Hale v. Gullick

84 N.W. 196, 13 S.D. 637, 1900 S.D. LEXIS 199
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 84 N.W. 196 (Hale v. Gullick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. Gullick, 84 N.W. 196, 13 S.D. 637, 1900 S.D. LEXIS 199 (S.D. 1900).

Opinions

Haney, J.

In its decision the circuit court finds the facts to be as follows: “(1) That the plaintiff the American [639]*639Savings & Loan. Association was organized as a mutual building and loan association on or about April, 1887, under the laws of the state of Minnesota, having first been incorporated under the name of the American Building and Loan Association, which name was changed on or about July 26, 1892, to American Savings and Loan Association. (2) That prior to January 14, 1896, some of the officers of said association had been guilty of certain violations of law, and it became unable to carry out the purpose for which it was created, and on said date the plaintiff William D. Hale was duly appointed receiver of said association by the district court of Hennepin county/' Minnesota, and thereafter, on June 18, 1896, plaintiff was by said court appointed permanent receiver of said association. That thereafter, and prior to the commencement of this action, the officers of said association were directed by said district court of Hennepin county to, and did, transfer and assign the note and mortgage hereinafter described to said plaintiff, and granted leave to him to bring this suit. That on or about July 11, 1888, the defendant Thomas Gullick made application to said association for membership therein, and on the 11th day of July, 1888, the plaintiff issued to him its certificate of shares in said association, No. 4,366, being for six shares, of the par value of $100 per share. Said certificate, among other provisions, contained the requirement that the shareholder agrees to pay the association sixty cents monthly upon each share as dues. (3) That on or about January 25, 1889, defendant Thomas Gullick made application to said association for a loan of $300, pursuant to the condition of said certificate of stock and the agreement between the parties hereto, and bid the sum of §50 per share, amounting in all to §300, as and for a pre[640]*640mium for such loan, which application and bid were accepted, and which sum was paid by said Thomas Gullick to said association as a premium for the privilege of making said loan, and that he received from it the sum of $300 upon said loan. That, in order to secure said loan or advancement, on the Hth day of August, 1889, the defendants Thomas Gullick and Johanna Gullick executed and delivered to said association their certain bond and mortgage, dated on that day, wherein and whereby they promised to pay to said association, on or before nine years after said date thereof, the sum of §600, together with interest on $300 at the rate of six per cent per annum from August 8, 1889, until paid, in money, payable monthly, or that they shall well and truly pay or cause to be paid unto said association, its successors or assigns, §3.60 on the 11th day of each and every month thereafter, as and for the monthly dues on said six shares, the capital stock of said association then owned by said Thomas Gullick, and by them thereby sold, assigned and transferred to said association as security, and also pay all installments of interest aforesaid, and all fines which become due on said stock, until said stock becomes fully paid in and of the value of $100 per share, and shall then surrender said stock to said association; that then, and in either of such cases, said obligation to be void, otherwise in full force and virtue, and said mortgage being upon lots numbered one and two of block number two in Randi Peterson’s addition to the town (now city) of Brookings, county of Brookings, territory of Dakota (now state of South Dakota"), and said mortgage containing the provision, among others, that it was given to secure said bond for $600, with interest on $300 at six percent per annum, or that, in lieu thereof, mortgagors shall pay, [641]*641or cause to be paid, at the home office of said association, all installments and interest which become due on said bond, and all fines and monthly payments which become due on said stock, until said stock becomes fully paid, and shall surrender said stock to said association, then said mortgage deed to be null and void. And that, at the time of executing said bond and mortgage, defendant Thomas Gullick assigned said six shares of stock to said association as collateral security. (4) That at the time of giving said bond and mortgage, and continuously since that time, the said mortgaged premises have been occupied by the defendants Thomas Gullick and Johanna Gullick, husband and wife, as their family residence. That the same contains less than one acre of ground, and with the improvements is less than §2,000 in value, and is their homestead, and has been their homestead during all of said time. (5) That the defendant Thomas Gullick on the 11th day of July, 1888, paid to said association the sum of $8 as an admission fee, and thereafter paid regularly the monthly payments of dues and interest as the same accrued, until and including the dues and interest to January, 1896, and until the appointment of said receiver. That the amounts so paid in by said defendant to said association were at the time of such payment duly credited and entered in the pass book furnished by said association to its members; such credit entries being made by authorized agents of said association, and credited as payments upon said loan from month to month. That at the time of the appointment of said receiver, to wit, January 14, 1896, defendant Thomas Gullick had paid to said association, on account of said bond and mortgage and stock, $824 for dues, $124.50 as interest, and $8 as an admission fee. That no default existed [642]*642in the condition of either said bond or mortgage at the time of the appointment of said receiver, and at that time the account between the defendants Thomas and Johanna Gulhck and the association stood as follows, to wit:

Amount received on loan..........................................$300 00

Interest on same at 7 per cent, from date received.................135 10

Total...........................................................$435 10

Amount paid in as dues.............................................$324 00

Interest on same according to the rule of partial payments at 7 per cent................•.......................................... 80 30

As interest ....................................................... 124 50

Interest thereon according to the rule of partial payments aforesaid.. 27 20

Total.........................................................$556 00

—Being $120.90 more than the amount received by defendant Gullick, as aforesaid, with interest thereon as aforesaid from the date of its receipt. This balance, however, is stated merely for the purpose of ascertaining in whose favor the balance exists, but the amount of such balance is not to be deemed conclusive as to its exact amount. (6) That prior to the commencement of this action the defendant Thomas Gullick elected to apply all of said payments made to said association as payment pro tanto upon said mortgage indebtedness at the time said payments were made, and communicated such election to the plaintiff. (7) That no action or proceeding at law or otherwise has been had to enforce the„ payment of said alleged indebtedness. (8) That the defendant George More-house has an interest in and lien upon the said premises by virtue of a mortgage thereon executed and delivered to him by said defendants Thomas Gullick and Johannah Gullick on the 8th day of February, 1898, to secure the payment to him of [643]

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Related

Northwestern Nat. Bank v. Reed
220 N.W. 509 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1928)
Hale v. Tidball
84 N.W. 1119 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 N.W. 196, 13 S.D. 637, 1900 S.D. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-gullick-sd-1900.