Fidelity Building & Loan Ass'n v. Cox

84 P.2d 70, 52 Ariz. 514, 1938 Ariz. LEXIS 187
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1938
DocketCivil No. 3992.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 84 P.2d 70 (Fidelity Building & Loan Ass'n v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Building & Loan Ass'n v. Cox, 84 P.2d 70, 52 Ariz. 514, 1938 Ariz. LEXIS 187 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

*516 LOCKWOOD, J.

Fidelity Building and Loan Association, a corporation, hereinafter called plaintiff, brought suit against J. J. Cox and Mary Cox, his wife, hereinafter called defendants, and others, to foreclose a mortgage covering lots 1, 2, 3 and 4, in block 33 of the town of Glendale. Judgment was rendered that plaintiff take nothing by its suit, and that it be barred from any claim against or an interest in the property set forth in the mortgage, and from said judgment this appeal was taken.

Plaintiff based its claim upon a note and mortgage given by one John D. Frahm, now deceased, payable in monthly amortized installments.’ Frahm disappeared and presumably died in November, 1928, and his estate was administered, J. J. Cox, one of the defendants herein, purchasing at probate sale all of the assets of the estate, including the property covered by the note and mortgage. At the time of the execution of the note and mortgage, Frahm had also purchased fifty shares of stock in the plaintiff. Many payments were made by him and his successor in interest, Cox, on the note, but not sufficient to satisfy it, and since it was considerably in arrears, this suit for foreclosure was brought.

Defendants admitted the execution of the note and mortgage by Frahm and his purchase of the stock in the plaintiff, and that the property had passed, by order of the probate court, to defendant Cox. They set up, however, that they had been unable to obtain a statement from plaintiff, showing the true amount still due on the mortgage and the payments made on the stock, and further alleged that the stock had been sold by plaintiff in violation of chapter 9 (tit. 9, section 2259 et seq.), Revised Statutes Arizona 1913, commonly known as the “Blue Sky” law; that Frahm had paid on its purchase price the sum of $1325, and was *517 entitled to recover from plaintiff that amount, or have it credited upon the note and mortgage. The prayer was for an accounting as to how much, if any, was due plaintiff, and that if nothing were found to be due, that defendants’ title to the mortgaged premises be quieted.

The case was tried to the court, sitting without a jury, and it found that the note had been reduced by various payments made directly thereon by Frahm and his successors in interest to $1312.72; that the stock in question was sold to Frahm in violation of the “Blue Sky” law, and that plaintiff had led the administrator of the estate of Frahm, and Cox, before the latter purchased the property, to believe that said stock certificate was valid and that there had been paid thereon the sum of $1325. The judgment was that plaintiff take nothing by its suit, and be barred of any claim against, or interest in, the mortgaged property.

There are many assignments of error, but we think the case can, and should, be determined by us on certain general propositions of law raised by the assignments as applied to the evidence in the case, rather than by considering these assignments seriatim. The evidence reasonably supports the findings of the trial court that after deducting from the amount of the original loan, with interest, the amount of payments made by Frahm and his successors in interest directly thereon, there was still due to plaintiff the sum of $1312.72. If that were all, it would have necessarily followed that judgment should have been given against defendant Cox and his wife, who, in their pleadings, admit that they agreed to assume the payment of the note and mortgage, for that amount, and for a foreclosure of the mortgage.

The real bone of contention in this case is as to whether defendants were entitled to an offset against *518 the amount due on the mortgage of anything on account of the stock hereinbefore referred to. It is the theory of defendants (a) that the stock in question was sold to Frahm in violation of the terms of the “Blue Sky” law, (b) that if this were true, he was entitled to recover from plaintiff the full amount paid for the stock, (c) that the evidence shows, either directly or by presumption of fact, that he had paid for said stock the sum of $1325, or (d) if it was not actually paid that plaintiff is estopped to deny the payment.

It is the contention of plaintiff (a) that the sale of the stock was not made in violation of the “Blue Sky” law or any other law of the state, and that Frahm, therefore, took it subject to the terms of his contract of purchase with plaintiff; (b) that the evidence shows that he had paid thereon only the sum of $200, and that the rules and regulations of plaintiff, to which Frahm assented when he purchased the stock, provided that it had no value on account of his failure to make the balance of the payments thereon, and (c) that plaintiff is not estopped from this contention. The first question then for our consideration is whether the sale of the stock was made in contravention of the terms of the ‘£ Blue Sky ’ ’ law.

It is clearly shown by the evidence that before the sale of the stock, plaintiff had complied with the provisions of sections 2231 to 2242, Revised Statutes Arizona 1913, and had been issued a certificate by the corporation commission, licensing it to do business as a building and loan association within the state of Arizona, but that it had not attempted to comply with the provisions of sections 2259 and 2271, Revised Statutes Arizona 1913, relating to investment companies, and commonly known as the “Blue Sky” law. The question before us then is whether the code of 1913, which was in force at the time the stock was sold to Frahm, *519 required foreign building and loan associations desiring to do business within the state of Arizona to comply with the provisions which specifically govern such associations, and also with those governing investment companies in general, as prerequisite to selling any of their stock within the state of Arizona.

The code of 1887, in chapter 7, title 12, section 347 et seq., provides certain general regulations for foreign corporations which desire to do business in the state of Arizona. Chapter 4 of said title, section 283 et seq., also provides for the organization of savings and loan corporations within the state of Arizona. A comparison of the two chapters shows clearly that all that a foreign savings and loan corporation was then required to do, in order to engage in business in the state of Arizona, was to comply with the general provisions of the law regarding foreign corporations, which were, substantially, to file a copy of the articles of incorporation and to make an appointment of an agent within the territory. There was no special regulation of foreign building and loan corporations or of investment companies of any nature at that time. The provisions of chapter 4, supra, were carried forward to the Civil Code of 1901 as chapter 6, title 13, section 827 et seq., with some modification, and those of chapter 7 were carried forward, in substance, as chapter 9, section 909 et seq., but an addition was made to chapter 9, applying specifically to foreign building and loan associations. Section 914 of that code reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
84 P.2d 70, 52 Ariz. 514, 1938 Ariz. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-building-loan-assn-v-cox-ariz-1938.