Assets Realization Co. v. Heiden

74 N.E. 56, 215 Ill. 9
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 N.E. 56 (Assets Realization Co. v. Heiden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Assets Realization Co. v. Heiden, 74 N.E. 56, 215 Ill. 9 (Ill. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Ricks

delivered the opinion of the court:

The union was incorporated under the Homestead Loan Association act of 1879, but did not pretend to follow the law with reference to making loans, issuing or selling stock, or in scarcely any "other of its many features. The loans as made by the union upon the property in question were in direct violation of the spirit but not the letter of the act in providing that seventy-two payments would entitle the borrower’s stock to mature, and in violation of both the letter and spirit of the act in arbitrarily fixing the amount of interest and premiums by the by-laws and without letting the money by competitive bids, which latter was required by section 8 of the act then in force. It paid its officers, agents, solicitors, collectors, etc., salaries and commissions in violation of the statute; did a banking business; received money on deposit and paid six per cent interest thereon; issued paid-up stock for $55 per share, the face value payable in six years; compelled a retirement of stock without any cash payment by issuing a certificate for the amount that had been paid, due at the end of the six-year period, with six per cent interest; did not recognize the statutory right of withdrawal except in case of the death of the stockholder, and was devoid of every feature of mutuality that was intended to obtain in such associations. Practically every item that stood on the credit or debit side of its ledger was in violation of the statute under which it was incorporated and pretended to do business.

Section 2 of the act required that the by-laws of the association should be adopted before the charter was granted, and that a copy of the same should accompany the report of the commissioners to the Secretary of State upon which the certificate of incorporation was issued. That was done in the case at bar. The by-laws then were passed by the stockholders, and the objectionable features above mentioned were all provided for in the by-laws. By section i of article 12 it was provided that “the terms and conditions expressed in the certificate of stock, in connection with the application for membership and the by-laws of this association, form the contract between this union and each shareholder therein.” The shareholder had to make written application for membership, in which he agreed to be bound by the by-laws, and each certificate of stock had printed thereon and made a part thereof a copy of the by-laws, and, in addition to the by-laws, certain conditions and stipulations, which were alleged to be, and admitted by the shareholders to be, binding upon the union and the shareholder. The first material provision was as to the payment or maturity of the stock, and was: Said union “agrees to pay to said shareholder * * * the sum of $ioo for each of said shares at the end of six years from the date hereof, or, in case of his death prior to the expiration of such six years, the union will pay the sum of all monthly installments paid on this certificate, with interest at six per cent per annum, payable in the manner and upon the conditions set forth in said terms, conditions and by-laws hereto attached.” The first condition attached tó the share of stock was, that payments should be made in monthly installments of seventy-five cents on each share named in the contract. The third was, that the union would issue a paid-up certificate for the amount of all monthly installments paid on shares that had been in force one year or over, payable at the maturity of the stock, with interest at six per cent. The twelfth was, that upon the maturity of the stock each shareholder was to pay into the reserve fund five per cent of the par value of the share. The thirteenth was as follows: “The said shareholder shall not have any claim to any interest in the affairs, assets or funds of this union, nor the control of them, except as above specifically set forth, and assumes no further liability of any kind whatsoever except as herein described.” Section 21 of article 13 of the by-laws contained this provision: “And it is hereby expressly agreed between all shareholders in this union, that a payment of $100 per share named in his or her certificate that has been in force six years shall be accepted as full pay of all claims on their certificate or against this union.”

The membership fee was fixed at $10 for ten shares and one dollar per share in addition thereto, and two dollars per share was charged for the transfer of stock. The reserve fund, from which a large,—in fact the largest,—source of revenue of the association was derived, seems to have been regarded as the sole and separate property of the union, in which the stockholder had no interest, right or concern. The union did practically nothing but borrow money and loan the same at usurious rates of interest, without any pretense of complying with the law in reference to homestead associations. The record shows that in the last year of its existence, from April 1, 1895, to April 1, 1896, it received on deposit $271,457.27, that it distributed deposits to the amount of' $273,665.52 and that it retained money on deposit amounting to $57,427.92; that the total amount received for monthly dues amounted to $274,738.24, and that it paid out by way of interest $26,493.87; that between March 31, 1895, and April 1, 1896, it paid on shares of stock which it declared matured upon the seventy-two or seventy-five payment plan, $314,910. It showed two kinds of stock, called “current stock,” payable in six years, and “paid-up stock,” payable in the same period of time. These, together with the deposits received by it, were its sources of revenue, except that by its system of enforced retirement of stock, which it reserved the right to do at any time after one year from issue, and in any and all cases by issuing its certificate payable at the expiration of the six-year period for the amount paid by the shareholder, with six per cent interest. These were in the nature of enforced loans, which the evidence shows the company could, and did, avail itself of.

It will thus be seen that although chartered as a homestead loan association, when its real nature is looked into and the actual method in which it did its business is brought to light, the union bore little, if any, resemblance to one; and it also appears that by the terms of his membership and the conditions and provisions on each certificate of stock, every stockholder was notified and fully apprised of its method of doing business.

Linlce, the original borrower, solicited and obtained the first loan of $5000 on December 2, 1889, and the second loan upon the same property of $1000 on February 1, 1890. To obtain the first loan he paid a $50 membership fee, and $250 was deducted for the so-called reserve fund, so that he, in fact, received $4700; and on the $1000 loan he paid $10 membership fee and $50 to the reserve fund and received $940. By the note the maker agreed to pay, six years after date, the amount borrowed, with five per cent interest and five per cent per annum in monthly payments until maturity, and the mortgages provided for the pajunent of $41.70 on the $5000 loan and $8.35 on the $1000 loan on the last Saturday of each month.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Erzinger v. Gerrity
271 Ill. App. 450 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1933)
Wilson v. Mundy
238 Ill. App. 575 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 N.E. 56, 215 Ill. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/assets-realization-co-v-heiden-ill-1905.