Forsell v. Suddard

90 Ill. App. 407, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 807
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 31, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 Ill. App. 407 (Forsell v. Suddard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forsell v. Suddard, 90 Ill. App. 407, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 807 (Ill. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Horton

delivered, the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree entered by the Circuit Court in a suit for the foreclosure of a mortgage given by appellants to the Mechanics’ & Traders’ Savings, Loan and Building Association, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Illinois governing building and loan associations.

August 1,1897, said association ceased to do business, and December 22, 1897, appellees were appointed receivers of the association under a decree of the Circuit Court finding said association to be insolvent, and directing its affairs to be wound up.

January 21, 1889, appellant Charles E. Forsell, being then the owner of sixteen shares of its stock, applied to said association for a loan of $1,600. Upon such applica¡tion a loan was agreed upon, and to secure repayment thereof said mortgage was given. Said association paid on account of said loan $1,231.25, and retained $368.75, the balance of said sum of $1,600, as premium. Said sixteen shares of stock were assigned to said association as collateral security. Appellant made all his stock and interest payments up to the time said association became insolvent and ceased to do business. He had also paid $262.50 on account of the principal of said loan.

Section 8 of the statute of Illinois, relating to such associations, in force at the time this loan was made (see Starr & Curtis’ Stat., Ch. 32, Sec. 115), provides:

“The board of directors shall hold such stated meetings not less frequently than once a month, as may be provided by the by-laws, at which the money in the treasury, if one hundred dollars or more, shall be offered for loan in open meeting, and the stockholders who shall bid the highest premium for the preference or priority of loan shall be entitled to receive a loan of one hundred dollars, less the premium bid for each share of stock held by said stockholders.”

Section 1, Art. 5, of the by-laws of said association provides:

“The board of directors * * * at their stated meetings shall offer for loan the funds of the association, as provided in section 8 of the same act.”

In their answer to said bill, appellants deny that there was any bid for the privilege of obtaining said loan, and deny that the principal appellant, Charles E. Eorsell, bid any sum whatever as a premium on said loan, but admit that the principal appellant agreed to pay said premium. Said answer prays that an accounting may be had and that said appellant be charged with only the amount actually received by him on account of said loan and interest thereon at the rate of five per cent.

Upon the hearing before the master in chancery, appellees offered in evidence an 'extract from the records of said association, as to a meeting of the directors held January 21, 1889, wherein it is stated :

“ The money on hand for sale was awarded to the highest bidder for premium, as follows, to wit: Charles E. For-sell, sixteen shares, at a premium of twenty-five per cent.”

And at said hearing appellant offered to prove that said principal appellant never had any conversation with any officer of said association in relation to the bidding of any premium for said loan; that he was not present at said meeting of directors, and that he never bid or authorized any one to make any bid for him of any premium for a loan on his behalf from said association. And appellants caused questions to be propounded to witness at said hearing for the purpose of establishing the correctness of said offer to prove. Upon the objection of appellees, such testimony as proof was excluded. The master in the accounting, made and reported by him, included the amount of said premium as a part of the amount due to appellees.

Counsel for appellants here contend-that the court below erred in entering a decree charging the premium of $368.75, for the following reasons:

“ First. The premium was not fixed by bidding, and was not the result of a competitive sale of the money on hand for loan.

“ Second. A premium which is not the result of competitive sale is usurious.”

The question thus presented has never been decided bv the Supreme or one of the Appellate Courts of this State so far as we are advised.

On the part of appellees it is contended that the'question of usury is not raised by the answer of appellant, and that therefore these contentions can not be considered by this court. This objection on the part of appellees is not well founded. It is not necessary that the answer should contain the word “ usury.” It is sufficient if it contain such averment of facts, as would constitute usury, if proven.

If the premium charged to the principal appellant was not fixed by bidding, i. e., by a competitive sale, as required by said statute and said by-law, 'and if that be usury, then it was error to exclude the testimony offered by appellant and to include in the decree entered in this cause the amount of said premium.

In McCauley v. Building & Savings Association, 97 Tenn. 421, it appears that the appellant there was a stockholder in the appellee association in the sum of $1,600. SHe made a loan from that association and gave her note therefor for the sum of $1,600. She received upon her note $1,120 and the association retained $480 as premium. The statute of that State and the by-law of that association are in legal contemplation and effect, and in regard to the question here involved, the same as the statute of Illinois and the by-law above quoted. Appellant in that case-had not bid for the loan, and it was held that the contract was infected with usury. The opinion of the Supreme Court of Tennessee in that case is so complete and exhaustive and so commends itself to us that we quote therefrom at length:

“ * * * In t'heir original conception their object was to enable the poor and those of small means and incomes to acquire homes and build houses, and thus to become better citizens and more identified with the growth and welfare of the country. The original purpose is well foreshadowed by the name of ‘ Building Associations,’ and the loan feature was a mere incident to effect its primary object. The theory was to enable persons whose earnings were small to become, by a system of compulsory saving, the owners of homesteads, either at the end of a certain time or in anticipation of it; and the scheme, as originally framed, was not complicated or difficult to understand. * * *
As originally designed, their object was in the highest degree laudable, and consonant with the broadest public policy. It was these features that commended them to public favor and to the special consideration of legislatures to such an unusual degree. But building and loan associations, when used as mere depositories for the idle money of the capitalist, large or small, to be used in loans to enrich the depositor at the expense of the needy borrower, would never have acquired the unusual rights and powers given them by the different legislatures.

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Related

Free Home Building, Loan & Homestead Ass'n v. Edwards
124 Ill. App. 191 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1906)
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91 Ill. App. 657 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
90 Ill. App. 407, 1899 Ill. App. LEXIS 807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forsell-v-suddard-illappct-1900.