Mercantile Co-Operative Bank v. Goodspeed

59 A. 802, 68 N.J. Eq. 395, 2 Robb. 395, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 151
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 17, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 59 A. 802 (Mercantile Co-Operative Bank v. Goodspeed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercantile Co-Operative Bank v. Goodspeed, 59 A. 802, 68 N.J. Eq. 395, 2 Robb. 395, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 151 (N.J. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Stevenson, V. C.

The following are my conclusions:

.1. The receiver of the complainant corporation, a building and loan association, since the filing of the bill, has practically taken the place of the complainant and is conducting the suit. I do not think that the position of complainant’s counsel is correct to the effect that all rights and equities were fixed at the time of the filing of the bill, and that the case should now be disposed of as if the complainant were still solvent and operating its business, and offering to its members, including the defendants Mr. and Mrs. Goodspeed, the advantages of their system. The inference is fair that at the time when the complainant undertook to make the mortgage due and file its.bill of complaint in this cause the seeds of death were in it, and its enterprise in fact was a failure. Moreover, if the corporation were now [397]*397solvent and continuing its business, it is not clear that the defendants would not have an opportunity, according to the regulations and practices of the company, to pay up and reinstate in all respects their relations with the company as mortgagors and members. The case will be dealt with as if the bill had been filed by the receiver.

2. The defence of usury is not sustained. The only usurious agreement attempted to be set up in the answer of the mortgagors is an alleged corrupt agreement between the New York corporation, the original mortgagee, and Mr. and Mrs. Goodspeed, the mortgagors, in violation of the usury laws of New Jersey. I ‘find that the original contracts are under the New York law. The answer does not set up usury under the New York law, and it is not claimed by anyone that the New York law governing building and loan associations, which was offered in evidence, did not fully authorize the agreements for interest and bonuses which were made.

3. The defences, based on non-compliance on the part of. the New York corporation with section 97 of our Corporation act, and chapter 251 of the laws of 1890, are not set up in the answer, and if they had merit could not be considered. The defendants certainly will not be allowed to amend their answer in order to get the benefit of an inequitable forfeiture, if such forfeiture could be claimed on the facts proved in this case. If the failure of the New York corporation to comply with these New Jersey statutes has any effect upon the mode of ascertaining the amount due on the mortgage, as counsel for the defendants seems to think, no amendment of the answer is necessary to give the defendants the benefit of any such result.

4. I think this case must be dealt with in precisely the same way as if the whole transaction from the start had been between the complainant, the building and loan association incorporated under the laws of New Jersey, and the mortgagors, Mr. and Mrs. Goodspeed. These mortgagors, originally, were borrowing members of the New York building and loan association. When the mortgages were transferred by the New York corporation to the New Jersey corporation, and the stock of the Goodspeeds in the New York corporation was canceled; and they subscribed for and [398]*398took stock to the same amount in the New Jersey corporation, what in fact occurred was a substitution of the New Jersey corporation for the New York corporation. Both were building and loan associations. No difference has been pointed out in respect of the law governing them, and their minute codes of by-laws, setting forth complex and elaborate methods of business, appear to be identical. The only difference between what took place and what would have taken place, if by the consent of all parties interested the New York corporation had moved into New Jersey and come under the New Jersey law, seems to lie in the fact that the advantages of borrowing members in the two corporations were probably not the same. It appears that the New York corporation went into liquidation first. But the complete answer to this suggestion is that Mr. and Mrs. Goodspeed agreed to the substitution and surrendered their stock in the one corporation and accepted an equivalent amount of stock in the other. The only fact, I think, which calls for a discrimination between the two corporations in the work of ascertaining the amount due on the mortgage is the payment of $190, which appears, as the proofs now stand, to have been made by Mr. Goodspeed to the New York corporation after the transfer of the mortgages and the complete substitution of the New Jersey corporation for the New York corporation had been effected. The master may take any further testimony, however, as to this payment, and also inquire and report as to the other payments (two in number, I think) alleged to have been made by the mortgagors and disputed by the receiver.

5. In ascertaining the amount due the receiver will not be allowed the benefit of the two bonuses included in the mortgages,' amounting to $5,800, or any interest thereon. The amount of the monthly bonus of twenty-five cents per share, to the extent that it was actually paid by the mortgagors, will be credited to them as a payment on their debt. In dealing with these bonuses I am constrained to regard the law, so far as this court is concerned, as settled by the two cases of Weir v. Granite State Provident Association, 56 N. J. Eq. (11 Dick.) 234, decided by Vice-Chancellor Reed in 1897, and Hoagland v. Saul, 53 Atl. Rep. 704, decided November 22d, 1902, by Vice-Chancellor [399]*399Grey. I think that these eases control the present decision in regard to this matter of bonuses, notwithstanding what is said by Vice-Chancellor Pitney in his brief oral opinion, in Whitehead v. Commercial Building and Loan Association, 64 N. J. Eq. (19 Dick.) 24 The learned vice-chancellor, in the latter case, does not discuss the important distinction between the status of dues and the status of a bonus in cases of this class. Moreover, while the case was apparently decided about a week after Hoagland v. Saul, it is evident that the opinion in the last-mentioned case had not yet anywhere been published.

Counsel for the receiver argues that if the whole amount of the bonuses cannot equitably be allowed, the court should permit only a pro rata abatement, based on a comparison of the estimated period of the loan according to the terms of the original contract, with the shorter period during which the loan was in fact retained, and in support of this view he cites the case of Towle v. American Building, Loan and Investment Society, 61 Fed. Rep. 446. I cannot find a sound basis for any such apportionment. There are authorities and reasons to sustain the proposition that the entire bonus should be allowed, and there are also authorities and reasons which sustain the proposition that the entire bonus should be disallowed. When both of these simple but contradictory rules, which are perfectly easy of application, are discarded, and an attempt is made by the court to frame a new bargain which the parties might or might not have been willing to make, a great deal of difficulty is naturally to be expected.

As I understand the authorities which favor the disallowance of the bonus in part or in whole, the ease is regarded as one of failure of consideration. The question seems to be whether such failure of consideration is to be deemed a total failure or as only a partial failure, in respect of which a court of equity can in some way make a just and fair apportionment.

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Bluebook (online)
59 A. 802, 68 N.J. Eq. 395, 2 Robb. 395, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercantile-co-operative-bank-v-goodspeed-njch-1905.