Berg v. Equity Savings & Loan Co.

30 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 1932 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1452
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedAugust 9, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1 (Berg v. Equity Savings & Loan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berg v. Equity Savings & Loan Co., 30 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 1932 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1452 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

Silbert, J.

In the instant case the facts appear as follows:

The defendant is and was at all times herein mentioned a building and loan association duly organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Ohio. In addition to its general powers it was authorized to and did actually, receive monies on deposit by way of savings accounts, agreeing to pay such deposits a certain definite rate of interest.

On December 1, 1925, the plaintiff opened a savings account with the defendant company and continued to make deposits in said account up to and including April 13, 1931, at which time, the balance of her credit on said savings account amounted to $7,368.23. At the time of opening the account, the plaintiff signed a signature card on which was printed the following:

“We hereby agree to the rules and regulations of The Equity Savings & Loan Company of Cleveland, Ohio,”

Simultaneously with opening the account in question, the defendant gave the plaintiff a pass-book, in which were printed the rules and regulations then in effect with the defendant company, among which were incorporated the following:

“To withdraw deposits no notice is usually required excepting in the withdrawal of large amounts. All deposits however are subject to such rules as are allowed by statute or embodied in the by-laws of the Company.” pany.”

“Depositors upon signing the signature card thereby agree and consent to these rules and regulations which may be altered or amended at any time, and all such altered or amended rules shall be obligatory and binding upon depositors after due notice of same.”

Section 17 of the by-laws of the defendant company provided as follows:

“Deposits may be received upon such terms as to interest and withdrawal as the Board of Directors may authorize, provided, however, the interest paid shall not exceed the legal rate and further provided that the Company may at any time require not less than thirty [3]*3day’s notice of a depositor’s intention to withdraw. Applications to withdraw shall be filed in the order received, and paid in the order filed as fast as one-half of the receipts of the Company will pay them. The Directors may, however, apply the entire income to the payment of withdrawals. When a withdrawal is paid in currency, or otherwise, except by check, a receipt for the amount withdrawn must be given by the depositor. A non-negotiable order properly endorsed giving the amount withdrawn and the number of the pass-book shall be accepted by the Company as sufficient receipt. The pass-book must always accompany a withdrawal that the amount withdrawn may be charged therein.”

It seems that on October 29, 1931, the directors of the defendant company duly met and endeavored to amend Section 17 of the then existing by-laws so as to provide for a limitation and restriction on the amount of withdrawals permissible by depositors. They endeavored to obtain the approval of this amendment from the Superintendent of Building & Loan Associations at Columbus, Ohio, in accordance with Section 9645 of the General Code of Ohio. So confident were they that this amendment would be approved as adopted, that without delay, they immediately had printed in booklet form, all of the bylaws of the Association including the attempted amendment to Section 17 and this booklet was mailed to all depositors on the same day as passed, viz, October 29, 1931. As a matter of fact this amendment was not approved by the Superintendent of Building & Loan Associations until March 31, 1932.

It seems further that on October 29, 1931, at the same meeting wherein the directors took action to amend the by-laws and apparently acting under such amendment, they passed a resolution as follows:

“Resolved that beginning on October 29, 1931, withdrawals on any savings account or certificate of deposit shall not exceed $1,000.00 in any period of thirty days.”

It seems further that on the 18th day of January, 1932, the directors passed the following resolution:

“Resolved that beginning January 19, 1932, withdrawals on any savings account or certificate of deposit shall not exceed $300.00 in any period of sixty days.”

[4]*4No notice of either of the foregoing resolutions was given by the defendant company to any of its depositors except when any depositor called to withdraw a sum in excess of that provided for in the foregoing resolutions, such depositor was then informed that he could not withdraw more than the amount called for in the respective resolutions at and after the respective dates.

The amendment to Section 17 was as heretofore stated finally approved by the Superintendent of Building & Loan Associations, and part of such amendment provided as follows:

“* * * The Board of Directors, regardless of the requirement that the depositors give written notice of their desire to make withdrawals and regardless of the order of application for withdrawals, may authorize the payment of withdrawals to any one depositor on demand, in a sum not exceeding $25.00 at any one time, nor exceeding $100.00 in any one calendar month, and any such sums so paid shall not be in addition to the amounts paid on any notice of withdrawal.”

It is further admitted that prior to the amendment of Section 17 of the by-laws effective March 31, 1932, the defendant company did not at any time require written notice on the part of a depositor of such depositor’s intention to withdraw any moneys from his or her account.

On December 24, 1931, there being a balance due the plaintiff on her savings account as hereinbefore stated of $7,368.23, she presented herself at defendant’s place of business with the intention of withdrawing the entire amount due her, filled out a withdrawal slip for same and presented same with her pass-book to the defendant company.

She was then informed for the first time that she could not withdraw more than $1,000.00 a month, whereupon she stated that if she could withdraw such an amount monthly she would be satisfied and thereupon accepted the $1,000.00.

The following month she again called at the defendant company and demanded $1,000.00 whereupon she was informed that a new rule had been put into effect limiting withdrawals to $300.00 every sixty days. She objected to [5]*5this and had some discussion with some official of the bank who it seems stated to her that he would take the matter up with the executive committee of the defendant company and see what could be done. She called some little time later, namely on February 11, 1932, whereupon she was again informed that all she could receive was $300.00 which amount she accepted under protest informing them at that time that she desired the entire amount due her.

Under the impression that the defendant company required' written notice of her intention to withdraw, the plaintiff did immediately thereafter through her attorney, notify the defendant in writing of her intention to withdraw the entire balance due her which at that time amounted to $6,068.23. In answer to said letter, the defendant company wrote under date of February 15, 1932, that they required no written notice of her intention to withdraw, but cited in that letter the resolution passed by the Board of Directors on January 19, 1932, limiting the amount of withdrawals to $300.00 in any period of sixty days.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 1932 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berg-v-equity-savings-loan-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1932.