Hinman v. Ryan

2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 305
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 305 (Hinman v. Ryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hinman v. Ryan, 2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 305 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

(orally).

The two cases of Wilbur F. Hinman, Receiver, v. William Ryan and others, and Perry Prentiss, Administrator, v. Anne Cody and others, although their names are very different, involve practically the same principles of law, and, to a very large degree, the same facts.

Hinman was receiver of The Mechanics’ Land & Building Loan Association, succeeded by Mr. Sherwood.. The action of Wilbur.F. Hinman, Receiver, is an-action to foreclose á building association mortgage against Ryan. . The case [306]*306of Perry Prentiss, Administrator, is an action that was originally brought to foreclose a second mortgage upon property upon which exists a first mortgage to the same association, which is represented by the receiver, and which, the Prentiss mortgage having been paid off, is undertaken, in the action of Prentiss, to be foreclosed by the receiver, and all there is left of it is the foreclosure oi a mortgage by a receiver. So that practically it is a foreclosure by the same receiver of the same corporation against two different mortgagors, and the same class bf facts exists in regard to both. ' **

It seems.that The Mechanics’ Land & Building Loan Association was an association which, in due time, did as other building associations have done— it undertook to redeem a portion of its stock. It had done business on a somewhat false basis.' The persons who borrowed money of it secured their money by the bidding of a large premium. For instance, a person who got nominally a thousand dollars would bid a premium of forty per cent., perhaps; so that he would get only six. hundred dollars, and it collected interest upon the basis of a thousand dollars, instead of the six hundred which he got, which was decided by the supreme court, in a case of Building Assn. v. Gallagher, 25 O. S., 208, to be illegal and improper. The end was that a proceeding was brought which involved a contest as to which of two boards of directors was competent, and for a dissolution of the corporation, under the act found in 64 O. L., 153, as,, amended, 72 O. L., 138 (Rev. Stat., 5651-5688); and this receiver was appointed in those proceedings, and he -now appears as foreclosing the mortgages.

In both cases the mortgagors paid interest and dues up to a certain time. They paid interest on the full nominal amount of their loans — for instance, on the basis of a thousand dollars, instead of the six hundred dollars which they, got; and that being usury, under the decision of the supreme court, there is a balance 'to be applied. It can hardly be claimed, we think, that they paid dues for a less time than they were obliged to pay dues as the matter then stood. They paid dues as long as anybody else did, and until, by common consent, dues were dropped; and within certainly not more than two or three months after the matter was dropped by common consent for the non-payment of dues, the proceedings for dissolution were commenced, and the affairs of the corporation were put into the hands of the law.

In each of these cases there appears another claimant, under each of these mortgages, who claims that the association assigned to him these mortgages, and he claims to be entitled to foreclose them, instead of the receiver. In each case the assignment was made or. purported to be made by the association after the proceedings had been commenced for the dissolution. We had occasion to discuss that matter quite fully in the case of Broderick against this same association, and we do not think it is necessary in this case to say anything more than to refer to that case as the authority in which, in our minds, we settled it by a careful and elaborate statement of the reasons which we had why this association, after the time that those proceedings for dissolution were commenced, was not in a condition to transfer its assets, which must be held for the proceedings already then pending in the courts. Under sec. 13, 64 O. L., 153, now Rev. Stat., 5661, these assignments were void as against this receiver. So that, without saying any more, I shall say that in each of these cases we find that the transfers which are claimed to have beer made to other, third parties, of these mortgages, are void.

Then the question comes down directly as between the receiver and the., mortgagors.

It is claimed upon the part of the receiver that he is entitled to recover the full amount of the note. The note was for $1,000, on which the party received, for instance, $600. The plaintiff claims that he is entitled to recover upon that note $1,000, and to have the property, sold for the payment of the $1,000, the full amount. On the other hand, it is claimed that the receiver is not entitled [307]*307to .recover anything. There are various other claims made ranging between those, the receiver being willing and anxious, if he cannot recover the whole of'that $1,000, to get such amount less than that as the court may think he is entitled to. It is claimed that he is entitled to a judgment for that $1,000,. and if the court think there should be an adjustment between this person and. other persons, the judgment standing, execution to be issued at some future time when the court shall find that there has been an"adjustment by which the amount that this person should pay in to settle the matters between himself and-other parties has been ascertained; because, the corporation having come to a practical end, as far as its own conduct of its own affairs is concerned, the various members and stockholders of this corporation are left in various conditions .of credit or debt to this corporation, and they have obligations and duties as between themselves, and, in order to work even and exact justice between these various parties, there is an adjustment to be made. Some of these parties have redeemed their stock by taking loans, and they have actually received money. There are other parties who have been paying in money in the shape of dues all the time, and, they have not received any money. One side have money in then-pockets, while the other side have been money out; and some of the parties have undertaken to go through the operation, which was so severely criticised in the case of State v. Building Assn., 35 O. S., 258, of selling their stock to the corporation, and, for a fixed price paid down, h'aving their relations with the corporation entirely dissolved. It is pretty plain that, in order to do complete justice between the parties, there should be a suit in which everybody interested on one side or the other of this matter should be represented, and matters should be evened up and adjusted as between these parties.

In the meantime, the receiver claims that upon this contract he is entitled to' maintain a suit in foreclosure. The mortgage in this case does no more than' to secure the obligation. Sometimes in mortgages, and in some of the cases which appear in the books, which have been before us in the discussion of this case, there are additional terms to those in the money obligation; but in this particular case, so far as it is a contract obligation and to be determined'according to that, it turns upon this contract:

“$1,000. Cleveland, Ohio, February 22, 1870- .
“For value received, I promise to pay to The Cleveland Mechanics’ Land & Building Loan Association, of Cleveland, the sum of one thousand dollars, with interest at six per cent, per annum, payáble monthly.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinman-v-ryan-ohcirctcuyahoga-1888.