Louchheim v. Somerset Building & Loan Ass'n

60 A. 1054, 211 Pa. 499, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 490
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 17, 1905
DocketAppeal, No. 314
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 A. 1054 (Louchheim v. Somerset Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louchheim v. Somerset Building & Loan Ass'n, 60 A. 1054, 211 Pa. 499, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 490 (Pa. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Dean,

This case is an action of assumpsit in the court below, by plaintiff against defendant, to recover the withdrawal value of nine shares of stock in the association, on which he alleged he had paid the dues required to be paid by the by-laws of the association. The defendant in its affidavit of defense, denied that he had paid the dues so required to be paid. The issue by agreement of the parties was referred to E. Hunn Hanson, Esq., to find the facts and state the law applicable thereto. On the facts found by him, from the evidence, he awarded to plaintiff, after several corrections of the amount at the instance of the parties, the sum of $1,102.30 as of July 12, 1902. To this report exceptions were filed by both parties in the court below. The learned judge of the court of common pleas sustained the nineteenth exception filed by defendant, to wit: that the referee should have decided that defendant owed nothing to plaintiff, set aside the report and entered judgment for defendant. From this judgment plaintiff appealed to the Superior Court, which court affirmed the judgment entered by the common pleas.

There was much said and well said on both sides of the question involved as well by the referee as by the two lower courts. We take from the report of the referee these facts : The sixth section of article II of the by-laws of the association says : “At the regular meeting of the Board of Directors in March and September, the President shall appoint three Directors as a Financial Committee to serve the ensuing six months, who shall receive the monthly payment of dues, interest and fines at the monthly meeting, pay the same to the Treasurer and take his receipt for the same.”

On October 20, 1890, H. S. Louchheim, the father and trustee of the plaintiff, then in his minority, paid B. F. Houseman, the secretary of the association, for nine shares of its stock, the sum of $18.50, and received from him a deposit book with his receipt for this sum. The book was blank at the space left for the designation of the series. The then current series was the twenty-eighth, and the plaintiff, either by [502]*502his father or by himself, after attaining his majority, paid from October 20, 1890, the monthly dues upon these nine shares up to and including the payment of May 21, 1900. Excepting the last, the payments were all made to Houseman, when and as he each month called for them at the store of H. S. Louchheim on Market street, which was not the place of meeting of the association. Excepting the last payment, all were receipted for in the deposit book by Houseman. Neither the plaintiff nor his trustee ever attended a meeting of the association; neither did he read the by-laws, or know what they enjoined.

Of the dues amounting to $1,053 so paid, Houseman paid to the association no more than $415.50, and he caused it to appear in the roll book that the first subscription on account of the plaintiff was in April, 1894, when the thirty-fifth series was current.

Stockholders were entitled to a certificate of stock by virtue of the sixth section of article I of the by-laws; to most of the stockholders certificates were not issued, they were so issued generally when a stockholder transferred his shares, and when the stockholder obtained a loan from the association; no certificate was issued to the plaintiff.

It will be noticed that Houseman was only the secretary; he was not a director nor a member of the financial committee. Of the money paid to him by plaintiff he embezzled a large part and then on May 10, 1900, when the association was about discovering his crime, killed himself. The father, the present trustee, had previously subscribed for stock for his sons in the same association and had paid the subscription price and monthly dues for the same for about ten years, and then at the expiration of the series received the withdrawal value of the shares for his sons. The payments for these shares, another series, ran over a period of ten years. The payments were all made for this stock to Houseman who called each month at the father’s store on Market street for the money and gave a receipt as secretary for it. The trustee never attended any of the monthly meetings. The defendant avers, that Houseman was not a person to whom the monthly dues of the association could be legally paid and therefore such payment must be treated as no payment to the association.

[503]*503Undisputedly, the secretary was not the officer designated by the by-laws to receive subscriptions for stock and the monthly dues, and if the answerability of defendant depended on that fact alone, the affidavit of defense would effectually answer plaintiff’s claim; but the law is not so narrow in its interpretation as to be conclusive against plaintiff on a mere reading of the by-law. The learned referee correctly states the law as follows:

“ Where a corporation designates an officer or a committee as its agent to receive moneys due it, and this is known to those who intend to pay, or if they have the means of knowledge, then a payment to another officer or committee is only a payment to the corporation if it actually receives the money. Notwithstanding this, the corporation may by its conduct depart from its appointed method and set up a different one, which under certain circumstances will be binding upon it. The legal principle is this :

“ The authority of an officer of a corporation as its agent although distinctly designated by the corporation, may be ascertained to be different, from circumstances covering a period of time long enough to manifest a course of dealing, provided such circumstances are known also to and acquiesced in by the board of directors, and if the course of dealing is one the board had power to authorize: Hoyt v. Thompson, 18 N. Y. 207-218; Martin v. Webb, 110 U. S. 7;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 A. 1054, 211 Pa. 499, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louchheim-v-somerset-building-loan-assn-pa-1905.