Harris v. Monroe Building & Loan Ass'n

154 So. 503, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 695
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1934
DocketNo. 4792.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 154 So. 503 (Harris v. Monroe Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Monroe Building & Loan Ass'n, 154 So. 503, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 695 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff sued to recover the interest or dividends on 75 shares of full-paid stock issued by the defendant to plaintiff. Plaintiff alleged she was the owner of the stock, and, by the terms of the stock certificate, that defendant had agreed to pay her $1 per share per month on each of the 75 shares of stock. *504 She further alleged that the dividends were unpaid for the months of July, August, and September, 1932, and prayed for judgment in the sum of $225.

Defendant filed an exception of no cause of action, which was sustained by the lower court, which judgment was reversed by this court and the case remanded. See Harris v. Monroe Bldg. & Doan Association, 148 So. 489. Defendant then filed in the lower court a plea of estoppel based on section 55 of Act No. 140 of 1932, which reads as follows: “A member who has served notice of his intention to withdraw remains a shareholder, hut shall have the status of, and be classified as, a withdrawing member; and his rights and privileges are prescribed, limited and defined exclusively by the provisions and restrictions of the present Statute. Except as stated in Section 53, no liabilities or losses as of a date subsequent to the time of the filing of his notice of withdrawal shall he chargeable or assessable against his shares; and from the date of said application and as long as his application for withdrawal has not been withdrawn, he shall not be entitled, except as hereinafter set forth, to any benefit on his shares beyond the collection of the face value thereof, nor to allowance or dividend in the distribution of the accumulated or current profits or earnings. No suit shall be instituted by a withdrawing shareholder against an association, its officers or representatives, except for a violation of the provisions of the present Statute, or to enforce compliance with said provisions. Por such purpose and not otherwise, such a withdrawing shareholder shall be entitled, under such reasonable rules as the association may prescribe, to inspect the books and records of the association.”

On the trial of the exception, it was agreed by counsel that plaintiff’s stock was listed for withdrawal on July 20, 1932.

The lower court sustained the plea of estoppel and dismissed plaintiff’s suit, from which judgment she has appealed to this court. In this court appellee has filed the following plea of prescription, acquiescence, waiver, and repose, based upon section 76 of Act No. 140 of 1932: “Into Court comes Monroe Building & Doan Association and shows to this Honorable Court that at the time of the filing of this suit, this plaintiff had placed all of her stock sued on herein, on the withdrawal list and that in accordance with Act No. 140 of 1932 of the Legislature of the State of Louisiana, this plaintiff is estopped to file -any suit against this defendant association except for violation of or to enforce compliance with said Act, which estoppel respondent specially pleads.”

Slight mention of this plea was made in the ai'gument of the case, and neither appellant nor appellee has filed brief pertaining to it here. This provision of the act can have no effect on one who has a cause of action against a building and loan association. It is wholly unreasonable and is an attempt by the Legislature to force shareholders and others interested in the association to call upon the courts to render declaratory judgments which are not permitted under our law. Certainly one without a cause of action or grievance against such an association cannot be forced to file suit against said association or else be forever barred from suing, should a cause of action arise later.

The act to be unconstitutional must violate the provisions of the State or Federal Constitution, or both, and, when it does either, the act is null and void. A Legislature cannot deprive any one of his right to attack the constitutionality of an act; neither can it fix a time in which the attack must be made. To sustain the validity of section 70 of Act No. 140 of 1932 would mean that the Legislature of this state would have the power to destroy all the rights and guaranties offered the citizens of this state by both the State and Federal Constitutions.

Plea of Estoppel.

It is admitted that this suit is not for violation of the provisions of Act No. 140 of 1932, and is not to enforce compliance with any of the provisions of said statute. Therefore the only question is the constitutionality of Act No. 140 of 1932, especially section 55 thereof.

Act No. 140 of 1982 expressly repealed Act No. 120 of 1902 and Act No. 280 of 1916, by stating that said acts were superseded by the corresponding and relevant provisions of Act No. 140 of 1932. The acts of 1902 and 1916 were in effect and were the. law governing withdrawals at the time plaintiff acquired her stock, and were also the law in effect at the time plaintiff listed her stock for withdrawal with defendant, and it is conceded that, under the law at that time, the listing of the stock for withdrawal did not deprive plaintiff of her rights under her contract, as set out in the face of the stock certificate, to continue to collect and be paid by defendant the $1 per share per month on stock owned by her in defendant association, and did not prohibit the filing of suit against *505 defendant for that purpose after the stock was listed for withdrawal. Therefore, unless the provisions of section 55 of Act No. 140 of 1932 are constitutional and binding on plaintiff, she is not estopped from suing for dividends due,

Plaintiff contends that section 55 of Act No. 140 of 1932 is unconstitutional for the reason that it violates the obligation of contract and that it divests vested rights. Defendant contends that said section of said act only regulates the remedy and is therefore constitutional; and further contends that said act was an emergency act and authorized under the police powers of the state in its regulation of quasi public corporations, of which defendant is one.

The contention of plaintiff is well founded. Under its contract, set out in the stock certificate and the law in effect at the time, she was guaranteed payment of $1 per month per share on each share of stock of said defendant association owned by her. This was the moving consideration for her placing her money ($15,009) in said association in return for full paid-up stock. The only profit she could receive from said association was the $1 per share, regardless of the amount earned by the association, and, although said amount was due her, she could not collect it until it was earned. See former opinion, 148 So. 489.

Under said contract as above described, plaintiff was guaranteed $1 per month per share dividend up to the time she was actually paid her money, under the plan of withdrawal then in effect, although she- had listed her stock for withdrawal long prior to the time she was paid. The listing of the stock for withdrawal did not cause the dividends contracted to be paid to cease, and did not deprive her of the right to file suit. Act No. 140 of 1932, § 55, completely wiped out and changed the contract, as set out in the stock certificate, by causing the dividends guaranteed therein to cease becoming due after the stock had been listed for withdrawal even though the stock should remain on the withdrawal list for several years, as in the present case, and further prohibited the withdrawing shareholder to file suit for said dividends.

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Bluebook (online)
154 So. 503, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-monroe-building-loan-assn-lactapp-1934.