101 Ala. 582 | Ala. | 1893
The main question in this case, as stated by the appellant, is the right and power of the* Southern Building and Loan Association to declare forfeited the shares of a borrowing member. Or, as. stated by counsel for appellees, “The cause was submitted in the court below upon an agreed state of facts, and the single point of dispute turns upon the question of the right of the Southern Building and Loan Association to forfeit the shares of stock held by it as collateral, and the refusal of said association to credit its mortgage with the value of the stock, or the aggregate amount of the payments made by Isaac Linsky on account of said stock, or on account of said loan. There is no dispute as to what payments were made, but the Southern Building and Loan Association plants itself upon the proposition, that it is entitled to recover the full amount of the original loan with interest, without any abatement for the value of the stock, or the aggregate amount of payments made by Isaac Linsky during the life of the loan.. The learned court below held that this construction was inequitable and not within the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was made, and that the junior mortgagee and the assignee for the benefit of creditors were entitled to redeem upon paying the amount of the mortgage loan, after deducting the value of the stock, or the aggregate amount of the payments made by said Isaac Linsky prior to making default.” We thus have the issue plainly and sharply defined, and the parties treat the value of the stock, as merely the aggregate of all the payments which have been made upon it, thus following the rule which is laid down in the books for the ascertainment of its value — Endlich on Building Asso., §§ 455, 457, and authorities there cited.
This question has given rise to some confusion in the
In principle there can be no difference in the rule as to the prompt payment of premiums on a policy in a life insurance company, and the premiums and other dues on a building and loan contract, and this court, speaking of the former, said : “It is too late, at this
With these principles in view, let us enquire into the particulars of the case we have before us. This association was chartered under the provisions of the Code, Part 2, Tit. 1, Oh. 4. Section 1556 confers upon Building & Loan /Associations, chartered thereunder, the power, (4.) “To make all needful rules and regulations and by-laws, for the transaction of its business, and the management and control of its affairs;” (6.) “To compel payment and compliance with all lawful orders, by fines and forfeitures;” and (12.) “To secure the payment of instalments and loans, and a compliance with all the terms on which loans are purchased, by mortgages with power of sale on real estate, and the same to foreclose on default, ” &c.
The Association adopted a code of by-laws clearly
Linsky signed his applications for the loan he received, and in them he agreed, “I will also comply with all the rules and regulations of the association. ’ ’ They were approved, and under them he received a loan from the association for $2,000, on the 16th June, 1890, for
From what has been said, it appears, then, that the association was duly organized, under a charter obtained under the general law of the State for that purpose ; that the statute under which it was organized authorized it to make all needful by-]$yrs for the tyans$c
The appellant is entitled to the full amount of its said loan, principle and interest, according to the terms of the contract, from the time said Linsky ceased to pay the same thereon, without any abatement for the value of the stock forfeited, and if the same is not promptly paid, in redemption of its said mortgage by the complainant in the cross bill, or by the complainant in the original bill, — the complainant having submitted itself to the authority of the court to that end, — it is entitled to a decree of foreclosure of its said mortgage, and to a sale of the real property therein described, for the payment of its said debt and interest.
The complainant in the cross bill is entitled to redeem from the mortgages of the appellant and of the Anniston Loan & Trust Company, by paying the amounts that may be ascertained to be due thereon, respectively, within a short time to be specified by the court; and, in default of such redemption by him, then, the complainant in the original bill, the Anniston Loan & Trust Company, is entitled to redeem from the mortgage of the defendant, the Southern Building & Loan Association, by paying the full amount due thereon, principal andin
The decree of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in conformity with the above directions.
Reversed and remanded.