Franklin County Building & Loan Ass'n v. Blood

255 Ill. App. 175, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 379
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 26, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 255 Ill. App. 175 (Franklin County Building & Loan Ass'n v. Blood) 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
Franklin County Building & Loan Ass'n v. Blood, 255 Ill. App. 175, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 379 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolfe

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Franklin County Building & Loan Association filed a bill to foreclose a mortgage, to the May term, A. D. 1927, of the circuit court of Franklin county. The amended bill alleges that the complainant was a building and loan association organized under the laws of 1879 and amendments thereto. The bill further alleges that on the 12th day of November, A. D. 1921, D. W. Blood became a member -of said association and subscribed for twelve shares of the capital stock; that certificates of stock were issued to him for said shares, that on the same day he became indebted to complainant in the sum of $1,200 for money loaned to him, and to secure the same pledged his stock and executed the note and mortgage involved in this suif. The bill further avers that the by-laws of the complainant provide that monthly instalments be paid on stock with premium and interest on each share; that neglect to pay said instalments when due subjected the defendant to pay a fine on each share of stock, and neglect to pay such instalments for six months subjected the stock to forfeiture by resolution of complainant’s board of directors.

The bill further alleges that the complainant is the legal and equitable holder and owner of the note and mortgage and entitled to all the benefits of the same; that it is expressly stipulated in said mortgage that in case default should be made in the payment of said obligations according to the tenor and effect of said mortgage, or for the nonpayment of taxes, etc., the whole of such amount should become due and the complainant upon the resolution of its board of directors might foreclose said mortgage.

The bill further alleges that for a consideration of $50 the said D. W. Blood conveyed the said premises to the defendant, T. I. Galloway, but that Galloway did not assume or agree to pay said mortgage; that default has been made in the payment of the instalments, as provided in said writing, for more than six months and default has been made in payment of taxes and insurance ; that the complainant, by a resolution of its board of directors duly adopted, has elected to forfeit the stock and mature the debt and bring this suit to foreclose the mortgage.

The defendants D. W. Blood and Grace O. Blood were defaulted. The defendants T. I. Galloway and Jennie Galloway filed two pleas and an answer to the bill. The first plea avers that the complainant at and before the commencement of the suit and since that time has not been either an actual or artificial person and at that time had no legal entity; that the certificate of complete organization of said association was issued May 24,1917, and was not filed for record in the office of the circuit clerk and recorder until the 21st day of December, 1921; that at the time of the organization of said association the City of Benton, where said association was located, was a city of more than 5,000 inhabitants and only 200 shares "of the capital stock was subscribed for, before the said certificate was issued; that said association did not organize and proceed to do business until after the statute of 1879 was repealed.

The second plea averred that on account of the facts as stated in plea No. 1, the Building & Loan Association was not a legal entity and had no authority to become the mortgagee or payee in the note and mortgage.

The answer filed denied in substance all of the material allegations of the bill and demanded strict proof of the same; denied that the complainant was the legal or equitable owner of the note or mortgage or entitled to any of the benefits of same. The answer avers that the loan is usurious and is not made in compliance with the statute of the State of Illinois, nor in compliance with the by-laws of the complainant.

To these pleas and answer the complainant filed a replication. The cause was heard in open court before the chancellor who found that the allegations in the amended bill were true as therein stated and the equities therein were with the complainant, and found that the amount due from defendants to the complainant was $1,372.25, including attorneys’ fees, costs, etc., and ordered the property sold to satisfy this decree. From this decree the defendants, T. I. Galloway and Jennie Galloway, bring the case to this court for review.

It is first contended that the complainant Building & Loan Association is not a legal entity. The gist of their argument and the substance of the two special pleas, as well as the facts set up in the answer, is that because of the fact that the charter of the complainant association was isued May 24, 1917, but not recorded until December 21, 1921, thereby the charter elapsed and became null.and void and that the acts of the corporation thereunder were and are a nullity; that it is not and never was a legal entity to which a note and mortgage could be made, or in which the right of action thereunder became vested. It is also urged by plaintiffs in error that the certificate under which the association was organized was defective in that only 200 shares of the capital stock were subscribed when the statute required that 500 shares should be subscribed. The plaintiffs in error rely upon the cases of People v. Mackey, 255 Ill. 144, and Africani Purchase & Loan Ass’n v. Carroll, 267 Ill. 380, as sustaining the conten-tion that the Franklin County Building & Loan Association’s failure to file its certificate of incorporation within two years from its date was fatal to the legal existence of the corporation and therefore any acts done by the supposed corporation would be a nullity. In a later case of Hall v. Woods, 325 Ill. 114, the former cases are overruled and it expressly holds that the failure of a corporation to file its final certificate of organization within two years after its date was not subject to collateral attack in a suit between a corporation and individual litigant, and-cites Bushnell v. Consolidated Ice Machine Co., 138 Ill. 67; Marshall v. Keach, 227 Ill. 35; and Inter-Ocean Newspaper Co. v. Robertson, 296 Ill. 92. It is our opinion that the at-, tempt of the plaintiffs in error in this case, to raise this question, is a collateral attack, and cannot be sustained.

It is alleged in the pleas of the plaintiffs in error that the City of Benton in 1917 had a population of more than 5,000 inhabitants, therefore there must be at least 500 shares of stock subscribed before the Building & Loan Association could function properly; that the evidence shows that there were only 200 shares actually subscribed and, therefore, the charter of the Building & Loan Association was void ab initio.

The only evidence offered to support this plea was a certificate of the Secretary of State which the Department of Commerce had published to the effect that the population of the City of Benton according to the census of 1920 was 7,201. The certificate shows on its face that there had been no official census of 1920 which had been filed in the Secretary of State’s office. The plaintiffs in error reason that because no cities in southern Illinois during the time from 1910 to 1920 made any extraordinary gains in population that they were justified in assuming that because the population of the City of Benton in 1920 was 7,201 that, therefore, they have established the fact that in 1917 the population exceeded 5,000.

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Bluebook (online)
255 Ill. App. 175, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-county-building-loan-assn-v-blood-illappct-1929.