99 Tenn. 344 | Tenn. | 1897
This is a bill filed by the building and loan association to foreclose a mortgage executed on June 20, 1891, conveying the lands of Geo. P. Cannon. Subsequently to. the execution of the mortgage, and on November 2, 1-891, Cannon sold and transferred the same land to Eugate, and took three notes therefor for $466.66, two of which went into the hands of the National Bank of Bristol, and are
The Chancellor refused any relief on the original bill and dismissed it, but granted the prayer of the cross bill, and the association appealed. The Court of Chancery Appeals has considered the case, and found that the building and loan association, at the time it made the loan to Cannon and took the mortgage from him, was doing business in the State of Tennessee without complying with the Acts of the General Assembly prescribing the terms upon which foreign corporations might do business in the State, and that when the notes and mortgage were executed it was conducting its business, in the sense of said Acts, in contravention of their inhibition, and the association was not, therefore, entitled to enforce its contract or foreclose the mortgage, and in all respects affirmed the Chancellor’s decree.
The first question of real controversy in - the case is whether the loan made, and mortgage, taken in this case by the building and loan association, were, at the time when made, in contravention of law:
The Court of Chancery Appeals find that Cannon became a stockholder and applied for his loan before the Acts in question were passed, but that the loan was made and mortgage executed, in the ordinary and regular course of the association’s business, long after their passage, and without a compliance with them, though the association had full knowledge of them.
It is argued that Cannon, having become a stockholder in the association before the Acts were passed, Avith a view to becoming' a borrower and for that purpose, and having made his application for a loan likewise before the Acts passed, acquired a vested right to the consummation of the loan, and the association became legally obligated to complete it, and it was also unfinished business which the association had a right, and which was its duty, to finish, notwithstanding the Acts of the Legislature. If we
We think it cannot be considered that the association and Cannon were winding up an old transaction and unfinished business, but the association, as found by the Court of Chancery Appeals, was entering into new contracts, and, through a local board, doing business in the sense prohibited by the statute, with full knowledge of it and in defiance of its prohibition. Under this finding of facts, the Court of Chancery Appeals was correct in holding that the contract was illegal, and could not be enforced by the Court, and in refusing to foreclose the mortgage of the building and loan association. Carey Lombard Lumber Co. v. Thomas, 8 Pickle, 589; Milan Milling Co. v. Gorten, 9 Pickle, 597.
The decree of the Court of Chancery Appeals is affirmed as to this feature.
A question remains, however, whether the complainant in the cross bill, to wit, Peters, administrator of Cannon, is entitled to the relief, which has been granted to him by the Court of Chancery Appeals.
The principle is that a Court of Equity will
Let a decree be entered reversing and modifying the decree of the Court of Chancery Appeals, to the extent that the bill of complainant building and loan association is dismissed, and the association is taxed with all the costs of this Court and the Court below.
H. G. Peters, administrator of Cannon, could have had the relief prayed m his cross bill against the building and loan association if he had repaid, or tendered do, the association the sum of $975.60.