14 Utah 443 | Utah | 1897
The defendant in this case is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Minnesota, and is doing business in this state. It appears from the record that one Charles J. Humphries on December 20, 1891, subscribed for 17 shares of its capital stock, and received a certificate therefor on April 11, 1892, and that the certificate was issued on the condition that the shareholder agreed to pay to the defendant corporation 60 cents monthly for each share, until such monthly payments, together with the profits arising from interest on loans, premiums, and other sources, apportioned to such share, amount to $100. If a monthly payment was not promptly made when due, a fine of 10 cents per share was to be imposed. On the 18th of April, 1892, Humph-ries procured from the corporation a loan of $850 on his 17 shares of stock, making and executing, as evidence thereof, his certain promissory note, and on the same day, as further security for the payment of the sum borrowed, he made, executed, and delivered to the corporation a mortgage on the property mentioned and described in the pleadings herein. The note was made payable after three years from date thereof, and before nine years from date, and at a time when each share of his stock would be of the value of $100. The note provided for interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum, payable on or before the second Tuesday of each month, until each share of the stock would mature and be worth $100; and it contains a pro
There are a number of errors assigned on this appeal, but the principal contention between the parties relates to the application of the payments on the stock procured by Humphries. The plaintiff insists that the monthly payments of dues on the stock, aggregating the sum of $367.2C, should be applied as payment on the principal, and that the court erred in finding that one-half of it should be credited to the corporation in payment of dues on the stock absolutely assigned to it as a premium, and the other half thereof be applied in reduction of the principal. It is evident, in view of the fact apparent from the record, that this contention must be sustained. The plaintiff owns no stock of the corporation, has no interest in it, and can derive no benefit from it. He merely purchased the property which was mortgaged to the corpo
Having reached this conclusion, we do not deem it necessary to consider the cross appeal, nor is it important to discuss any other questions raised in the record. The