45 W. Va. 275 | W. Va. | 1898
Thomas S. Savage and E. J. Savage, administrators of the estate of George Savage, deceased, brought a suit in equity in the Circuit Court of Wood County, against-the People’s Building, Loan & Savings Association, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of New York, to recover from the defendant the sum of eight hundred and forty dollars, with interest thereon from the 10th day of August, 1892, claimed to be due the plaintiffs, as the withdrawal value of fourteen shares of paid-up stock in the defendant company. An attachment was sued out against the defendant, and levied on its real estate situated in said county. The sole ground upon which the order of attachment was based was that the defendant was a foreign corporation. The defense interposed with a plea in abatement of the suit, a plea in abatement to the attachment, and a demurrer and answer to the bill. Depositions were taken by plaintiffs and defend
The first error assigned and relied on by the defendant is that the court erred in failing and refusing to dismiss the plaintiffs’ bill upon the plea in abatement to said suit. This plea, in substance claims that the plaintiffs did not at the time of the institution of said suit have a right to institute it in the State of West Virginia, because, as fully shown in the bill, if any such suit or action existed at the time the same was instituted, it should have been brought in the county of Ontario and state of New York; that it is a corportion of the state of New York, and has fully complied with the laws of West Virginia governing foreign corporations doing business in this State, has caused an attorney in fact to be appointed, as required by statutes of West Virginia, and the plaintiffs could not obtain jurisdiction by attachment of defendant’s property in this State; that defendant is a solvent corporation, and no ground for said attachment existed. This question was passed upon by this Court in the case of Quesenberry v. Association (recently decided, and not yet officially reported) 30 S. E.
It is insisted by counsel for the appellant in his brief that this suit abated by reason of the fact that the summons was issued on the 2d day of December, 1895, and was returnable to rules to be held on the 1st of December, 1895, — a day prior to the date on which it issued, and before the suit was instituted, — and a considerable portion of his argument is devoted to the consideration of this alleged mistake. A stipulation is filed with attorneys’ brief for the appellees, signed by counsel for both parties, which reads as follows: “It is stipulated and agreed that the original summons in this case was issued to rules to be held on the first Monday of December, 1895, whereas it is printed on page 7 of record as ‘on the 1st day of December, 1895.’” This stipulation therefore disposes of the first assignments of error, which were based upon the alleged fact that said summons was returnable to the 1st day of December, 1895.
The appellant assigns as the third point of error that the court erred in not sustaining the demurrer to plaintiffs’ bill, and in overruling the same; as the bill clearly shows on its face that there was no debt due at the time of the institution of this suit. Can this assignment be sustained?
Could the contract be varied or altered by the enactment of subsequent laws, changing time and terms of payment? On this point, Beach on the Modern Law of Contracts (section 1223, p. 1615) says: “A person has the right to treat the by-laws given to him on becoming-a member of the association as all the by-laws such association has; and he is not bound to take notice of modifications of such bylaws with respect to withdrawing, on the record of the company simply, without further notice to him, which notice must be proven by the defendant company to have been given,” — citing McKenney v. Association, 8 Houst, 557, (18 Atl. 905). Again, in Association v. Lewis, 1 Colo. App. 127, (27 Pac. 872), the court held that: “Where plaintiff became a member of defendant building association at a time when a by-law provided that all nonborrow - ing stockholders wishing to withdraw shall be privileged so to do upon giving notice to the directors of his or her intention, and shall be entitled to receive the amount of installments actually paid in without interest, plaintiff’s right of withdrawal was a vested right, of which defendant could not deprive him without his own consent by a subsequent repeal of the by-law.” The general proposition is well and properly stated in ' 5 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 96, where it says: “A corporation has not the power, by laws of its own enactment, to disturb or devest rights which it has created, or to impair the obligations of its contracts, or to change its responsibility to its members,
Authorities might be multiplied upon this question, but these are regarded as sufficient to establish the doctrine of the inability of a corporation, by subsequent by-laws, to take from a stockholder therein vested rights, acquired under by-laws existing at the date of the contract made with the corporation at the time said shares were acquired. After agreeing that stockholders may withdraw at the end of three years, upon surrender of their paid-up certificates, the amount paid on same, with interest at six per cent, per annum, such corporation cannot, by subsequent by-law, provide that the association shall not be required to pay out, on withdrawing and matured stock, more than 'one-half the amount received from dues and stock pav-ments in any month. To sustain the validity of such bylaw would imply the right to say that but one-tenth of the receipts from dues and stock payments in any month should be paid on withdrawal, and thus indefinitely prolong the payment of withdrawal value, when, as in this case, the holder had fully complied with all the requirements of his contract. My conclusion, therefore, is that the court committed no error in overruling the demurrer. As to the right to recover, this Court held in Haigh v. Association, 19 W. Va., 793, that “a member of a building association who complies with its constitution and by-laws, and, under their provisions, withdraws, can recover the amount due him under such constitution and by-laws, by an action of assumpsit in which there is no special count, but only the common counts.” So, in a recent case decided by the supreme court of South Carolina (McNab v. Association, 27 S. E. 543), it is held that “where a building and loan association’s by-laws provide that a member who has made all payments may surrender his shares of stock
The contention that the defendant was improperly proceeded against as a nonresident or foreign corporation has already been considered, and shown to be no longer an open question in this State.
The ninth condition found on the back of the certificates of shares, providing that any action brought against the association by shareholders shall be brought on or before six months from the date the cause of action accrues, and, in the county of Ontario, N. Y., was a void requirement, as jurisdiction cannot be taken away by consent. See Nate v. Insurance Co., 9 Gray, 174-180; Hall v. Insurance Co., 6 Gray, 185; Reichard v. Insurance Co., 31 Mo., 518.
The affidavit and order of attachment sued out appear to be regular, and in compliance with the statute, and the lien thereby created properly directed to be enforced against the real estate levied upon. I am therefore of opinion that the decree complained of must be affirmed, with costs and damages.
Affirmed.