Downes v. Southern Savings & Building Ass'n

98 S.W.2d 457, 266 Ky. 192, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 617
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 13, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 S.W.2d 457 (Downes v. Southern Savings & Building Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Downes v. Southern Savings & Building Ass'n, 98 S.W.2d 457, 266 Ky. 192, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 617 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

This action was brought by appellants in the chancery branch of the Jefferson circuit court, as a derivative action, against the present and some of the former directors of the appellee Southern Savings & Building Association, seeking, on behalf 'of themselves and ail other stock and certificate holders of the association, an accounting against the defendants for their ultra vires acts and a determination of the loss and damage suffered by plaintiffs and the association by reason thereof.

Plaintiff’s petition, filed on September 21, 1935, alleged that plaintiffs were the holders of “surplus certificates,” which had been issued them in 1930 by soliciting salesmen of the association upon their subscribing, each for a certain number of shares of its capital stock and upon which subscriptions therefor they each paid $5 cash per share subscribed for.

This written receipt, termed a “surplus certificate,” acknowledging such subscription payment, reads as follows:

“This is to certify that-has subscribed for- shares of the full participating Capital Stock of the Southern Savings and Building Association, and has paid into the Association, in ac *193 cordance with and for the purposes set forth in the by-laws of said Association, the sum of $-.
“The legal holder of this Surplus Certificate, at such time as his proportionate share in the Surplus Fund of the Association, as defined in the bylaws, shall be equal to the amount represented hereby shall, upon the surrender of this certificate, be entitled [1] to have the amount represented hereby credited on his pass book, or [2] to convert same into an equal amount of any class of stock at such time being issued by the Association, or [3] to withdraw the amount represented hereby in accordance with the provisions of the by-laws.
“The amount represented herein is not a part of the withdrawal value of the stock.
“This certificate is transferable in accordance with the rules and regulations of this Association. # # &
“Stock Shares $100 Par Value.”

. It is admitted by stipulation that the stock thus subscribed for was to be paid for in monthly installments of 50 cents for each share of the par value of $100, and that pursuant to their subscription contracts, plaintiffs for awhile did make monthly payments upon their stock, when they abandoned the carrying out of the stock purchase agreement and withdrew from the association the full amounts thus paid in to the association by them on the stock. However, they were not at such time or at all repaid their subscription fees' of $5 per share for the respective number of shares of stock they had each subscribed for.

The petition alleges that the plaintiff W. A. Downes had subscribed for 20 shares of stock, for which a surplus certificate was issued him, showing that he had paid for such subscription (but not upon the stock subscribed for) $100; likewise, plaintiff Carl Smith subscribed for 100 shares of stock, for which a surplus certificate was issued him showing payment of $500 therefor; and that the plaintiff E. H. Kamman had also subscribed for 80 shares, upon which subscription she had paid the sum of $400, as evidenced by her surplus certificate then given her therefor.

These surplus certificates, so received by plaintiffs,' are filed as exhibits with the petition.

*194 Notwithstanding’ plaintiffs had thus, some four or five years prior to the filing of this suit, withdrawn from the association all installment payments made by them upon the stock subscribed for, they have here filed a suit, alleging that, as they still remain the owners of these surplus certificates, they hold an interest in the surplus funds of the association, and, as such, h'ere seek an accounting for the moneys which they had paid to it, they allege, “under the guise of these termed surplus certificates.”

The petition further alleged by way of bolstering up-their claim, that some 2,000 people had paid the association, upon the like surplus certificates as theirs, some $184,000, all of which the defendant directors of the association had illegally, and under an ultra vires contract had with their stock salesmen, paid over in full to them, and that such contract, had with them, was a wrongful and fraudulent stock-selling promotion scheme. Further it alleged that the plaintiffs and other holders of these surplus certificates were not told, nor knew, when subscribing for the stock, that all the money paid in by them on their surplus certificates was immediately paid out to the stock salesmen for obtaining their stock subscriptions; that for each subscription of stock of par value of $100, the member was thus induced to pay in cash $5 at the time of subscribing for the stock and for which a surplus certificate was given him, showing the amount of cash paid, upon his subscription, at this $5 rate per share.

Numerous instances of complaint and protest are also alleged in the petition to have been made to the association and the banking commissioner against this method followed in the selling of its stock.

Defendants’ demurrer to this petition having been sustained, an amended petition was filed, wherein plaintiffs allege that they are still members of the association under the terms and provisions of the association’s by-laws, and by which they as such are entitled to maintain this action against the directors of the association.

By section 16, ss. c thereof, it is provided that:

“In the event of failing to pay installments or dues and fines by a non-borrowing member for the space of more than one year, the secretary may notify *195 such stock holders by mailing a notice to his or her last known post office address, and if the member fails to pay the arrears within thirty [30] days after notice is mailed, the directors may thereafter at any regular meeting, order the cancellation of such shares and declare such membership forfeited. ’ ’

Further they alleged that, after the suit was filed, defendants had a letter sent these plaintiffs, setting out this section of its by-laws, recognizing their continuous status as members, and demanding that they pay their dues or installments or forfeit their membership in the association; also they pléaded that they, as surplus certificate holders, were not told that the amounts paid by them upon their subscriptions to the stock was only a membership fee when they purchased the surplus certificates and that such charge to a subscriber of building and loan association stock was not the customary practice among reputable building associations.

Further they alleged that they, as holders of these surplus certificates, have an interest in the association, according to its further by-laws, -section 18, ss. i, which is pleaded, setting out the interest thereby given surplus certificate holders in the surplus- funds 'of the association, and which is as follows:

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156 S.W.2d 173 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 S.W.2d 457, 266 Ky. 192, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downes-v-southern-savings-building-assn-kyctapphigh-1936.