Miller v. Missouri Guarantee Savings & Building Ass'n

83 Mo. App. 669, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 229
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 27, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 83 Mo. App. 669 (Miller v. Missouri Guarantee Savings & Building Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Missouri Guarantee Savings & Building Ass'n, 83 Mo. App. 669, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 229 (Mo. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

BIGG-S, J.

Tbe defendant is organized under tbe laws of Missouri as a building and loan association with its chief office at tbe city of Hannibal, Missouri. In 1892 one O. E. Bonnefon was tbe owner of eight shares of tbe stock of defendant of tbe par value of one hundred dollars each. In that year Bonnefon borrrowed of tbe association $700 and pledged bis stock as collateral security for tbe loan. As further security be executed a deed of trust on certain lots owned by him and situated in tbe city of Aurora, in Lawrence county, Missouri. One Thompson was tbe local agent of defendant at Aurora, who solicited loans and reported upon tbe value of real estate offered as security. On tbe eighth day of July, 1892, Bonnefon applied to Thompson for tbe loan. His application for tbe loan was written and signed in Aurora and sent from there to tbe company at Hannibal. In tbe application Bonnefon agreed to pay six per cent interest on tbe loan and be bid as a monthly premium forty cents on tbe hundred dollars, which be agreed to pay each [672]*672month. According to the records of the association the application was favorably considered by the board of directors of defendant at a meeting held in Hannibal on July 14, 1892. The minutes of the meeting contain this, to wit: “The association having funds on hand to loan and the following named persons having offered sufficient security and being the highest and best bidders, were awarded the amounts set opposite their names subject to the approval of their abstracts by the general attorney.” Then follow the names of about 'thirty applicants; among them is that of Bonnefon. In the obligation signed by Bonnefon for the loan he agreed to pay the following sums: On the twentieth day of each month for one hundred months, to wit, monthly dues $3.50; interest on loan $4.20, and $2.80 premium for priority of loan, maldng a total of $10.50. This obligation was set forth in the deed of trust which was conditioned upon the prompt payment of the aforesaid sums. Bonnefon continued to make the monthly payments until December, 1892, when he conveyed the lots and shares of stock to Thompson in trust to be sold for his (Bonnefon’s) benefit. On the third day of December, 1892, Thompson for a consideration sold the lots and stock to plaintiff, Olara B. Miller, the wife of T. A. Miller, her co-plaintiff. This conveyance contained this recital, to wit: “This deed is given subject to deed of trust to secure the payment of a promissory note for seven hundred dollars, which party of the second part assumes and agrees to pay as it may become dire; the above mentioned note being held by the Missouri Guarantee • Savings and Building Association of Hannibal, Missouri.” It is conceded that after the purchase the plaintiff Clara B. Miller continued to pay the monthly assessments up to and including August, 1898; that during the time there was paid to the defendant $296 in monthly dues; $307.44 interest, and $204.96 in premiums. At that time the plaintiffs refused to [673]*673make further payments, claiming that the stipulated interest and the further sums exacted ás premiums exceeded the lawful rate of interest, thus making the transaction usurious; that tlioy were entitled to have the so-called premiums, which were not the result of competitive bidding, entered as credits, and if so applied the plaintiffs would owe the defendant $22.97. They demanded of defendant an adjustment of the matter on this basis, which was refused. The defendant claimed that the transaction was not tainted with usury, and that under the terms of the contract the plaintiff then owed defendant $445.16. The present action was there-^ upon instituted for an accounting and for a cancellation of the deed of trust upon the payment by the plaintiffs of the amount so found to be due. The cause was submitted to the court and the issues were found for the plaintiffs. In stating the account the court allowed credit for the usurious payments and found that plaintiffs owed the defendant a balance of $191.96 and it decreed a cancellation of the deed of trust upon the payment of that sum. From that judgment the defendant has appealed, and it attacks the decree upon the grounds (1) that the evidence conclusively shows that the loan was made to Bonnefon in the manner required by the statute, and therefore the monthly premium bid by him was lawfully exacted; and (2) even though the transaction was tainted with usury the plaintiffs are estopped to plead or prove it.

Section 2812, Revised Statutes 1889, governing building and loan associations provides that in making loans “the directors of the corporation shall hold stated meetings, at which such sums of money as they may determine shall be offered for loan to all the members in open meeting. The shareholder who shall bid the highest for the preference, or priority of loan, shall be entitled to receive a loan whose amount shall not exceed the number of shares of stock held by [674]*674such shareholders,” etc. The effect, of this provision is to modify the general interest law of the state and to legalize the taking of premiums, provided such premium or bonus is the result of a public offer of the money for loan in the mode prescribed by the statute. The questions are: First, was there a lawful bid made by Bonnefon, and second was the bonus the result of competitive bidding in an open meeting held by the board of directors of the company ?

It was not necessary, as counsel for respondents claim, that Bonnefon should have made his bid in person. The written bid forwarded to the general office by Thompson was sufficient. This was the decision of the chancery court of appeals of Tennessee in Hughes v. Bldg, and Loan Association, reported in 46 S. W. Rep. 362. The same ruling was made by our supreme court in Springfield Engine and Thresher Company v. Donovan, 49 S. W. Rep. 500.

If the minutes of the meeting of the board of directors of July 14 are accepted as true, the loan was made to Bonnefon in full compliance with the statute, for the record shows a loan made in open meeting and that the premium bid was the result of competitive bidding. But the truth of the minutes are contradicted by the testimony of Thompson, the local agent, as appears by the following excerpts from his testimony:

“Q. Now, I will get you to state what condition this loan was made under to Mr. Bonnefon by the association through you as its agent. In that connection state the facts; what was done by you and what Bonnefon did? A. (Taking application above referred to.) This handwriting looks like mine; there are some things in here I don’t think I ever put in there.
“Q. I will get you to state if that was the application furnished you by the defendant association and if that was in accordance with all the blank applications furnished you [675]*675while you were acting as their local agent there ? A. It is the same kind of a blank they use, it is not exactly the same kind of a blank they furnished at all times. My recollection was it wasn’t the ldnd of a blank that was used at that time.
“Q. I will get you to state under what condition now, this loan was made. Tell the court the conditions under which the company made the loan through you as local agent there. "What did you and what did Bonnefon do? A. Well, about the only thing Bonnefon had to do — he, of course come first about the stock; I think he had eight hundred dollars of stock there and he applied for eight hundred dollars of loan and agreed to pay on that loan fifteen dollars a month for one hundred months; that was the agreement or understanding.

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Related

Holmes v. Royal Loan Ass'n
107 S.W. 1005 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1908)
Ruppel v. Missouri Guarantee, Savings & Building Ass'n
59 S.W. 1000 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1900)
State v. Phoenix Loan Ass'n
85 Mo. App. 477 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1900)
Clark v. Missouri Guarantee Saving & Building Ass'n
85 Mo. App. 388 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Mo. App. 669, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-missouri-guarantee-savings-building-assn-moctapp-1900.