Family Savings & Loan Ass'n Shareholders' Protective Committee v. Stewart

215 A.2d 726, 241 Md. 89, 1966 Md. LEXIS 696
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 4, 1966
Docket[No. 87, September Term, 1965.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 215 A.2d 726 (Family Savings & Loan Ass'n Shareholders' Protective Committee v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Family Savings & Loan Ass'n Shareholders' Protective Committee v. Stewart, 215 A.2d 726, 241 Md. 89, 1966 Md. LEXIS 696 (Md. 1966).

Opinion

Marbury, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is the second appeal by Family Savings and Loan Association Shareholders’ Protective Committee, et al., appellants, from a decree of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, in favor of Howard Stewart, et al., appellees, representatives of Christmas Club and other club account holders, in the insolvent Family Savings and Home Loan Association, Inc. (Association) .

*92 On October 27, 1961, pursuant to a petition filed by the State of Maryland alleging the 'Association to be insolvent, the Circuit Court for Montgomery County appointed a receiver. The appellees, on January 10, 1962, filed a petition in the Circuit Court for declaratory relief, requesting that they, the club account depositors, be given a preference over savings share depositors in the distribution of the assets of the Association. This resulted in a decree of the Circuit Court granting them the preference requested. On appeal, in Family Savings v. Stewart, 232 Md. 424, 194 A. 2d 118, decided October 9, 1963, we affirmed the action of the lower court. Pursuant to the mandate of this Court and decree of the Circuit Court, the receiver, on April 1, 1964, paid the appellees the principal sums due them plus interest at the rate of four and one-half per cent (the contract interest rate) on such sums to the date of the appointment of the receiver. On November 20, 1963, appellees petitioned the Circuit Court for an amendment of its final decree to include the payment of post-receivership interest to them at the rate of four and one-half per cent from December 1, 1960, to the date of final distribution, prior to the distribution of any assets to savings share depositors. Their second petition on August 18, 1964, was orally amended in open court so as to provide for post-receivership interest at the rate of four and one-half per cent from the date of the appointment of the receiver to January 10, 1963, the date of the decree of the Circuit Court granting appellees a preference; and six per cent interest from January 10, 1963, to the date on which payment was made to the club account holders, April 1, 1964. In the lower court it was undisputed that the receivership estate of the Association did not contain sufficient assets to repay to its savings share depositors the principal of their deposits. Nevertheless the Circuit Court, on February 23, 1965, entered its decree awarding appellees straight six per cent interest from the date of the appointment of the receiver to the date of distribution to appellees, and this appeal followed.

The principal question is whether the lower court was correct in its award of post-receivership interest to the appellees; the practical effect of which was to allow the club account holders an additional twenty per cent over and above the amounts *93 deposited in their accounts, while the savings depositors, appellants, would receive something less than twenty-five cents on every dollar that they deposited in the Association. Resolving this issue in the appellants’ favor requires the answering of two subsidiary questions affirmatively. They are: (1) are the appellants, savings share depositors, creditors of the Association, and (2) if so, are they, as “junior” creditors, entitled to be paid principal before the preferred club account creditors receive post-receivership interest ?

In their briefs and in oral argument before this Court, both parties apparently agreed that if the savings share depositors can not be characterized as “creditors” of the Association, then post-receivership interest was properly payable to the club account holders. The appellees argue that the issue of whether the appellants are creditors was answered in the negative on the first appeal. As we see it, that decision resolved only the question whether the club account holders were entitled to priority in the payment of principal over the savings share-depositors. In the course of that opinion the appellees were classified as creditors and they were deemed to have priority in the payment of principal, but we did not say that the savings share depositors could not be, under certain circumstances, creditors of the Association.

While one may state with assurance that a shareholder in an ordinary business corporation is an owner and not a creditor of that corporation, it does not follow' that a shareholder in a savings and loan association is to be likewise so characterized. Although possessing some of the attributes of a shareholder in an ordinary corporation, such as the right to vote for the election of officers and directors, as well as the right to share proportionately with their respective interests in its profits and losses, the savings share depositor in a savings and loan association possesses other characteristics not shared by investors in an ordinary corporation. First, the depositor in a savings and loan association may usually pay for his shares by installment deposits in his account, whereas in an ordinary business corporation they must be paid for in full at the time of purchase, and secondly, a savings share depositor has the right to withdraw the amount he has deposited dollar for dollar at any *94 time up to insolvency or dissolution. In deciding whether these savings share depositors are creditors, the most relevant difference between ordinary stockholders and the shareholders in a savings and loan association is the right to withdraw the funds placed in the association which gives the depositors hybrid creditor-owner characteristics. Commenting on the right of withdrawal, on the first appeal Judge Prescott said for this Court, at 430 of 232 Md.:

“This latter right makes the shareholder in the association, at leást under certain circumstances, a creditor of the association as well as a shareholder thereof. As stated by Justice Holmes in Atwood v. Dumas, 21 N. E. 236 (Mass.): ‘But the interest of the member of a corporation of this kind [a co-operative savings fund and loan association] is of a peculiar nature, and it does not follow, because the defendant is a member, that she may not be a creditor also in respect of her money paid in * * *.’ See also Benton’s Apparel, Inc. v. Hegna, 7 N. W. 2d 3 (Minn.), and compare Morris Resnick B. & L. Ass'n v. Barnes, 164 A. 358 (Pa. Super.); Aberdeen S. & L. Ass’n v. Chase, 289 P. 536 (Wash.); Ohio Valley B. & L. Ass’n v. County Court, 26 S. E. 203 (W. Va.); In re Western States B-L Ass’n, 50 F. 2d 632 (D. C., Cal.).”

The hybrid creditor-owner characteristics of the savings share depositor is also evidenced by the Maryland rule as to the insolvency of a savings and loan association as compared to the test for insolvency of an ordinary corporation, i. e., in the former insolvency is deemed to be present when the association is unable to pay its general creditors and its savings share depositors dollar for dollar the money contributed by its shareholders, whereas the latter is insolvent when its assets are insufficient to pay its creditors, regardless of its assets in relation to the amount of money invested in the corporation. Wyman v. McKeever, 239 Md. 130, 210 A. 2d 537.

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215 A.2d 726, 241 Md. 89, 1966 Md. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/family-savings-loan-assn-shareholders-protective-committee-v-stewart-md-1966.