Johnson v. Potomac Bldg. Ass'n

13 F. Cas. 784, 14 Leg. Int. 393
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia
DecidedJuly 1, 1857
DocketCase No. 7,406
StatusPublished

This text of 13 F. Cas. 784 (Johnson v. Potomac Bldg. Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Potomac Bldg. Ass'n, 13 F. Cas. 784, 14 Leg. Int. 393 (circtddc 1857).

Opinion

MERRICK, Circuit Judge.

The complainant is a member of one of those voluntary associations, with the principles and modes of operation of which the public has long been familiar, under the denomination of “building associations,” and brings his bill into this court against the trustees of the association to restrain the enforcement of the stipulations he has entered into with them in the usual conduct of the business of the association, and in furtherance of the objects for which he and all its members enter into the co-partnership, upon the ground that those stipulations are usurious, unconscionable, and oppressive. This case is understood to raise the question, presented by several of like character on the docket, of the lawfulness of the operations of this class of associations, and of a large number of kindred societies which are known as “benefit societies,” and have as their ostensible object the accumulation of a fund for each of their members by the periodical contribution of small savings, which are made productive by being advanced in certain amounts to individual members in the form of composition sales of their interests. All these societies combine two leading features, viz. hoarding savings and making profits by compounding interest on savings, on substantially the same principles as savings banks and mutual insurance companies, by the following simple process: A number of persons enter into mutual agreement to subscribe and pay into a common fund by regular installments, say of one dollar per month for each share the member may take, until the fund shall have accumulated so as to divide two hundred dollars or any other given amount to each share, at which period the partnership is to cease, and the share of each member thus accumulated will be a fund for him to purchase a small freehold tenement, or to be applied to any other prudential use he may determine; and to secure punctuality, each member neglecting his monthly payments is subjected to a fine, say of ten cents upon every dollar he fails to pay at the regular monthly meetings. The period of distribution is hastened, and the common fund made productive by authorizing any member to make a composition sale of his interest in the ultimate distribution to the other members of the association. Thus, whenever there are funds enough in the treasury for the purchase of one or more shares at any regular meeting of the association. the member who bids the highest premium, or, in other words, agrees to take the lowest price, is paid the price so bid by him for his ultimate share. He remains, however, a member of the society until the close, paying thenceforth a double monthly instal[785]*785ment on his shares, two dollars per month on each, instead of one dollar, and subject to all the regulations of the society, liable to attend its meetings, and to do any duties which might be devolved upon any other member, and liable to the regulated fines, in default of punctual payment of monthly contributions, or any other default under the rules. Whenever a sale of this kind is effected, it is manifest that, unless some arrangement is made, the society has no security that the member who has been advanced by this sale his ultimate share of profits, will continue to bear his proportion of the burden of mutual contribution; therefore a bond in the penalty of the ultimate value of the shares sold, and a deed of trust upon real estate is executed to the society, conditioned for his faithful payment of the monthly dues thereafter to accrue, and all fines and forfeitures which may, under the rules, be imposed on him for any defaults. There is in the bond and deed no stipulation for the return of the principal sum advanced to the member, nor is it at all in the power of the society to compel its return if he ful-fil the conditions of the bond and deed of trust. Should the member fail to comply, the bond and deed of trust become forfeit, and the society may direct a sale of the property conveyed by the deed, to raise the amount of damages which are ascertained and liquidated by the deed of trust, and which are usually the return to the society of the advance paid upon the bid of the member, with interest thereon, all the monthly dues and fines which may be in arrear; and the member is then and thereby reinstated in the condition of a member who has had no advance, and has paid all his dues and fines, &c.

The facts in the present case conform to the general scheme I have mentioned. John Johnson is a member of the Potomac Building Association, consisting of one hundred and seventy-six members. On the 5th of May, 1851, he received from the society $206, bid on two shares, of the ultimate value of $400. In other words, he sold to -the other members at f’>5 per cent, discount, and gave bond and deed of trust for the payment of double monthly dues thenceforth, or $4 per month, and for such fines and forfeitures as he might incur; and. falling in arrear for dues and fines in December, 1856, the trustees under the deed of trust advertised the property for sale, and' he has filed his bill, charging that the stipulations he entered into were only a device to cover an usurious loan, and. praying to be discharged from his contract on payment of the principal sum of $200, with interest from May 5. 1S51, and to be released from the fines incurred by him as a member of the. society,' and to enjoin a sale of the property by the trustees. The answer denies that there was any corrupt intent or secret agreement to effect an usurious loan under the forms of stipulations entered into by parties, and sets out the bond, deed of trust, articles of association, &e., and avers that the contract was bona fide entered into and made and intended to be what it appears on the face of the papers, and none other. In the present stage of the cause, the answer must be taken as true, that the contract between the parties was whatever it appears to be, and that there was no other and different agreement behind the ostensible arrangement. Were there other secret agreement to make an usurious loan, to which the stipulations here shown were but an outward covering, and it were so charged in the bill by proper averments, it would become necessary, before a final hearing, to send down a case to a jury to ascertain whether there be in fact a secret corrupt usurious agreement for a loan; for whatever form parties adopt to hide usury, if they have secretly made a corrupt loan, the law will drag away the veil and penetrate the motive. But I do not understand the bill to charge any different agreement from that disclosed by the answer, and the question before us is therefore not one of intention, but one of construction upon the face of the articles of association, bond, and deed of trust exhibited with the answer. As a question of construction, it seems to me, both upon principle and authority, that stipulations like those we are considering are not usurious. To constitute usury, there must be a loan of money, in which the principal sum is not hazarded, and is to be repaid at all events, with more than legal interest. There was a time in the history of the law when the taking of any interest for the use of money was an heinous offence; but “usury has long since lost that deep moral stain which was formerly attached to it, and is now generally considered only as an illegal or immoral act, because it is prohibited by law.” Supreme court, in Lloyd v. Scott, 4 Pet. [29 U. S.] 224.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 784, 14 Leg. Int. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-potomac-bldg-assn-circtddc-1857.