Lunati v. Progressive Building & Loan Ass'n

67 S.W.2d 148, 167 Tenn. 161, 3 Beeler 161, 1933 Tenn. LEXIS 22
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 67 S.W.2d 148 (Lunati v. Progressive Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lunati v. Progressive Building & Loan Ass'n, 67 S.W.2d 148, 167 Tenn. 161, 3 Beeler 161, 1933 Tenn. LEXIS 22 (Tenn. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cook delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill was filed by Louis Lunati and John P. Lunati on behalf of themselves and other shareholders of the association. It was stated in the bill that on January 26, 1932, the complainants gave notice, as provided by section 3, chapter 136', Pub. Acts of 1919, of their intention to withdraw from the association, and thereafter demanded payment of $800.94 to Louis Lunati and $800 to John Lunati, which defendant failed or refused to pay.

It appears from an exhibit to the bill that the assets of the association amounted to $1,914,172.10, including, among other items, $1,375 loaned on real estate, $43,284.-80 loaned on installment stock, notes receivable $237,- *163 036.64, first mortgage real estate bonds $26,591, real estate sold on contract $29,013.20, real estate on hand $71,885.82, interest and premiums due from borrowing-shareholders $67,754.90, cash $29,908.75.

Beyond liabilities for installment stock, dues from borrowing members, paid-up shares, and thrift shares, the liabilities of the association are shown to be notes payable $145,000, due borrowers on loans $1,495.55, accounts payable $472.33, unrealized profits $17,468.82, surplus and reserve $83,226.80.

It was charged that the loans on real estate were made on inflated values and other assets were carried on the books at excessive valuation. Also that the cash on hand included a claim for -deposits in a defunct bank with no reasonable prospect of collecting it.

It was charged in an amended and supplemental bill filed October 7, 1932, that the «association was operating at. an annual loss of $43,000, had borrowed $150,000, and was paying $5,000 a month interest on the loan, and pledged $800,000 of its assets to secure the loan. In an amended and supplemental bill filed January 11, 1933, it was charged that the demands of the withdrawing shareholders had increased to more than $440,000' and the board of directors had ordered a suspension of dividends. It was alleged that the association was insolvent, that it was impossible for it to function for the purposes designed and for these reasons the complainants prayed for the appointment of a receiver and liquidation of the corporation under the orders of the court.

The association answered denying the charge of insolvency and mismanagement. It admitted the receipt of notice from complainants 'of their intention to withdraw and also admitted their right in due sequence to pay- *164 merits of sums due them as withdrawing shareholders, but explained that shareholders were induced by extraneous and improper influences designed to incite them to withdraw and make unreasonable and unexpected demands upon the association, which made it impossible to immediately pay complainants and other withdrawing shareholders.

When presented on December 5, 1932, the chancellor refused to grant complainants’ motion for the appointment of a receiver but passed the case until after the regular meeting of shareholders, with the statement that, upon their failure to act upon the question of whether the association should be liquidated, he would determine whether it was proper to appoint a receiver. Thereafter, on March 21, 1933, the defendant moved to dismiss the bill and intervening petitions in so far as they sought the appointment of a receiver, because the Legislature, by chapter 19, Pub. Acts of 1933, prescribed an exclusive mode of procedure -without following which no receiver could be appointed. The chancellor sustained defendant’s motion and dismissed the bill. The complainants appealed and through assignments of error insist that the Act of 1933 is void; that'it is retrospective in effect, contrary to article 1, section 20, of the Constitution; it deprived complainants of vested rights without due process of law, contrary to article 1, section 8, of the Constitution, and is an attempted assumption by the Legislature of the judicial power, contrary to article 6, section 1, of the Constitution. Provisions of the Constitution of the United States, imposing, in substance, similar limitations upon the legislative power are relied on by complainants.

*165 Chapter 19, Acts of 1933, is comprehensive. With only slight variations, it is a re-enactment of chapter 114, Acts of 1895, and chapter 126, Acts of 1897, carried into sections 2159 and 2165 of Shannon’s Compilation of the Statutes. These acts were omitted from the Code of 193-2.

As in section 2165 of Shannon’s Code, section 12 of chapter, 19 of the ¡Pub. Acts of 1933 empowers the commissioner of insurance and hanking to intervene upon disclosure of illegal practices or insolvency, and, as in the former statute, provides that shareholders cannot bring suit to wind up the affairs of an association or for the appointment of a receiver until the commissioner, upon request of such shareholders, has made an examination to determine the question of solvency or insolvency. And it provides that the commissioner cannot be required to cause an examination unless the applicants for it give security to cover the expense of making the examination in the event the charge of mismanagement or insolvency is groundless.

Section 13 of chapter 19 of the Pub. Acts of 1933 provides :

“The provisions of this Act in reference to the liquidation of Building and Loan Associations shall be exclusive, and other laws of this State providing for the receivership of corporations shall have no application to Building and Loan Associations. Where an Association is found to be insolvent or its affairs conducted illegally, should the shareholders desire to continue in business but the Commissioner believes that liquidation is necessary and that the institution cannot make good the impairment of its capital, then the Commissioner shall call such facts to the attention of the Attorney General who shall make *166 such additional investigation as lie deems proper, and. is in Ms discretion empowered to institute any action or suit deemed necessary to bring about the liquidation of such Association; and provided, further, that any and all pending actions, brought contrary to the provisions of this Act, having for their purpose the appointment of a receiver of a Building and Loan Association in which no receiver shall have been appointed at the time this Act becomes effective, shall be abated upon the application of such Association against whom such action is pending or any stockholder of the same, and no relief shall be hereafter granted except in accordance with the provisions hereof. ’ ’

Subsequent provisions of this section regulate and control the course of procedure for the appointment of receivers for building and loan association, as well as regulate the receiver’s compensation and define his powers. The object of the statute is to conserve the rights and interests of shareholders in these associations created to meet the wants and accommodate the situation and needs of wage-earners and others of small means, and permit them to convert their small periodical incomes into an effective and usable bulk.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.W.2d 148, 167 Tenn. 161, 3 Beeler 161, 1933 Tenn. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lunati-v-progressive-building-loan-assn-tenn-1934.