Building & Loan Ass'n v. Leonard

74 Miss. 810
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 74 Miss. 810 (Building & Loan Ass'n v. Leonard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Building & Loan Ass'n v. Leonard, 74 Miss. 810 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

Williamson, Special J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

■ This appeal is from the chancery court of the first district of Hinds county. Leonard subscribed for six shares of the first series of stock in the Building & Loan Association of Jackson. The par value of each share of stock was $200. On June 10, 1886, he borrowed from the association $800 at a premium of 35-J per cent., which netted him $516 in cash, and executed his obligation to pay $800 and secured said obligation by trust deed on property in the city of Jackson. Again, on August 13, 1886, Leonard borrowed from the association the further sum of $100 at a premium of 26 per cent., netting him the sum of $296 in cash, and executed his obligation to pay $100, secured by a second trust deed on the same property embraced in the first. So that on the two loans Leonard received in cash $812 and obligated himself to pay the association $1,200 and interest thereon at 8 per cent, per annum, payable in monthly installments. The contract also bound Leonard to pay monthly on each share of his stock $1, making a monthly payment of $6 on all his shares, and stipulated that a default in the monthly payments of dues and interest should subject him to the payment of a fine for each default, the fine to be imposed under the rules and regulations of the association.

Leonard made all his payments of dues and interest monthly, [813]*813from the time he effected the loans until the month of April, 1892, except in the months of September, November, and December, 1890, and the months of January and February, 1891, he failed to pay promptly, and paid for such defaults $1.40 each month. In the month of April, 1892, Leonard defaulted and never paid again, either the dues or interest, and was fined, under the rules and regulations of the association, $1.40 each month until December, 1892. OnDecember 13,1892, Leonard, through his brother, who acted as his agent in the matter, made a settlement with the association and withdrew his membership. The following statement was rendered to Leonard by the association, and on it the settlement was made:’

B. J. Leonard in Account with Buildino & Loan Association or Jackson.
Dr.
To loan_______________________________________________$1,200 00
To interest and fines__________________________________ 123 20
$1,323 20
Gr.
By stock______________________________________________$ 522 00
Dividend on stock_____________________________________ 276 00
Premium rebate______________________________________ 31 24
Casb to balance_______________________________________ 493 96
$1,323 20

The bill was filed to set aside this settlement and to recover from the association the usurious interest which complainant claims was collected from him in said settlement in the way of interest charged on the premium of $388 and the fines that were charged against him, the bill of complaint alleging that no fines should have been charged against complainant, for the reason that the association had on hand money belonging to him which had been collected in the way of interest on the premium.

After setting forth the amount of interest on the premium, and the amount of fines collected from him by the association, complainant sets out in his bill the settlement made December [814]*81413, 1892, and with reference to it makes the following averments: “ Your orator now states and charges the fact to be, that, at the time of making said settlement, the association was indebted to your orator in the sum of $300, or thereabouts, above set forth, and that he, your orator, was unaware of the fact, and that the sum so due him was not allowed him in said settlement so made, is a fraud upon him, and he should be credited with said sum.” This is the only allegation in the bill charging fraud, concealment, or mistake in the settlement.

The proof shows that the settlement was made openly, with full opportunity to complainant or his agent to know exactly what he was charged with, and with what he was credited in said settlement. In the settlement Leonard was charged with $1,200, being the actual amount of cash loaned him, and the premium at which he bid it in. To this was added the sum of $123.20, being interest and fines which had accumulated after he quit paying according to his contract. He was credited as follows:

Amount of dues paid on his stock______________________I 532 00
Amount of dividends on stock__________________________ 276 00
Rebate unearned premium_____________________________ 31 24
Cash paid to settle the balance__________________________ 493 96
$1,323 20

The chancellor referred the cause to a commissioner, to compute and state to the court the amount of interest actually collected from complainant, and the amount of interest at ten per cent, on the cash actually borrowed by complainant, to strike a balance between the two, and to report the same. The commissioner made calculation of interest for six years six months and five days, and made his report as directed, and showed a balance of $96.97 in excess over ten per cent, actually paid. Defendant excepted to said report (1) because the report in nowise showed the state of accounts between the complainant and defendant; (2) because the report does not recognize the settlement had between the parties; (3) the report is only a statement of the interest account between the parties; (4) other [815]*815grounds to be shown, etc. The exceptions were overruled, and a decree entered in favor of complainant for the balance shown by said report, and the building and loan association appealed.

The order of the lower court referring this cause to a commissioner, ignores the contract between the parties, and disregards the settlement had between them on December 13, 1892, when appellee withdrew from the association, and paid the balance then claimed against him. The order of reference dealt only with the question of interest, and excluded every other element of the contract from the consideration of the commissioner in making the calculation directed by the court. The contract may .have seemed a hard one to Leonard when he decided to withdraw his membership, and to have the settlement which was made, but it was binding on him and the association in all particulars, except that the association could not enforce against him so much of the contract as required interest to be paid on the premium. Whatever may have been paid by Leonard in the way of interest on the premium, should have been credited to him, in addition to his other legal credits, when the settlement was made. Sullivan v. Loan Association, 70 Miss., 94; Goodman v. Loan Association, 71 Miss., 310; Loan Association v. McElroy, 72 Miss., 441.

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74 Miss. 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/building-loan-assn-v-leonard-miss-1897.