65 A. 336 | Md. | 1906
There is but one question raised by this appeal. It is whether, when a building association has become insolvent and is in process of liquidation, one of its members who owes it a mortgage debt may set off against the debt not only the premium and interest but also the dues theretofore paid by him under the mortgage.
No controversy exists as to the facts of the case, of which an agreed statement appears in the record. The facts material to the question brought up by the appeal are as follows:
The Colonial Savings and Investment Association of Baltimore City was incorporated on April 19th, 1897, under the provisions of Art. 23, § 18, clause 5 of the Code relating to Building or Homestead Associations. It continued in operation until December 28th, 1905 when it was judicially declared insolvent and placed in the hands of the appellants as receivers for liquidation by a decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City. It had an authorized capital stock of two hundred and fifty thousand shares of the par value of one hundred dollars each. *644
According to the general scheme of the association as disclosed by the record, subscribers to its stock had the option of paying for it in cash at its face value, or by the payment of specified monthly installments, called "dues" until its maturity i.e. until the assets of the association made the stock worth one hundred dollars per share. The holders of full paid shares were subject to no further assessments and received dividends at the fixed rate of eight per cent per annum. The holders of installment shares received no dividends but their stock was to be credited with a proper share of the earnings of the association.
Each stockholder was entitled to borrow upon mortgage or other satisfactory security from the association, when it had funds on hand, one hundred dollars on each share of his stock. On such loans the borrowing stock holder was required to pay, in monthly installments, interest at the rate of six per cent per annum and a premium at the same rate. If the borrowers stock was installment stock he was required in addition to pay the monthly dues on it. Every member was entitled to one vote at meetings of the association for each share of stock held by him, except that no member who was indebted to the association could vote upon any question affecting its claim against him.
On April 30th, 1898, Harry E. Forwood, being the owner of eighteen installment shares in the association, received a loan thereon from it of $1800, which he secured by a mortgage on a house and lot on Druid Hill avenue. He continued to pay the interest, premium and dues called for by the mortgage until July, 1900, when the appellee John W. Woodland acquired title to the house and lot subject to the mortgage, the payment of which he agreed to assume. Woodland thereafter paid the sums called for by the mortgage until November, 1904, after which he refused to make further payments. It does not appear from the record that the eighteen shares of stock in the association were ever assigned to Woodland, and the account of the mortgage debt on its books seem to have always been kept in the name of Forwood. *645
After the receivers for the association had been appointed and the Forwood mortgage had come to their hands, Woodland filed a petition in the receivership case in the Circuit Court averring that the whole of the mortgage debt had been fully paid and satisfied and he was entitled to have the mortgage released and praying for an order requiring the receivers to release it. The receivers answered the petition denying that the mortgage debt had been paid and asserting that a balance was still due thereon which should be paid in order to entitle the petitioner to the release of mortgage for which he prayed. The issue upon this petition and answer and the testimony taken thereunder having been heard the Circuit Court passed the order appealed from directing the receivers to execute and deliver to Woodland a release of the mortgage. It is admitted that the total payments made as interest, premium and dues amount to more than the mortgage debt with interest at six per cent and, if credit be allowed for all of them, the mortgage debt has been fully paid; but if a proportionate share of the losses sustained by the association be charged against the dues paid there will be a balance due upon the mortgage.
The counsel for the appellant receivers contended before us with skill and plausibility that inasmuch as the association was a mutual one each shareholder should be obliged to bear his share of its losses and the fact that a shareholder was also a borrower did not release him from this obligation; and that therefore to allow credit for all payments made under the mortgage in question without any deduction for losses would operate as an unjust preference of the eighteen shares upon which the mortgage loan was made and would be inequitable to the other stockholders. A number of decisions of both State and Federal Courts were cited which tended strongly to support the appellant's contention.
We do not further notice or discuss the authorities thus cited by the appellant because the question on which they bear was settled in this State by the cases of Low St. BuildingAssociation v. Zucker,
The covenant in the mortgage in the present case required the mortgagor to make the payments therein called for, "until the stock becomes fully matured and of the value of one hundred dollars per share." Under Zucker's mortgage the payments were to be made "until the time arrives when the said body corporate shall have sufficient funds on hand to pay the holders of every unredeemed share of its stock the sum of $100, clear of alllosses and liabilities." Under the Jaecksch mortgage *647 the payments were to be made "until the time should arrive when the association should have sufficient funds on hand to pay the unredeemed shareholders the sum of $150 on each share held by them, clear of all losses and liabilities."
These provisions of the three mortgages are essentially the same, the final clause "clear of all losses and liabilities" found in two of them having no effect upon the grounds on which the Court based its decision in Zucker's and Jaecksch's cases.
In Zucker's case this Court speaking through the late JUDGE ALVEY, said it could perceive no warrant for charging against each share of the mortgagor's stock a proportionate share of the losses of the association and further said of such proposed charge: "The covenant in the mortgage does not justify it in terms nor does it authorize the charge by any fair implication. The covenant is to pay the weekly dues and fines until such time as the association might have a sufficient fund to pay all of the holders of unredeemed shares of stock the sum of $100 per share clear of all losses and liabilities. This of course contemplated the continued existence and operation of the association and that it should terminate in the regular course and mode as provided in the articles of association. It was only in that event that the mortgagors could be required by the terms of this covenant to contribute to losses and liabilities of the association and then only by the prolonged or extended payment of the weekly dues. Losses by the association are chargeable by virtue of this covenant in no other way."
Applying the principles thus laid down to the present case it results that the Circuit Court correctly determined that the appellee Woodland was entitled under the circumstances of the present case to credit on the mortgage debt for all payments of interest, premiums and dues which had been made under the mortgage. We will therefore affirm the order appealed from.
Order affirmed with costs. *648