150 Mo. 103 | Mo. | 1899
This is a suit in equity instituted* in the Greene Circuit Court by the plaintiff, a borrowing stockholder, against the Equitable Loan & Investment Association of Sedalia, a building and loan association organized under article IX, chapter 21, Revised Statutes 1879, to cancel and declare satisfied two certain deeds of trust on lot four in Kelley’s addition to Springfield, Missouri, given to secure loans obtained by plaintiff from said association. On the hearing in the circuit court the issues were found for the plaintiff and a decree rendered that said deeds of trust be canceled and for naught held, and that plaintiff recover of defendant his costs expended therein; from which judgment defendant appealed.
The petition, after stating that defendant is a building and loan association organized under the statutes of this State, in substance alleges that on the 20th day of March, 1889, being the owner of the real estate in question, and desirous of borrowing $800 with which to build a dwelling house on said premises, and the further sum of.
The answer of defendant, after admitting the incorporation of defendant company and the execution of the note3 and deeds of trust, in substance averred that while the face or par value of plaintiff’s shares of stock was $200 each, yet said shares would not be worth their face value until by the payment of dues thereon as provided by the law governing building and loan associations, together with the profits, they would have earned $200 per share; that under the law governing building and loan associations, and the by-laws of the association, the advancement so made to the plaintiff was upon the full estimated or maturity value of his shares of stock, with the understanding that plaintiff should continue to pay the monthly dues on said shares until they had earned or become worth the sum of $200 per share, and should also pay the association interest upon the amount so advanced until such time as said shares should mature, together with the sum bid for preference and priority of loan. It was further averred that the provision in the obligations secured by the deeds of trust sought to be released, to the effect that the shares of stock pledged to secure the loans in question should mature and be entitled to redemption at the par value of $200 at the epd of one hundred months and then canceled and satisfied, should be construed as an estimated period at which said
The defendant further averred that all of the shares of stock held by the non-borrowing members of the association contained a provision that such shares should also mature and be redeemed at the expiration of one hundred months from the date thereof, and that it would be utterly impossible to carry out such provisions as to all of the members of the association for the reason that such shares would not, at the expiration of the one hundred months period, have earned the full sum of $200 per share; and that if the provision in the deeds of trust sought to be released, providing that the deeds of trust should be released at the end of> one hundred months, provided the dues, interest and penalties on plaintiff’s pledged shares should have been fully paid up to thatpe-riod, should be enforced, the plaintiff would thus acquire an undue preference and an inequitable advantage over the free shareholders and the other members of the association holding shares with like provisions as to the period of maturity; that the shares of stock so pledged by plaintiff had not matured, but had only earned, and were only worth the sum of $141.14 per share; that it was impossible to carry out the agreement.to mature plaintiff’s stock within one hundred months, and also mature the shares of the free shareholders containing a similar agreement touching the time of maturity.
The plaintiff replied by a general denial.
It appears from the record in this case that plaintiff has complied with all the terms and conditions of the obligations entered into by him at the time the loans in question were
Counsel for plaintiff contends that said deeds of trust should be released at the expiration of the one. hundred months period, regardless of the fact that plaintiff’s shares of pledged stock had not matured. On the other hand defendant insists that the foregoing clause in the notes in question stipulating for a release of said deeds of trust at the end of one hundred months, providing the dues, interest and penalties on said shares should have been fully paid for that period, regardless of the maturity of said stock and the earnings of. the association, is in contravention of the statutes of Missouri governing building and loan associations and violative of the principles of mutuality between the shareholders and beyond the powers of the defendant company.
The precise point involved in this appeal was before the Court in Banc in the recent case of Bertche v. Equitable Loan & Investment Ass’n, 141 Mo. 343, where, after a full review of the authorities the conclusion was reached that the statutes of this State governing building and loan associations must be considered as forming a part of- the contract between the borrowing members and the association, and should be so read into their contract as to prevail over their language; and that the provision in the borrowing stockholders’ obligations, providing that the pledged shares should
As to the point made in the very able and exhaustive brief of counsel for plaintiff that there was usury in these loans, it suffices to say that this is not a suit for an accounting in which the debtor pleads usury and asks credit for the amount of usurious interest paid. The plaintiff, on the contrary, by his petition filed herein, bases his claim to relief solely upon the provision in said obligations and deeds of trust providing for a release thereof at the expiration of one hundred months, and upon the further fact that he has complied with the terms and conditions of said obligations by paying all monthly instalments as therein required for the period of one hundred months, and having so complied with his obligations is entitled to the stipulated release of his deeds of trust and the cancellation of his said shares. No mention whatever is made in the pleadings as to the usurious nature of the transaction. Moreover,the circuit courtdoesnot base its decree on the fact that usury has been exacted, but the judgment below, as shown by its recital, is predicated on the fact that plaintiff has paid his monthly dues, instalments and premium for the period of one hundred months. The question of usury was not in this case upon its pleadings and need not now be discussed on this appeal.
Judgment of the circuit court will therefore be reversed and plaintiff’s bill dismissed.