86 Mo. App. 301 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
The Phoenix Loan Association was organized under our statute, but is insolvent and in the hands of receivers. The circuit court appointed a referee to adjust the demands against the defunct. The intervenor, Searpaei, presented to the referee for allowance the following written instrument.
“No. 444.
“This is to certify that Mary Catalana is entitled to shares of series B of the capital stock of the Phoenix Loan Association of St. Joseph, Missouri, on which there has been paid by him the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000). The holder of this certificate is entitled to interest on said sum from date hereof at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable semiannually, at the office of said association in the city of St. Joseph, Missouri. This certificate is redeemable at its face value in accordance with the by-laws and its terms. The holder of this certificate by its acceptance and in consideration of the contract and obligation on the part of said association therein contained, waives and releases all right, interest and benefit of said shares in and to the earnings and profits of said association over and above the said semi-annual interest,’ and hereby transfers and assigns all such excess of earnings andi profits, if any, to said association and waives the right to demand the redemption of this certificate at any time within one year from the date hereof.
“Dated, October 6, 1892.
“Signed. William H. Carpenter, President.”
Searpaei contends that the instrument is not a certificate of stock in the defunct, but an obligation for the direct payment of money and that, therefore, as a holder thereof, he is entitled to a preference in payment over the stockholders. The receivers, on the other hand, insist that the certificate is but a certificate for full paid up stock in the association and that, therefore, the relation of'Mrs. Catalana to the defunct was that óf a shareholder having no preferential rights over other, shareholders. If Searpaei sustains the relation of creditor to the defunct then manifestly he is entitled to a preference of payment over the shareholder, but if his relation is that of shareholder or, the assignee of a shareholder he is not.
Section 5 of article 3 of the by-laws of defunct provides that the certificates of the capital stock shall be issued in two series to be called respectively “Missouri Issue” and “Class A,” and that the series to which each certificate belongs shall be plainly designated thereon. Section 6 provides that the capital stock shall be payable in monthly instalments of fifty cents upon each hundred dollars expressed upon the face of the certificate. And (section 7) when one hundred monthly payments have been made upon any stock, either as they become due or in advance, and one hundred full months shall have elapsed from the date on which the first of said monthly payments have become due, according to the terms of the subscription therefor, all further liability for payments and rights to participate in the subsequent profits shall cease and said stock shall be deemed as matured and shall be considered as filed for redemption, etc. It is further provided in section 8
The several provisions of the by-laws just quoted relate to the issue of two kinds of stock. One on which the dues thereon are to be paid monthly and the other in advance. • The certificate here shows on its face that it was not issued for either kind of stock. The subscribers for either are entitled under said by-laws to participate in the earnings, but not so as to the holder of this certificate. No fact is recited in this certificate showing that it was issued under the by-laws of the defunct. And our attention has been called to no provision of the by-laws authorizing any other kind of stock than that already specified.
But by reference to sections one and two of article 4, of said by-laws, it is provided that there shall be issued a series of paid up interest bearing certificates to be denominated “Series B,” and that such certificates shall be issued only for “cash paid in” and shall bear interest not exceeding eight per cent per annum. And that such certificates to be re
The very language employed in said article 4 shows that the certificates authorized by it were to be distinguished from stock certificates, for it provides that such certificates shall be redeemed in the same manner as capital stock except as to the notice to be given of the intention to present for redemption. These certificates are not to be redeemed in the same manner and on the same condition as oilier capital stock, but in the same manner and on the same condition as ca/pital stock. As has been seen, a holder of either kind of stock is entitled, under the bylaws, to participate in the profits and earnings while the holder of a certificate is not. The provision in the certificate to the effect that the payee therein released, waived and assigned all her rights to participate in the profits does not show her to be a shareholder. She was neither benefited nor injured by it. The certificate must be considered as if it contained no such provision.
It appears that the defunct, while a “going concern,” issued interest bearing certificates like that here, amounting to $187,921.88, all of which were paid off except about $8,998.10 still outstanding. It is to be inferred that such certificates were issued for any amount paid in whether great or small, for it appears among those issued was one for only $3.10. The shares of stock were for four hundred dollars each. It is inconceivable that the shares of stock were sold in “vulgar fractions,” or that one paying in three dollars and ten cents and taking therefor the kind, of certificate here, should be to that extent a shareholder. The officers in charge of the business of the defunct certainly did not understand that these interest certificates were stock certificates belonging to either one of the
The books of the defunct do not show that the persons to whom interest certificates were issued were charged a membership fee, yet the by-laws require the exaction of such fees of all those subscribing stock. This circumstance, although apparently trivial in itself, goes to further support the inference that the officers and managers of the defunct did not understand that the holders of these certificates were shareholders or members within the meaning of the by-laws, or else they would have exacted membership fees of them as they did of those subscribing for the stock of “Glass A” and “Missouri Issue.”
In Endlich on Building Associations, section 56, it is stated: “There is, where it is permitted by law to exist, a class known as “depositors” — persons who, without fully entering the circle of the society’s membership, and becoming liable to all its duties, and sharing in all its benefits, use its treasury as a savings bank, in which to deposit, from time ,to time, small sums of money, with the privilege of drawing them, at their pleasure, thereafter, under certain restrictions, and with the addition of interest at a certain moderate rate. These people are not properly members.”
And for the like reasons the holders of the interest certificates here are not properly members. As said by us in the similar case of Grohmann v. Brown, 68 Mo. App. 634: “The claimant by the deposit of her money did not contract for the issue to her of any of the kinds of stock which the association
This certificate, by whatever name it may be called, is, as we think, nothing more nor less than an obligation for the direct payment of money at a specified time; and by the transaction evidenced by the said certificate .the relation of debtor and creditor was created. We have examined with much care the several authorities cited and relied on by the receivers to sustain their contention, but do not find any of them are applicable in a case like this. Our conclusion is that both the referee and the court erred and that the claimant’s demand should be payable out of the assets of the defunct association ahead of the claims of shareholders as such; and, therefore, the judgment will be reversed and cause remanded, to be proceeded with in accordance with the conclusions which we have herein expressed.