Alter v. Security Building & Loan Co.

16 N.E.2d 228, 58 Ohio App. 114, 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 538, 10 Ohio Op. 389, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 257
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 25, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 16 N.E.2d 228 (Alter v. Security Building & Loan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alter v. Security Building & Loan Co., 16 N.E.2d 228, 58 Ohio App. 114, 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 538, 10 Ohio Op. 389, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 257 (Ohio Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Crow, J.

This case was appealed on questions of law and fact from the Common Pleas Court of Defiance county, Ohio, where it originated. It was submitted here on questions of law only.

The facts can well be stated with conciseness. At the time of the transactions in issue defendant was and ever since has been a building and loan association organized and existing under the laws of the state of Ohio, with its office and principal place of business at Defiance therein.

It issued a passbook to Mr. and Mrs. Diehl, on each page of which excepting a printed one hereinafter mentioned, were four columns, the first being for dates, and the other three for “Payment,” “Withdrawal,” and “Balance,” respectively.

The first entry was of date October 22, 1927, “Balance from old Bk. $12,734.59,” and the next one, dated October 29,1937, shows $30 in the “Payment” column; and other entries in that column are shown, ranging in amounts from $7.32 to $1,030, most of which are $30 each and weekly.

In the “Payment” column are entries of dividends noted as “Div.,” beginning January 31, 1928.

Entries of “Withdrawals” appear in various amounts' intermittently up to $1,931.59 commencing February 15, 1928, for $295, and ending July 24, 1935, for $100.84, which latter entry was the last in the book, leaving the “Balance” due the Diehls $26,702.66.

On July 30,1935, the Diehls, for a valuable consider *116 ation, executed and delivered an order to plaintiff in the following words:

“Defiance, Ohio, July 30, 1935.

“The Security Building and Loan Co., Defiance, Ohio.

“Pay to Karl J. Alter Bishop of Toledo Nineteen Thousand Nine Hundred Seventy Six and 58/100 Dollars, $19,976.58 and charge to my Savings Account No. 2063. This order is positively not negotiable and will be paid only to the person to whom drawn. It must be accompanied by the pass ’book from which withdrawal is made.”

“Prank B. Diehl
“Mrs. Prank B. Diehl.”

Excepting the following, written in ink, the order is in printed form: “July 30,” “5,” “Karl J. Alter Bishop of Toledo Nineteen Thousand Nine Hundred Seventy Six and 58/100,” “$19,976.58,” “2063,” “Prank B. Diehl,” “Mrs. Prank B. Diehl.”

On the date last mentioned plaintiff owed mortgage indebtedness to defendant in a sum exceeding one-half of the amount'named in the order and on that date presented the order to defendant and then tendered to it in money an amount equivalent to the amount named in the order and demanded that the aggregate of said two amounts be applied to the payment of said indebtedness owed by plaintiff to defendant, which demand was refused. .

The purpose'of this suit is to establish in plaintiff the right of set-off of the amount of the order.

The printed page of the pass book above referred to is as follows:

“Instructions to Members.

“1. This book must always be presented when payment is made or money withdrawn.

“2. If this book is lost or stolen, notify the company at once.

*117 “3. All transfers must be made on tbe books of tbe company.

“4. In February and August of each year, this book must be left at the office of the company to be audited and balanced. '

“5. As a general rule money paid in on this book may be withdrawn at any time without notice, but to protect the interest of members, and borrowers,' and to avoid the sacrifice of securities, notice of withdrawal may be required. Withdrawal notice of members-will be filed in the order in which they are received and paid from the regular receipts of the company in the order filed. As to dividend rights, a notice to withdraw shall be deemed the same as an actual withdrawal.”

Defendant had three classes of members, paid up stockholders, running stockholders' and borrowers, and it never availed itself of the right to “receive money on deposit” as it might have done under Section 9648, General Code, which is quoted later.

Defendant has been solvent at all times and neither of the Diehls was ever a borrower.

Plaintiff relies on Section 9652-1, General Code (115 Ohio Laws, Part 2, 398), passed June 28, 1934, as follows :

“An Act

“To supplement Section 9652 of the General Code by the enactment of supplemental Section 9652-1 of the General Code, relative to rights' of depositors of building and loan associations, and to declare an emergency.

“Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Ohio:

“Section 1. That Section 9652 of the General Code be supplemented by the enactment of supplemental Section 9652-1 of the General Code, to read as follows:

“Discharging obligations with credit: transfer of credit.

“Section 9652-1. A borrower from a building and loan association may tender in discharge and payment *118 of Ms obligations to the association, or any part thereof, credit to a deposit account standing in the name of the borrower on the books of the association, or such amount thereof at face value as may be sufficient for such purpose, regardless of the time or times when such credit or any part thereof may have been created or transferred to the name of such borrower, and the association shall accept such tender at the full face value of such credit in satisfaction and discharge of such obligations or a part thereof; provided, however, that for each dollar of credit to a deposit account so tendered, the borrower shall, if required by the association, pay one dollar in cash.

“No association shall refuse to transfer a credit, or a portion thereof, on its books unless the association shall have a valid lien thereon, or a valid right of appropriation thereof, or unless the transferee is not the owner of the credit sought to be transferred.

“Emerg-ency.

“Section 2. This act is hereby declared to be an emergency law, necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety. The reason for such necessity lies in the fact that at the present time in the state of Ohio, many certificates of deposit are being sold for considerably less than their real value. This will have a tendency to increase the demand for such deposits, and thereby enable the depositor who is desirous or forced to sell, to obtain a higher price for his investment, and assist in relieving the widespread distress now prevailing in many communities. Therefore, this act should go into effect immediately.”

Counsel for plaintiff argues that unless the quoted enactment is broad enough by the employment of the words “credit to a deposit account” to include a running stock account, there would have been no reason for its enactment because it was the law as1 settled by two Courts of Appeals that a borrower had the right *119 to enforce a set-off against his debt to an association, a deposit other than for the purchase of stock.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 N.E.2d 228, 58 Ohio App. 114, 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 538, 10 Ohio Op. 389, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alter-v-security-building-loan-co-ohioctapp-1937.