Mott v. Western Savings & Loan Ass'n

20 P.2d 236, 142 Or. 344, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 260
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 P.2d 236 (Mott v. Western Savings & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mott v. Western Savings & Loan Ass'n, 20 P.2d 236, 142 Or. 344, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 260 (Or. 1933).

Opinion

KELLY, J.

It is urged by defendants, Armen and O’Neill, and the intervener that the circuit court erred in holding that shareholders, who gave notice of with *346 drawal prior to the time when the corporation commissioner took charge of the association, did not thereby become creditors of the association or obtain any preference right over shareholders who gave no notice of withdrawal; and, especially, in holding that the intervener, whose notice of withdrawal was given more than sixty days prior to the date when the corporation commissioner took charge, did not become a creditor of the association at the expiration of that sixty-day period, or thereby obtain any preference rights over other shareholders.

Error is also predicated upon the trial court’s holding that shareholders, owning fully paid stock, do not by reason thereof have any priority or preference right over other shareholders.

It is also claimed that the circuit court erred in holding that members or shareholders, who borrowed money of the association and pledged their shares of stock or gave mortgages on real property as security for the loan, are not entitled to set off against their debts the withdrawal value of their shares of stock or any part thereof.

Plaintiff calls attention to the order of the trial court directing him, as corporation commissioner, to return to the payors payments made by members or shareholders to plaintiff in his official capacity as statutory receiver after plaintiff took' temporary charge of the association on May 26, 1931, and before his possession thereof became final, on June 24, 1931; and suggests a ruling thereupon by this court.

The questions under consideration are presented by means of demurrers supplemented by stipulations.

Defendant, Thuemmel, filed an answer to which plaintiff interposed a general demurrer. Plaintiff and *347 said defendant, Thuemmel, and another defendant, filed a stipulation admitting the allegations of paragraphs IV, V, VI and VIII of the complaint.

Defendants, Armen, Lehrer and O’Neill filed a demurrer to said complaint, which in reality is in the nature of a motion for judgment on the pleadings.

The following stipulation between plaintiff and defendant, Lehrer, was filed, viz:

“In this case it is stipulated and agreed that the sum of forty-two dollars ($42.00) paid by defendant Ernest C. Lehrer to plaintiff as statutory receiver, as set forth in the sixth cause of suit, was not mingled with the other funds or assets of the association in the hands of plaintiff as such receiver, was not credited to Lehrer as a payment on his stock subscription, and, with other like payments made between May 26 and June 24, 1931, was kept separate and distinct in an account called by the plaintiff, as such receiver, a ‘trust account’, which account consists of no other items than this and other like payments made between those dates, that the association, when the payment was made, was insolvent in that its assets were entirely inadequate, after paying its general creditors, to pay its general shareholders the full withdrawal value of their shares of stock and insufficient to pay anything to its reserve fund shareholders, that defendant Lehrer did not, and the plaintiff did, know of such insolvency when such payment was made”.

Pursuant to a stipulation, an order was made permitting Jean M. Paterson to file a petition in intervention. In this petition, all of the facts set forth in the complaint are incorporated; and it is affirmatively alleged that on March 13,1931, the intervener, who was then a member and shareholder of defendant, Western Savings & Loan Association, whose shares of stock were of the class designated in the by-laws as class E, which shares were not delinquent and had not been de *348 dared forfeited in such association, were then more than two years old, and were of the withdrawal value of two hundred eighty-eight and 02/100 dollars ($288.02), that is to say, such sum was the amount intervener had paid in on such stock, less membership fees and fines and plus three-fourths of all earnings credited to such shares, gave notice in writing to the secretary of said Western Savings & Loan Association of her intention to withdraw her shares from the association, and that no part of such sum has ever been paid to her.

To this petition, plaintiff filed a general demurrer.

Thus it appears that paragraph VIII of the complaint herein is admitted by all parties, which paragraph is as follows:

“VIII.
“That after paying administrative expenses, taxes, assessment, repairs and reserving funds for current dividends, the net monthly receipts of the association were not, at the date of such withdrawal notice, [February 28, 1931] nor were they at any time thereafter, sufficient to pay such withdrawal value of such shares of stock nor any part thereof, and that the assets of the association, at the date of such withdrawal, were not, nor were they at any time thereafter, sufficient to pay all the holders of its general stock the full withdrawal value thereof, nor to pay any sum whatsoever to its reserve fund stockholders, but that its assets at all such times were, and they are, sufficient to pay its general creditors in full”.

Section 25-310, Oregon Code 1930, is as follows:

“Withdrawal of shares — Surrender payments on stock.- — -Any shareholder whose stock is not delinquent and has not been declared forfeited in such association, and whose share or shares are not pledged upon a loan, may withdraw such share or shares from the associa *349 tion at any time after one year by giving at least sixty days’ notice in writing to the secretary of his intention to do so; at the end of said sixty days the association shall pay to .the members so surrendering as follows: If said stock is not more than two years old, all amounts paid in by such members upon such stock, except the sums paid as membership fees and fines. If said stock is more than two years old, the member upon such surrender shall receive, in addition to the amount above specified, at least three-fourths of all earnings credited to such shares; provided, that not more than one-half of the monthly instalments received by such association for any month shall be used to pay withdrawals without consent of the board of directors; provided further, that the directors of such association in their discretion may authorize the withdrawal of any share or shares at any time when such withdrawal appears to be in the best interests of such association”.

In the case of a withdrawing stockholder, if the notice of withdrawal was given and matured while the association was a solvent going concern, he is entitled to be ranked as a general creditor, otherwise, not. Sundheim, Law of Building & Loan Associations (2d Ed.), p. 185, § 180.

It is well settled that, when an association is insolvent, the giving of a notice of withdrawal, will not change the relation of the member to the association so as to place him in the position of a creditor rather than a stockholder. 4 R. C. L. 358;

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Bluebook (online)
20 P.2d 236, 142 Or. 344, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mott-v-western-savings-loan-assn-or-1933.