The defendant -is incorporated under the laws of this- state as a building and savings association. It has for sale different classes of stock, among which are those named by it “A” and- “B.” Provision is made in its by-laws for class A stock as follows : “(1) Any person, upon the payment of one- dollar per share, shall receive a certificate for the same known as ‘Class'A Stock/ and thirty days from the date of such certificate; and monthly thereafter until maturity, there shall be due fifty-eight cents per share, and .when the said payments-, together with the profits and accumulations thereon, shall equal one hundred dollars per share, then the holder thereof shall receive, on the surrender of his certificate, the value- thereof in cash. (2) Any person whose shares in class A may have been withdrawn or matured may at any time thereafter retake a like number of shares without the payment of ^admission fee; or, in cas-e of the- maturity of stock, the owner of such -stock may have the o-ption of withdrawing Ms admission fee of $1 per share, and thus terminate his membership-.” The provision in the by-laws- in regard to- class B stock is- as follows: “(1) Forty dollars per share, paid in advance, with one dollar per share admission fee, shall entitle any person to a prepaid certificate of one hundred dollars per share, par value at maturity, to be designated a-s ‘Class B Stock/ upon which no further payment shall be required, and such shares shall be charged two per cent, per annum
Y. The defendant has presented questions in argument which we have not specially mentioned. They include those raised on the introduction of evidence, the personal liability of Price for the money he received, the sale by him of a kind of stock which the defendant could not issue, the failure of the plaintiff to return the certificate issued to him in due time, and the correctness of a portion of the charge given to the jury. Some of these questions are disposed of by what we have already said, and others are not of sufficient importance to be treated at length. It is sufficient to say that we have examined all questions discussed, with care, but do not find sufficient grounds for disturbing the judgment of the district court. The plaintiff dealt with Price in his representative capacity only, and paid him money under an agreement which the defendant refuses to perform. The record shows that the plaintiff never accepted the certificate sent to him, but demanded one in accordance with his agreement, and within a reasonable time returned the one he had received. Under the circumstances shown, the payment made to Price was payment made to the defendant, and as it has refused to issue a certificate for the stock on account of which the payment was made, it should refund the money received by its agent. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.