Sullivan v. Spaniol

78 Ill. App. 125 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1898

Mr. Justice Wright

delivered the opinion of the court.

The American Building Loan and Investment Society-was incorporated November 22, 1888, under the provisions, of an act of the General Assembly, entitled “ An act to enable associations of persons to become a body corporate to raise funds to be loaned only among the members of such associations,” in force July 1, 1879, better known as the homestead loan association law. The capital stock was $50,000,. 000, and the principal office at Chicago. The appellee, Henry Spaniol, purchased twelve shares, at the par value of $100 each, of the stock of the society, for which a certificate thereof. was issued to him March 1, 1890, having printed thereon a copy of the by-laws of the society, the two combined constituting the contract. The stipulation of the certificate stated it was issued and accepted upon the terms and conditions that the shareholder was to pay, or cause to be paid, a monthly installment of seventy-five cents on each share of the. stock during the continuance of" the1 contract, and whenever the monthly payments made on any share, together with the profits apportioned to such share, amounted to $100, the share should be deemed to have ma-tured and no more monthly payments should be required; the society agreed to pay the shareholder $100‘for each of said shares at the end of six. and one-half years, according to the by-laws attached to the certificate. Neither statute nor by-laws permitted loans to other than members of-the' society. Spaniol obtained a preference for an advance, of his twelve shares of stock at a premium of ten per cent, he agreeing to comply with the charter and by-laws of the' society, and to pay five per cent premium and five per cent interest, and to give a mortgage on specified real estate. He and his wife executed a mortgage to the society March 1, 1890, to secure the sum of $1,455. This amount was composed as follows monthly dues on twelve shares of stock for seventy-five months at seventy-five cents on each share, $675;. and ten per cent premium and interest on loan pay-' able monthly, $780, for seventy-eight months. Seventy-five notes, $19 each, were given, one payable on the last Saturday in June, 1890, and one payable on the last Saturday of each month thereafter until all were paid. For interest and premium for the month of May, 1890, and September and.October, 1896, notes were given for ten dollars each, payable on the last Saturday of each of those months. Three months’ dues on stock, $27, had been paid before the mortgage was given. From advance or loan the premium of $120 was subtracted, and Spaniol received from the society $1,080 in cash. In addition to the mortgage, the certificate of the twelve shares of stock was assigned to the society as further security for the advance or loan. The by-laws of the society by the express stipulation of the mortgage are made part of the contract. By resolution of the directors of the society, December 30, 1893, application was made to the Circuit Court of the United States, Northern District of Illinois, for a receiver of the society, and thereafter it ceased doing business, the same being insolvent. A receiver was appointed to take charge of the association and wind up its business.

In November, 1893, appellees had paid forty-two of the nineteen dollar notes and the ten dollars due from May, 1890; and subsequently they have paid to the complainant, as receiver, $647, in discharge of the remaining thirty-five notes which have been surrendered to them. Two dividends of $40.50 each were declared in favor of appellee, one November 27, 1894, the other February 21, 1895. The appellant, on December 20,1S96, claiming a balance due from appellees upon the mortgage, which they refused to pay, filed the present bill for foreclosure. Appellees answered the bill, claiming théy had paid the mortgage in full, denied that any balance was due thereon, and filed cross-bill praying to have the mortgage released. Issues being formed on the bill and cross-bill the cause was referred to the master to take the evidence, with directions to report his conclusions of law and fact. The master reported $526.24 still due from appellees upon the mortgage. Exceptions to this report were sustained by the court, and a finding entered that the indebtedness secured by the mortgage was fully paid before the original bill was filed, and a decree was entered dismissing the bill for want of equity. The cross-bill was also dismissed. From the decree dismissing the original bill for want of equity ? appellant prosecutes this appeal, assigning such action of the court for error.

It is insisted, in support of the decree, that the mortgage was given only to secure the notes therein described, and upon the payment thereof the same was discharged and entitled to be released. This position is contested by appellant, who claims the mortgage was given to secure the payment of not only the notes described in the mortgage, but also the installments due to the shares of stock as provided by the by-laws of the society, until the same were fully paid, and the mortgage continued to be a valid and binding lien for such balance as might appear to be due thereon.

While courts of equity as well as courts of law, can not make for persons a contract different from that intended by the parties to such contract, still it is a well established and elementary tenet of equity jurisprudence, that in a suit in chancery, the chanóellor may brush aside and disregard mere matters of form, and look into the depths of the transaction of the parties to ascertain their real intent and purpose; and when discovered, to give effect' to such intention. It is a familiar principle that the law under which a contract is made enters into and forms a part of the contract as effectually as if written therein; and in the construction thereof all the facts and circumstances surrounding the parties, so far as can be ascertained from the contract itself, may be considered in ascertaining and giving effect to the intention of the parties to the contract, at the time of entering into its terms. If provisions or stipulations are found in the contract which are apparently illegal, or inconsistent with the law, they will be harmonized or disregarded, if possible to do so, for it will not be presumed, unless it can not be avoided, the parties intended to violate the law.

The object for which appellant society was organized is aptly expressed in the title of the act by which it was created—“ to raise funds to be loaned only among the members of such association.” Appellee Henry Spaniol'could not, therefore, obtain a loan represented by the mortgage until he first became vested with the qualifications of membership, and by assuming all the obligations imposed upon members by the statute, and such by-laws as were authorized or permitted by the statute. The instant he became a member of the society he was a constituent part thereof, and he became bound by all its acts, as effectually as if performed by himself, because' the officers of the association were his agents as well as that of all other shareholders. He was first, above all things else, bound by the law; and if by-laws, contracts or stipulations were made by the society inconsistent with the law, he could gain no advantage therefrom,* otherwise he would be permitted to take advantage of his own wrong. His first obligation, therefore, under the statute, was that he should make periodical payments upon his subscription of twelve shares of the stock of the society until such payments, together with the earnings of the society, should equal the full face value of the shares. Ho bylaw or agreement of the society, that the shares should mature within six and one-half years, or any other fixed period, would avail to relieve him from this statutory obligation, because such would be inconsistent with the statute under which the corporation has its existence, and antagonistic to the legal purposes and plans of such organizations, and not enforcible as contracts merely. King v. International Building Loan and Investment Union, 170 Ill. 135.

Section 8 of the act in question ] rovides that the money in the treasury shall be offered by the board of directors for loan in open meeting; and the stockholders who shall bid the highest premium for the preference or priority of loan, shall be entitled to receive a loan of one hundred dollars for each share of stock held by said stockholders, and the premium bid may be deducted from the loan in one amount, or may be paid in such proportionate amounts, or installments, and at such times during the existence of the shares of stock borrqwed upon, as may be designated by the by-laws; no loan shall be made by the corporation except to its own members, nor. in any sum in excess of the amount of stock held by such members borrowing; mortgage security upon real estate to be given. It seems to us from these plain requirements of the statute that the primary contract, from which there is no release save by withdrawal, is the stock subscription, and the obligations of the shareholder to continue payment, until payments and earnings shall equal the full face value of the shares. That which the statute calls a loan to the shareholder, is in reality an anticipation of the final value of such shares after payments and earnings shall have accumulated to the full face value thereof, and the loan, so called, is but an advance on such shares to the shareholder, and is so denominated bv subsequent amendments to the statute. Sec. 60, Rev. Stat., Chap. 33.

The by-laws of the society referred to are made part of the mortgage, and a covenant therein inserted imposing the obligation to duly observe and keep them. Section 14 of the by-laws requires all shareholders to pay, or cause to be paid, a monthly installment of seventy-five cents on each share named in his or her certificate, until the same shall be fully paid; said installments to be paid to the society on or before the last Saturday of each month, and without notice. It is also clear from the transaction itself, that the notes and mortgage were not given to secure a loan of money in the' ordinary understanding of such business. There, were seventy-eight notes, one payable each month for that number of months, which is equal to six and one-half years. Three monthly installments of $9 each had been paid before the mortgage was given. Hence three of the-notes represented the ten per cent per annum interest and premium, equal to $10 per month, and the other seventy-five notes were for $19 each, being the monthly interest and premium of $10, and the monthly installment of $9 due upon the stock. It is therefore apparent from the notes and mortgage themselves, they were not given to secure $1,200 borrowed money and interest, but to secure the payment of installments due upon the shares of stock for the time estimated for them to mature and for interest on the money advanced. The notes, therefore, to the extent of the $9 monthly dues upon the shares of stock, were merely collateral to the original or primary agreement to pay upon the shares until fully paid, which latter not havingbeen released,was inserted in the mortgage foritssecurity. It is true, no doubt, all parties believed, when the mortgage was given, that Spaniel’s share of the earnings of the society for the seventy-eight months, the period covered by the mortgage, would produce enough more, when added to the monthly installments of $9 each, to equal the full face value of the shares. In truth the certificate contained' a stipulation that at the end of that period the society would pay the shareholder $100 for each share, and it may be, had not insolvency intervened, the promise would have been fulfilled. But, as has been seen, such stipulations are not enforceable as contracts merely. King v. I. B. U, supra. The statute by its superior force must and does control, and so controlling prescribes the payment of installments to continue beyond the seventy-eight months limit until the full face value of the shares is reached, and such, therefore, is the contract. And here again recurring to section 14 of the by-laws, above recited, and the covenant contained in the mortgage requiring appellees to duly observe and keep the same,,it is reasonable-to presume the parties intended by such covenant to anticipate conditions like those now existing, by which the society. is rendered incapable of longer performing its promise, which at best is collateral .only in its nature, and therefore, in obedience to the mandate of the statute and the requirements of the rights of others, ■the original undertaking of the appellee should be resorted ¡to as the final remedy. Hot to infer this would be to .render such covenant meaningless and without force, and .thereby, ignore the elementary "rule of construction, that each part of the contract should be given effect, if consistent with other valid parts, of the same, . This construction is not only consistent with all other terms of the contract, .but also puts the latter in harmony with the.statute that gives to the society existence.

In our opinion the rational conclusion to be drawn is that the obligation to pay the installments due upon the shares .of stock was the primary object of .the parties, and at no time was it out of their minds, and the purposes and intent of the mortgage was to secure the payment for the shares of stock as well as the interest on advancement, in considera-' tion of the advancement of the face value of the former.

If the society was at fault in precipitating insolvency, and the consequent proceedings for a receiver and winding up of its business, Spaniol is equally involved in such fault with the other members of the society, for the officers or' managers were as much his agents as they were of the others, and he is therefore not in a position to complain on that ground, or to thereby escape the legal effect of his contract. Equity, in view of the common misfortune of all the members of the society in consequence of insolvency, will adopt the rule of equality and justice to all. By the voluntary act of the directors,z manifested by their resolution to discontinue business, and to apply for the appointment of a receiver, the further continuance and performance of the contracts of the society was abandoned, and equity requires that each member be restored as equally near to his condition before membership as the nature of the case will permit. The conditions' here nearly resemble a co-partnership. King v. I. B. U., supra. Mo reason is apparent why the general rules applicable to the -settlement of a partnership between its members should not be here applied. Where one partner has received more than his share of the assets he is so charged in the accounting. In the case presented this can only be done by requiring appellee to restore the money advanced to him, and also that he perform his primary contract by paying the installments of his stock subscription, as must all other members not receiving advances, and as a partner who had not paid his share of capital stock would be required to do. The mortgage, as we have seen, 1 was given to secure this, in consideration of the advancement to him by the society, and therefore appellant is entitled to a lien upon the mortgaged premises for any balance, upon a fair and equitable accounting, that may be due to him.

The better sustained rule, in reason and by the authorities, in our opinion, for such accounting, is the one prescribed in Towle v. Am. B. L. & I. Society, 61 Fed. Rep. 446, and Sullivan v. Stuckey, — Fed. Rep. —, which is that appellees are chargeable with the amount of money actually received by them, with legal interest thereon from the time it was received, and are entitled to credit for all interest and premium paid, and are chargeable with so much of the gross premiums as was earned at the time the society passed into the possession of the receiver, estimating the life of the loan as eight years. To free this rule from the imputation of being arbitrary ¡in respect to adopting eight years as the life of the loan for the purpose of refunding the premium, it may be stated that it seems to have its origin'in analogy to section 10 of the statute under consideration.

It therefore follows that, in our opinion, the decree of the Circuit Court is erroneous, and it will be reversed and the cause remanded to that court, with directions to proceed in conformity with the views herein expressed. Reversed and remanded.

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