Allmon v. Salem Building & Loan Ass'n

194 Ill. App. 224, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 464
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 1, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 Ill. App. 224 (Allmon v. Salem Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allmon v. Salem Building & Loan Ass'n, 194 Ill. App. 224, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 464 (Ill. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

On April 15, 1913, M. O. Alimón, Nellie H. White, Ida M. Pullen and Tina V. Cole, appellees, filed their bill in chancery in the Circuit Court of Marion county, Illinois, against appellant and William A. Mills, as trustee in bankruptcy for John S. Stonecipher, bankrupt, asking- that appellant be decreed to issue to them forty-six shares of the matured capital stock of said association of the par value of $4,600 or to pay them the principal sum of $4,000 and certain accrued interest, said to amount to the sum of $500, and for general relief.

The facts upon which the suit is based, as set forth in the bill, were in the main not disputed on the trial and are substantially as follows: On August 12, 1904, H. L. Alimón, the father of appellees, loaned to John S. Stonecipher the sum of $2,000 and took his note of that date for said sum due one year after date, with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum and afterwards, on September 10, 1906, said Alimón loaned said Stonechiper a like amount and took his note for $2,000 of that date, due six months after date, also with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum. At the time the second note was given, Stone-cipher assigned and delivered to said Alimón thirty-six shares of stock of said appellant building and loan association, to secure the payment of said notes. H. L. Alimón died intestate February 5, 1908, and appellees, as his heirs at law, became the owners of the notes and received the certificates of stock. The notes were never paid but Stonecipher paid the interest on the same each year up to and including the year 1911. The certificates of stock of the building association delivered to Alimón as aforesaid each bore on its face the statement that the same was “transferable on the books of the association in person or by attorney upon surrender of this certificate.” None of the certificates of stock were so transferred but remained upon the books of the association in the name of said Stone-cipher. Section 4 of article 6 of the charter of the appellant building and loan association which was offered in evidence is as follows: “Any member of this association may transfer to any other person any or all of the unredeemed shares held by him or her on which there are no arrearages of dues and fines, on payment to the association of twenty-five cents for each share transferred. All transfers shall be made in the presence of the secretary who shall record them in a book purchased and kept by him for that purpose alone; and they shall also be indorsed on the certificate transferred. In each case the transferee shall be entitled to all the privileges of the original holder; but no transfer shall be valid and complete until the foregoing provisions have been complied with.”

In December, 1911, M. O. Alimón, who also represented the other owners of the four certificates covering the stock in question, presented the same to Mr. Larimer, the secretary of the association, and made inquiry concerning them and as to whether Mr. Stone-cipher owned them. The secretary referred to his books and told him that the certificates had been paid as they matured to Mr. Stonecipher; that the amount due on sixteen of the shares had been paid to Stone-cipher on June 18, 1908; on ten shares, January 28, 1909; and on the remaining ten shares, May 15, 1909. M. O. Alimón testified that he told the secretary at the time referred to that he and the other appellees held the certificates as collateral security, but the secretary denied this statement and said the fact was not brought to his knowledge until this suit was instituted. Stone-cipher at the time the money was borrowed was considered a man of large means, and at the time he received the money for the stock from the secretary was a director of the building and loan association. On January 28, 1913, Stonecipher was adjudged a bankrupt but appellee, M. O. Alimón who held the certificates of stock, stated he considered the financial condition of Mr. Stonecipher good up to the first of the year 1912; that up to that time he thought the notes could be collected directly from Mr. Stonecipher and that he collected the last interest on them on December 10, 1911.

The couit found the equities to be with appellees, the decree finding that the certificates were held by and hypothecated with H. L. Alimón in his lifetime and have been so held by his heirs since his death; that each of said certificates was assigned by indorsement on the back thereof by the said Stonecipher at the time of its delivery; that said association had paid the certificates upon their maturity to said Stone-cipher without requiring the surrender of any or either of the same;-that by so paying over to Stonecipher the amount due on said several shares of stock without requiring him to surrender the certificates for cancellation, the association violated the trust cast upon it and became and was responsible to appellees for any injury sustained by reason of such misconduct; that it was the duty of the association to require the surrender of said certificates upon the payment of the amount due on said shares of stock; that at the time said payments were made to said Stonecipher, the association had notice that said certificates had been assigned to and hypothecated with H. L. "Alimón in his lifetime and were then hypothecated with and held by appellees as security for said notes, and that said Stonecipher had no interest therein. And it was decreed that appellant association pay to appellees, within forty days from the date of the decree, the sum of $3,600, and that upon payment of said sum they surrender said certificates to said association.

We find nothing in the proofs to show that the association knew of the transfer by delivery and indorsement of the certificates by Stonecipher to H. L. Alimón prior to December, 1911, a date long after the matured value of the same had been paid to Stonecipher. While it is true that Stonecipher knew of the transaction and that he was a director of the association at the time payment was made, yet his knowledge of the facts could not be charged against the association, as in acquiring such knowledge he was not acting for the association but for himself, and his actions as a whole were in effect hostile to the association. Gilkeson v. Thompson, 210 Pa. 355, Aycock Bros. Lumber Co. v. First Nat. Bank of Dothan, 54 Fla. 604; Teagarden v. R. B. Godley Lumber Co., 105 Tex. 616. Notice to a director of a bank acquired by him not in the bank’s business but privately is not notice to the bank. Black v. First Nat. Bank, 96 Md. 399. In Home Savings & State Bank v. Peoria Agricultural & Trotting Society, 206 Ill. 9, it was held that knowledge obtained by a director of a bank when he was negotiating for the purchase of a lot for himself, that the title was held in trust, did not of itself charge the bank, which had a judgment against the holder of the legal title, with notice so as to defeat its levy” and sale of the land on such judgment. We conclude that the facts an this case do not show circumstances which warrant the holding of the decree that, at the time of the payment of the amounts due on the certificates to Stonecipher, appellant had notice that they were held by any one else as collateral.

The statute in relation to homestead loan associations (Hurd’s Rev. St. 1912, ch. 32, par. 83, sec. 6a, J. & A.

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237 Ill. App. 500 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
194 Ill. App. 224, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allmon-v-salem-building-loan-assn-illappct-1915.