Meyers v. Acme Homestead Ass'n

138 So. 443, 18 La. App. 697, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 373
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1931
DocketNo. 13916
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 138 So. 443 (Meyers v. Acme Homestead Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyers v. Acme Homestead Ass'n, 138 So. 443, 18 La. App. 697, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 373 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

JANVIER, J.

This litigation was initiated by Mr. and Mrs. Meyers, former shareholders in a building and loan association, to recover a balance claimed to be due, or, in the alternative, damages because of the fact that the association, in complying with the request, did not include the dividends which the former shareholders claim their stock should have earned between the time they made application for withdrawal and the time at which they received payment.

The association maintains that payment was made strictly in accordance with its bylaws, by which plaintiffs are bound, and also that, in accepting the checks for their holdings, plaintiffs indorsed thereon a stipulation that the amount received constituted full settlement of the account.

On the books of defendant homestead association there had stood for several years an account in the name of “Joseph G. or Mrs. Anna G. Meyers.” No certificates of stock were issued, since Mr. and Mrs. Meyers preferred to employ' the “running share” system, under which all amounts standing to their credit were entered in a passbook issued by defendant association, and in which book all dividends earned were entered to the credit of the account.

On December 1, 1926, there stood in the said passbook to the credit of the said account $12,212.21. Between that day and December 2, 1930, earnings of the said stock were entered in the book, as well as three withdrawals of comparatively minor-amounts, the result being that, on December 2,1930, according to the book and according to the records of the association, there was a credit to the said account of exactly $12,900, and on that day, under circumstances which we shall hereafter narrate, the association issued two checks totaling that amount payable to “Joseph O. or Mrs. Anna G. Meyers,” and the said checks were accepted and used by the payees.

Prior to that time, on October 22,1929, there had been given to the association by Mr. and Mrs. Meyers a notice that they desired to withdraw such amount as stood on the association’s books to their credit. However, the withdrawal request had not, prior to December 2, 1930, been complied with because, according to the officials of the association, there was not before that time cash on hand sufficient for that purpose, since there were other withdrawal notices prior to that of Mr. and Mrs. Meyers, which, under the charter and by-laws of the association, and under the laws of the state, were entitled to prior consideration.

In paying to Mr. and Mrs. Meyers the sum of $12,900, the association issued two checks, one on the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company for $7,900, and one on the Poydras street branch of the Whitney Trust & Savings Bank for $5,000. That two checks were used instead of one has no bearing on the issues now involved, since that was done to avoid the depletion of one bank account at the expense of the other. ■

Between the day on which the withdrawal notice was given by Mr. and Mrs. Meyers (October 22, 1929) and the day on which the checks for $12,900 were given to, and accepted by, them (December 2,1930), certain dividends were declared and paid by the association, but no part thereof was credited to the Meyers^ account; the association availing itself of the provisions of section 2 of article 4 of its bylaws to the effect that “All written notices of withdrawal shall be recorded by the secretary in the order in which they are received and all dividends, not already credited, shall cease upon filing of notice of withdrawal, and withdrawing shareholders shall be paid in rotation as registered, out of the first unappropriated money in the treasury.”

Hereafter we shall refer only to Mr. Meyers-as -the plaintiff because, as the result of preliminary exceptions, the necessary amendments were filed to remove Mrs. Meyers as one of the plaintiffs, since it appears that the amount in question represents community property in connection with which the husband is the only necessary party.

When Meyers learned, on October 20, 1929, that no dividends would be paid on accounts for the withdrawal of which applications had been filed, he protested against what he considered the unfairness of being deprived of the right to obtain his money at once, and, at the same time, being refused the privilege of [445]*445participating in earnings of the association; and it was not until two days later that he gave the notice of withdrawal, and even then, according to his testimony, he did so under protest,

According to the testimony of Mr.Ries, secretary-treasurer of defendant association, Meyers made no protest against being deprived of the right to share in the earnings, hut was concerned only over the fact that he could not obtain his money at once.

It is not necessary to determine whether Meyers protested against not being permitted to participate in the dividends, because his rights are governed by the laws of the state and the charter and by-laws of the association, and were fixed by his withdrawal notice, and not by anything he may have said in connection therewith.

Each of the two checks issued by the association bore on the reverse the following:

“Full settlement of account detailed below BK 3⅞49.”

When these checks were indorsed by Mr. and Mrs. Meyers below the above-quoted stipulation, one of them, presumably Meyers, wrote in ink above their indorsement, “all rights reserved.”

In one of the checks the word “all,” apparently in the same handwriting as that in which is written the words “all rights reserved,” is also written higher up, but it is evident that the party who wrote the word “all” did so because he had first intended to write “all rights reserved” in that space and then decided to write the words lower down; so we find that no significance can be attached to the lone word “all” on one of the checks.

Thereafter this suit was filed. It has for its object the recovery of a sum of money equivalent to the dividends which would have been earned by the “running shares,” or money on deposit between the date of the withdrawal notice and the date of the actual withdrawal, had the homestead association allowed to stock, for the withdrawal of which application had been made, dividends equivalent to those paid to other shareholders. The amount claimed is $1,059.32. As an alternative claim, in the event it be held that the stock in question is not entitled to dividends during that period, then it is averred that the association violated the law of Louisiana (section 7 of Act 280 of 1910) in not setting aside for the payment of withdrawal applications the proportion of receipts required by law, and it is contended that, had the association set aside for such withdrawals one-half of its receipts, then the withdrawal in question would have been consummated some nine months earlier, in- which event the proceeds would have been invested and would have earned, at six per cent., $530.50, and this amount is claimed in the alternative as damages, which plaintiff alleges have been sustained as the result of the alleged violation by defendant of the pertinent section of the statute to which we have referred.

Defendant has not answered to the merits of the controversy, but has interposed a plea of estoppel, and on the trial, and in support thereof, has introduced evidence establishing the facts which we have recited.

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 443, 18 La. App. 697, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-acme-homestead-assn-lactapp-1931.