Eastern Building & Loan Ass'n v. Snyder

37 S.E. 298, 98 Va. 710, 1900 Va. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 22, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 37 S.E. 298 (Eastern Building & Loan Ass'n v. Snyder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eastern Building & Loan Ass'n v. Snyder, 37 S.E. 298, 98 Va. 710, 1900 Va. LEXIS 97 (Va. 1900).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an attachment in equity brought by the appellee, a withdrawing member of the Eastern Building and Loan Association, a New York corporation, to subject its assets in this State, or so much thereof as might be necessary, to the payment of $1,345, with legal interest on $765, part thereof from March 31, 1897, and on $390, another part thereof from April 14, 1897, until paid, alleged to be due him on account of monthly payments made on thirty shares of stock held by him in the association.

Twenty shares of the stock were issued to the appellee on the 1st day of November, 1892, and the other ten shares were issued to his assignor on the same day, and by him regularly assigned to appellee March 2, 1896.

The appellee bases his right to recover upon a clause in each of the certificates held by him, which provides “that any member in good standing may withdraw their monthly instalments at any time by first giving thirty days’ notice, and will receive six per. cent, annual interest on all shares of six months standing and up to two years; the third year seven per cent., and at any time after the third year and before maturity eight per cent.” The appellant, desiring to take advantage of this provision and withdraw before his stock matured, gave notice of his withdrawal of the twenty shares issued to him on the [712]*71225th day of February, 1897, and, on the 13th of the following month, gave notice of the withdrawal of the ten shares acquired "by assignment. The association acknowledged the receipt of these notices and his certificates of membership, and wrote him that they had been filed and would be paid in their regular order, as provided by the articles of incorporation and by-laws. On the 6th day of May following, more than thirty days after the notices were given, the withdrawal value of the appellee’s stock not having been paid, he instituted this suit.

One ground of defence relied on by the association is that, at the time the suit was brought, the appellee had no cause of action against it, because, by the terms of the contract between the appellee and the association, and the provisions of its articles of incorporation and by-laws, and its rules and regulations, the association is not required to pay out to withdrawing or matured stock more than one-half of the amount received by it from dues and stock payments in any month, and that such withdrawals are to be paid in the order in which applications therefor are filed; that, at_the time appellee’s applications were filed, and up to the time of the institution of his suit, the amount of withdrawing stock filed for payment prior to appellee’s applications exceeded the amount of money paid to or in the treasury of the association applicable to their payment, so that there was not, when his applications were filed, and have not since been, any funds in the treasury of the association applicable to the payment of his claim.

The appellee denies that his right to recover the withdrawal value of his shares was thus limited, or that he was not entitled to receive the sums due him until all prior applications - for withdrawal had been paid.

The first question, therefore, to be determined, is, out of what fund, and when, is a withdrawing member entitled to be paid the withdrawal value of his stock?

By section 17 of the articles of incorporation it is provided [713]*713that all of its funds shall be divided into two classes, which shall be called respectively the “expense fund” and the “loan fund.” After declaring what each of these funds shall consist of, it provides that “no money can be withdrawn from the ‘loan fund’ for any other purpose than the making of loans on security provided by the by-laws, and to pay amounts due withdrawing shareholders.”

Section 2, article 11, of the by-laws, provides that: “The loan fund shall consist of all receipts which do not go into the expense fund as hereinbefore provided, together with all interests, fines, earnings, and accumulations from whatever source, ifo money can be drawn from the loan fund for any other purpose than the making of loans on security as provided by the by-laws, and to pay amounts due withdrawing shareholders.”

Section 12 of the articles of incorporation, after providing under what circumstances, and upon what notice, shares might be withdrawn, and the amounts the holder thereof would be entitled to receive, provides: “ But in no event shall the association be required to pay withdrawing members more than one-half of the net receipts of the monthly instalments paid in during the month in which the withdrawal occurred.”

By section 19 of article 14 of the by-laws of the association, it is provided that “any shareholder wishing to withdraw his stock may be allowed to do so at any time, but the association •shall not be required to pay more than one-half of the net receipts of the monthly instalments paid in that month to withdrawing members.”

Erom these provisions it appears that the only fund out of which a withdrawing member was entitled to receive payment was the monthly instalments paid in during the month in which the withdrawal occurred, and the association could not be compelled to pay more than one-half of the net receipts of- that sum to withdrawing members.

[714]*714In the year 1894, after the appellee and his assignor had purchased their stock, or become members of the association, its by-laws were amended so as to provide that “payments shall be made in the order of the application for withdrawal, but the association shall not be required to pay out on withdrawing and matured stock more than one-half of the amount received from dues and stock payments in any month.”

If this amended by-law, which was in force when the appellee gave notice of the withdrawal of his shares of stock, was binding upon him, his suit was prematurely brought, as there was no money in the treasury of the association legally applicable to the payment of his claim.

Whilst the decisions are conflicting as to the right of a withdrawing member to bring suit and recover judgment for the amount due him before funds have been collected out of which he is entitled to be paid, the doctrine in New York (and this is a New York contract), and in this State, is that a solvent building association in the. absence of bad faith on its part (and no such charge is made in this case) is not in default, and cannot be sued, until there are funds in the-treasury of the association out of which the withdrawing member is entitled to be paid. Englehardt v. Building Ass., 148 N. Y. 281, 285-6; Andrews v. Roanoke Building Ass., ante page 445.

It seems that prior to the 11th of January, 1897, the association paid withdrawing members what was due them upon the presentation of their stock, but after that time it ceased to do so because the amount of withdrawals greatly exceeded the income out of which they were to be paid. After that date, and before the appellee’s applications for withdrawal were filed, withdrawals of stock aggregating more than $260,000 -were filed, whilst the income from dues on stock applicable to the payment of withdrawals from January 11, 1897, until August 17, 1897, more than three months after this suit was instituted, was less than $45,000, and of the withdrawals on file when the [715]

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.E. 298, 98 Va. 710, 1900 Va. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastern-building-loan-assn-v-snyder-va-1900.