a settlement as provided by Sec. 2, Ch. 119, Acts 1895, but' did not include in this settlement the amounts paid by complainant to the New Orleans Loan, Building & Savings Association. But defendant’s assignment is that it was not doing business in this State; that it had no local board here, and that the loan to complainant was made direct from its home office in New Orleans, La., through its attorney, and that it did not have an office or agency in this State. It is insisted, further, that said indebtedness is payable in New Orleans, State of Louisiana, and that the law of Louisiana — the place of performance — governs, and not the law of Tennessee. It is well settled that the, law of the place where performance is to occur governs in respect of the validity and performance of contracts made in one State, but to be
In Bennett v. Eastern Building & Loan Association of Syracuse, New York, 35 Atl. Rep., 684, it appeared that a citizen of Pennsylvania, on application made in that State to an agent of a New York building and loan association, became a member thereof and obtained a loan from it, giving notes and bond therefor, secured by mortgage on Pennsylvania lands. All the instruments describing the association as of Syracuse, New York, and declaring the notes payable at its office there, the Court held that it was a New York contract. The Court said, viz.: “The Pennsylvanian had a right to borrow money in the State of New York if he chose to do so, and if he contracted to pay it in the State of New York he must be conclusively presumed to know that his contract would be governed by the law of that State. In all this there is not a shadow of unlawful intent to evade the law of Pennsylvania.” Equitable B. & L. Assn. v. Vance (S. C.), 27 S. E. Rep., 274.
In the case of Pioneer Loan Co. v. Cannon, 96 Tenn., 603, we held that a note and mortgage of lands situated in this State to secure it and stipulating for the payment of five per cent, interest per annum* and five per cent, premium per annum, made payable to a building and loan association in Minnesota, were not usurious because a Minnesota contract, and authorized by the charter of the company and
The loan secured by the mortgage executed by complainant to defendant company is payable in New Orleans, in the State of Louisiana, and each of the installment notes is so payable. The contract is essentially a Louisiana contract, and does not contravene any statute of this State. The defendant company, at the time this contract was made, was domiciled in the State of Louisiana; it had no local board or agency here, and was , not carrying on business in this State in the sense of the statute.. It was therefore not amenable to the statute requiring a foreign corporation to register its charter as a condition of doing business in this State. The Chancellor was therefore -in error in decreeing that complainant was entitled to a settlement with this company upon the basis of the Act of 1895 governing foreign corporations. The settlement must be made upon the building and loan plan, as contemplated by the contract of the parties.
The next question presented is whether complainant, in making this settlement, is entitled to be credited with payments made to the old association. The solution of the question depends upon a proper understanding of the relations existing between the old and the new company. If the transaction with the two associations were distinct and independent of each other, then it is obvious the defendant company can only be charged with payments made to it; but if
‘ ‘ The advance made by this respondent association
The proof shows that the only money received by this complainant from both of these associations was the sum of $500, advanced by the old company, and, the old company becoming insolvent and unable to carry out its contract, procured the new company to take its place. Complainant, at the instance of the liquidators of the old company, did make formal application for membership in the new company and
We are constrained to view the transaction with the new company as simply a continuation of the original contract. It was simply a transfer of the loan and mortgage from the old to the new company, accomplished by the execution of new instruments. The consideration for the new mortgage was the cancellation of the old mortgage and the extin-guishment of the old note by the execution of the new note, which was effected under the substitutional arrangement between the companies.
The result is, that the decree of the Chancellor is reversed, and a settlement will be made between these parties upon the building and loan plan, and in said settlement the complainant will be credited with all payments made, both upon the old and new mortgage. The costs of the appeal will be divided.