96 N.Y.S. 851 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
This case involves the same principles as those in the case of Preston v. Hockey (-App. Div. —-), argued at the same'term, as
, While the facts -differ in amount, and slightly as' to details, the questions of law are not different in any of these cases,, and we will consider the facts in the. Reinhart case. ■ The New York BxiildingLoan Banking Company was ox’ganized in' 1890,' under the provisions of chapter 122 of the Laws of 1851, as amended, and did business at No. Ill Fifth avenue in the borough of Manhattan, with a branch office in Brooklyn; In January, 1903, proceedings were instituted by the Attorney-General for the dissolution of the corporation for insolvency, fesxilting in the appointment of the plaintiff as permanent receiver on or about the 24th day of February, 1904. The objects for which the corporation Was formed, as set forth in' its articles of association, were, a'mong other things, - “ The accumxtlatibn of a fiind for the purchase of real estate, the erection of bixildtirgs, making any other improvements on lands and paying off incumbrances thereon, or to aid its; members in acquiring real estate, making improvements thex-eon, and removing incumbrances therefrom; and the 'accumulation of a fund to be returned to its members who do not obtain advances on their shares, when the funds of the Corporation to the Credit of such share sh.all amount to one hundred dollars a share, which is the full or par Value of a share, and for the traiisaction of the general business' of a Building,
It seems clear that the Few York Building-Loan Banking Company is not a stock corporation in the proper use of that terna, but is a membership corporation (see Gen. Corp. Law [Laws of 1892, .chap. 687], § 3, subd. 2, asvamd. by Laws of 1895, chap. 672) in . which the corporate entity discharges its duties by acting as trustee for funds contributed by its members to mature or bring to par the so-called shares of stock. 'When any share of stock of a particular class has reached the value of $100 the membership based upon such share comes to an end by the corporation paying over the $100 to the subscriber, or by transferring the property which has been purchased through the advances made by the corporation; there is no authority for continuing the investment and increasing the value of the share; there is no authority for declaring dividends out of the surplus profits. All that the .corporation has to do with the transaction is to husband the funds and accumulate the contributions, whether in the form of interest, premiums,, forfeitures or fines, and to pay them over whenever the shares have become of the value of $100, so that in dealing with the equities in these cases, in an action for the foreclosure of the mortgage given by the defendants, we are not to consider the corporation as a business corporation, in the sense that it is entitled to the privileges of a stock corporation like those of a bank or trust company. Thé corporation, as a corporation, has, in theory at least, no interest in the funds in its control; it is created purely for the purpose of transacting the business of a large group of people, and enabling them, through mutual contributions, to accomplish results which in their individual capacities they would . be unable to accomplish. On the one hand the corporation says to the man who wants a home that if he will give a certain premium for the privilege the corporation will advance the money necessary to place him in possession of the home; it will give him the present utility value of his investment, and will enable him, through a series of small payments, to mature the stock which will'pay the obliga
In the case at bar the defendants’ assignors, parties named White, had applied to the corporation for an advance to enable them to acquire a house and lot on Forty-first street, Brooklyn, and had subscribed for forty-five and one-third class A shares in the company, and the corporation had issued to them the usual certificate for forty-five and one-third class A shares and the usual passbook in which the monthly payments to be made were to be entered. The corporation purchased the premises for the Whites and transferred the property to them, rebeiving back the usual bond and mortgage. The transaction was carried on in the usual manner until 1897, when the defendants took the place of the Whites, the certificate and passbook and the property being transferred to them and a new bond and mortgage executed by them in all respects similar to the bond and mortgage executed by the Whites. This bond and mortgage was for the sum of $4,533, the par value of the stock, the amount being obtained as follows: Gash paid by the corporation, $1,100; underlying mortgages, $3,100; premium charged on loan, $733; making a total of $4,933, from which, was deducted $400 paid by the member, leaving the amount of the bond and mortgage $4,533 as above stated. Subsequently the corporation paid $400
When it is remembered that the defendants, in common with others, had entered into these contracts under" the authority of the Legislature, each having agreed to. pay a. premium, with fines and penalties under the conditions named in the contract, why should any one of them be permitted to renounce the duties and obligations of membership under the plea of an equitable adjustment! Every member, who has been contributing his payments has been doing so upon the assurance that every other member was to do the same thing, under penalty of foreclosure, the imposition of fines, or other, conditions named in the agreement, and it would be a strange perversion of the jurisdiction of a court-of equity to permit these defendants to avoid their obligations, deliberately entered into, by treating them merely.as-debtors for the amount of money advanced by the, corporation, and crediting them with all that has been paid
We are equally persuaded that the defendants are not entitled to any credit on the score of the excess on interest paid on the underlying mortgages. If the underlying mortgages commanded but five per cent interest, while the defendants paid six per cent on the com tract, that was an advantage to the corporation, representing the members of the corporation "generally, and the excess would simply go to the fund devoted to the maturing of the shares.
The cases of Riggs v. Carter (77 App. Div. 580) and Roberts v. Cronk (supra; affd. on opinion below, 182 N. Y. 546) afford authority for the decisions already rendered, and we should have been content to rest our determination upon the opinion of Mr. Justice Gaynor had it not been for the urgency with which the •appellants have contended that there was error in that decision.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Hirschberg, P. J., Bartlett, Jenks and Hooker, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.