Mykrantz v. Globe Building & Loan Ass'n

10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 250
CourtAshland Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 250 (Mykrantz v. Globe Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ashland Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mykrantz v. Globe Building & Loan Ass'n, 10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 250 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Adams J.

This cause has been submitted to the court on an amended petition, an answer and evidence.

The question between the parties is almost altogether one of law ; .and probably the only issue of fact is whether or not the plaintiff has made a tender to the defendant company of the amount the plaintiff •claimed to be due from him to the loan association, and whether he has 3cept that tender good by deposit with the clerk of the court.

In the petition Mykrantz seeks to have canceled two notes and two mortgages. As far as these two notes are concerned — and I will call these documents notes for the sake of convenience — executed and delivered by Mykrantz to the said building and loan company, he claims that he has tendered and paid to the clerk of the court the balance •remaining due on his note and mortgage to the building and loan association, and that by reason of that tender, and. keeping that tender good by •payment into the court, he is entitled to have his mortgage canceled.

The building and loan company, by its answer, make certain denials, as to what was said and done as to interest, and in issuing circulars and letters that the interest would only be six per cent., and deny that this Tender was made and kept good.

We find, as a matter of fact, that the plaintiff, Mykrantz, did tender to the building and loan association and has paid to the clerk of the court the amount alleged and the amount testified to by the clerk of the court, which was the amount due, at that time, to the building and loan association for the cancelation, according to plaintiff’s claim.

That brings us to the question between the parties, and that question grows out of the contract between the parties, which reads as follows :

■“ $800. Columbus, Ohio, July 20,1896.
‘ ‘ Received of the Globe Building and Roan Association of Columbus, Ohio, eight hundred dollars, as a loan on eight shares of stock, No. -, owned by me in said association.
“ I hereby agree to pay to said association, monthly, not less than twelve dollars and eighty cents.
“ First — To the payment of any fines or other assessments made against me in-pursuance of the by-laws of said association.
“ Second — To the payment of the interest and premium due on said loan, amounting to eight dollars per month.
“ Third — The balance of said payment shall be credited as dues on ■said stock. Said payments shall be continued until the dues so credited •on said stock, together with the interest accumulations, as per the tables adopted in the by-laws of said association, shall equal the amount loaned.
“Should I fail for three months to pay said payments, then the whole amount of said loan shall at once become due and payable.
“ C. W. MyeraNTZ.
“ Emma R. MykraNTz.

From the-by-laws it will appear that the dues on this number of shares of stoc'K will amount to exactly $4.80, so that it leaves of the $12.80 per month $8.00 per month to be paid as interest and premium on the bond.

It is provided by the by-laws of the association, which were in evidence, that the premium should be fifty cents per month on each one [252]*252hundred dollars, which would make $4.00 per month premium and $4.00 per month interest. In other words, the borrower obligates himself to pay six per cent, per annum on the loan, payable monthly as interest, and six per cent, per annum, payable monthly, as premium, or six per cent, as interest and six per cent, premium. The question of law, the question that has been argued, is, first, whether or not that sort of arrangement, that sort of contract, is usurious; and, second, whether or not sec. 3836-3, Rev. Stat., is constitutional or not.

We have been cited to two Ohio decisions under this section, State ex rel. v. Greenville B. and S. Association, 29 Ohio St., 92; and we read from page 97 :

“ The matters charged as unlawful, in the first and third subdivision of this specification, may be considered and disposed of together. The testimony shows that the corporation, in the past, has been loaning its money to members, depositors, and persons other than members or depositors, upon their promissory notes, at the uniform rate of twelve per cent, interest per annum; and also in buying and discounting orders, bonds and promissory notes, at the same usurious rates of interest, from members and depositors, and persons other than members or depositors; and also that it is so dealing with its members and depositors, but not with persons other than members or depositors.
“The first section óf the law (S. & S., 194) declares the purpose of associations incorporated under it to be the ‘ raising of money to be loaned among the members and depositors of such corporation, for use in buying lots or houses or in building or repairing houses, or other purposes.’ The declared purposes here are plain and unmistakable; and this association, by the provisions of its constitution and by-laws, has, upon paper, kept itself strictly within the purpose declared, without attempting to bring into action any of the latent powers that may repose in the phrase ‘ or other purposes ’ with which the enumeration closes.”
“ There is no countenance to be given to the idea that associations, incorporated under the act above referred to, can be used by capitalists as instrumentalities for obtaining more than the legal rate of interest on their money by depositing it with the association, and having it used in modes foreign to the declared purposes of their organization. ”

We are also cited to Bates v. People’s Savings and Loan Association, 42 Ohio St., 665, and we read the first three paragraphs of the syllabus:

“ 1. The act of May 9, 1868, amending the act of May 5, 1868, commonly called the Building and Loan Association Act (S. & S., 194), which authorizes building and loan associations to receive deposits of money, was not an act granting ‘ banking powers ’ within the meaning of sec. 7. of art. 13, of'the constitution. Dearborn v. Northwestern Savings Bank, ante, approved and followed.
“2. A person who applies to a building and loan association for a loan of money, and deposits therewith a sum of money, however small, for the purpose of making himself eligible as a borrower, and thereby receives a loan, is estopped, when sued for the money by the association, from denying that he was, in fact, a depositor of the association.
“ 3. Compensation for the use of money advanced by a building and loan association to a member or depositor, in excess of the rate of interest allowed by law, and not derived from dues, fines or premiums paid by the borrower for the right of precedence in taking said loan, is usurious. The premium, -which shall not be construed to make the loan usurious, under sec. 2, of the act of May 9, 1868, is a premium bid by a [253]*253member or depositor ior the right of precedence in taking aloan, at a competitive sale of such right.”

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10 Ohio Cir. Dec. 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mykrantz-v-globe-building-loan-assn-ohcirctashland-1899.