Missouri Loan Bank v. How

56 Mo. 53
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 Mo. 53 (Missouri Loan Bank v. How) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Loan Bank v. How, 56 Mo. 53 (Mo. 1874).

Opinion

Vories, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought on a negotiable promissory note which is charged to have been executed by the defendant, How, for the payment to defendant, Eilley, of the sum of four thousand dollars, ninety days after date, and which was, before the maturity thereof, indorsed and transferred by said Eilley to plaintiff for value.

The action is against the maker and indorser, and the petition is in the usual form.

The defendant, Giles E. Eilley, by way of defense to the action, states in his answer to the petition, that by the charter of plaintiff’s corporation, the plaintiff has no power to loan money except upon personal security and the pledge of goods and chattels; that the note sued on was made for no other or further consideration than the loan of four thousand dollars by the plaintiff to the defendant, John How, and that defendant, Eilley, received no part of the consideration for which the note was executed, bnt only indorsed said note for the accommodation of said How, and for no other consideration whatever; that said loan was made by plaintiffs without any pledge of goods or chattels to secure the same, and that said loan was contrary to the charter of said corporation, and without any legal power or authority to make the same, and that said contract and promissory note were and are illegal and void.

[54]*54The plaintiff demurred to the answer on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense to the action, and that the answer assumes an incorrect construction of -the charter of plaintiff, and that, if the construction was right, it is no defense to the action.

This demurrer was sustained by the St. Louis Circuit Court at Special Term.

It was agreed on the hearing of the demurrer, by the parties to the'action, that the charter of the plaintiff is contained in the “Act to establish the Missouri Benevolent and Loan Association,” approved February 20th, 1865 (Sess. Acts of 1865, page 252), and that the name of said corporation was changed to that of “The Missouri Loan Bank,” and that said charter should be considered as a part of the plaintiff’s petition as fully as if the same were set forth therein; and the same was so considered by the court in considering and passing on the demurrer to the defendant’s answers.

The defendant at the time excepted to the action of the court in sustaining said demurrer.

The defendant declining further to answer the petition, final judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for the amount of the note with legal interest. From this judgment the defendant appealed to the general term of the St. Louis Circuit Court, where the judgment rendered at special term was in all things affirmed: and from this judgment the defendant, Filley, appealed to this court.

It is insisted by the defendant, that the plaintiff by virtue of its charter only had a limited power to loan money, and that all contracts for the loan of money attempted to be made by the plaintiff, where not made in the particular manner designated in the charter, were unauthorized and void, and that the contract of loan for which the note sued on was executed, not having been secured by a pledge of goods and chattels,was and is therefore unauthorized and void.

It is provided by the first section of the act or charter incorporating plaintiff, that “the association hereby created shall have the power to loan money upon personal security and the [55]*55pledge of goods and chattels, by such agencies and established offices as the public business and requirements demand, subject to the restrictions and limitations in this act prescribed.” The second section provides that, “all loans by this association or its agencies shall be for a period of time not exceeding one year, the time to be at the choice of the person borrowing. Books shall be kept in which shall be entered the name of the borrower, amount of the loan, the time and terms of such loan and a description of the property pledged therefor. Whenever a sale shall take place of any pledged property, the same shall be entered on the books with the amount of the sale and costs and expenses of the same, showing in a clear and satisfactory manner the transactions, and the overplus if any, and such overplus shall be retained for one year and paid to the party borrowing, or his or her legal representatives. And if not demanded within that period, shall be carried to profit and loss, to be disposed of as hereinafter provided, unless the association may, in special cases, make any proper order to pay the same over to the borrower.”

The 4th section provides that, “'the amount of interest on loans shall not exceed eighteen per cent, per annum, to be disposed of as follows, viz: If the interest reaches eighteen per cent, after deducting the amount of costs and expenses attending the transaction, two per cent, shall be set apart, and if it reaches fifteen per cent, per annum after such deduction, one per cent, thereof shall be set apart, and the amount of such deductions shall be paid into the State Treasury on the first of January of each year for the support of the indigent insane at Fulton and St. Louis City Hospital, in equal parts. And one-half of the overplus as mentioned in the second section of this act, shall at the end of every period of five years, be paid into the State Treasury for the same purposes,” &c.

The 5th section provides, that the corporation created shall be exempt from the operation of the 4th, 18th and 20th sections of the general act of corporation, approved November, 23d, 1855.

[56]*56The 10th section requires the corporation and all of its agencies to pay into the State Treasury in semi-annual payments, one per cent, per annum of all its net earnings for the use and benefit of the Soldiers’ Orphan’s Home Fund.

The first, and I think the only question necessary to be considered by this court is, whether the plaintiff, by virtue of its charter, has the power or authority to make loans of money upon personal security, without joining therewith the pledge of goods and chattels as further security for the payment of the money loaned ? While it is admitted, that corporations have no powers but such as are specifically granted or such as are necessary, by fair intendment, to the complete exercise and enjoyment of the powers granted by their charters, yet we cannot say that the plaintiff under its charter had no power to loan money upon personal security. It is true, that where the language used by the legislature is plain, admitting of but one construction, and the natural and usual construction of the language used is consistent with the scope and object of the whole act, the natural and usual construction of the language ought to prevail. The language conferring power on this corporation to loan money is, that “The Association hereby created shall have power to loan money upon personal security and the pledge of goods and chattels.” I think that the most natural construction of this language is, when we take into consideration the objects and purposes of the creation of the corporation, that the association shall have power to loan money upon personal security,°and shall have power to loan money upon the pledge of goods and chattels.

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25 Mo. App. 12 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1887)

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Bluebook (online)
56 Mo. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-loan-bank-v-how-mo-1874.