National Home Building & Loan Ass'n v. Home Savings Bank

64 L.R.A. 399, 181 Ill. 35
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 64 L.R.A. 399 (National Home Building & Loan Ass'n v. Home Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Home Building & Loan Ass'n v. Home Savings Bank, 64 L.R.A. 399, 181 Ill. 35 (Ill. 1899).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

In November, 1893, Flora D. Bishopp made a trade of lots in the city of Chicago with the National Home Building and Loan Association, appellant, in pursuance of which appellant conveyed to her lot 10- in Lee Bros. ’ addition to Englewood, lots 15 and 16 in block 60 in Chicago University subdivision, and lot 36 in block 2 in Herring’s subdivision. In exchange for these lots said Flora D. Bishopp and Jonathan D. Bishopp, her husband, conveyed to the building and loan association lots 5 and 6 in block 2 in Johnson & Clement’s subdivision, and in the deed of the same it was agreed that the building and loan association should assume and pay an encumbrance on said lot 5 in the form of a trust deed executed by said Flora D. Bishopp and husband to Charles T. Page, trustee, to secure a note for §3000 and interest. The trade was negotiated and carried out on the part of the association through J. O. Duncan, agent, who was employed by the association to negotiate loans and examine abstracts for it in Chicago, and he acted under the direction of the secretary of the association. After the exchange the association paid a mortgage of §600 on said lot 5 and the delinquent interest on the mortgage assumed in the conveyance. On May 14,1895, the board of directors passed a resolution that the assumption clause in the deed was made without authority of the association, and directed the execution and tender of a quit-claim deed of the lot to Flora D. Bishopp. The deed was made and tendered unconditionally, and the association thereby offered the lot to her without a return of the consideration or any other condition. The note for §3000, secured by the trust deed, was transferred to the Home Savings Bank, one of the appellees, and it filed its bill in the superior court of Cook county to foreclose the same, asking for a decree against Flora D. Bishopp, a sale of the mortgaged premises, and a decree against the building and loan association for such deficiency as might exist. The building and loan association answered that the trade was consummated by direction of its president and secretary, but the clause assuming the mortgage was inserted without their knowledge or authority and without the knowledge and authority of its board of directors, that such an agreement was ultra vires the corporation, and that it had tendered a quit-claim deed of the lot to the said Flora D. Bishopp. The bill was answered by Flora D. Bishopp and her husband, who admitted its material allegations and filed their cross-bill, alleging- the agreement for an exchange of the properties and the conveyances and asking for a deficiency decree against the association. The building anddoan association answered the cross-bill, setting up the same defense as before, and the cause was referred to a master, who reported in favor of a foreclosure and sale and a decree against the building and loan association for any deficiency in the payment of the debt, interest, fees and costs. Exceptions to the report were overruled and a decree was entered in accordance with it, which has been affirmed by the Appellate Court.

No objection is made to the foreclosure of the trust deed or the sale of the premises, and "the only question involved in this appeal is whether the contract inserted in the deed, by which the defendant, the National Home Building and Loan Association, agreed to assume and pay the debt, is binding upon it. This defendant, which denied the binding force of the agreement, is a corporation organized under the provisions of an act entitled “An act to enable associations of persons to become a body corporate to raise funds to be loaned only among the members of such association,” in force July 1, 1879. (Laws of 1879, p. 83.) As a corporation it is a creature of the law, having- no powers but those which the law has conferred upon it. A corporation has no natural rights or capacities, such as an individual or an ordinary partnership, and if a power is claimed for it, the words giving the power or from which it is necessarily implied must be found in the charter or it does not exist. The law on this subject is stated by the Supreme Court of the United States in Central Transportation Co. v. Pullman Palace Car Co. 139 U. S. 24, as follows: “The charter of a corporation, read in the light of any general laws which are applicable, is the measure of its powers, and the enumeration of those powers implies the exclusion of all others not fairly incidental.” The purpose of this corporation is the raising of funds to be loaned to its members upon the security of its stock and unencumbered real estate. Manifestly the business of trading in real estate or acquiring the same, except as incidental to their legitimate business, is wholly foreign to the purpose for which the State has created such corporations and conferred upon them corporate powers. They have no power to take and hold" real estate, and contracts made for the purchase of it are not enforceable. (Endlich on Building Associations, secs. 305-308.) But for the purpose of collecting debts it is essential that they should have some power with respect to the real estate mortgaged to them, and for that purpose section 13 of the act for their incorporation provides as follows: “Any loan or building association incorporated by or under this act is hereby authorized and empowered to purchase at any sheriff’s or other judicial sale, or at any other sale, public or private, any real estate upon which such association may have or hold any mortgage, lien or "other encumbrance, or in which said association may have an interest, and the real estate so purchased, to sell, convey, lease or mortgage at pleasure to any person or persons whatsoever.” Such corporations are not authorized, either by their charters or as an incident to their existence, to acquire or hold any real estate, except such as has been mortgaged to them or which they may have an interest in: Not only is this the rule to be derived from the act of the legislature authorizing their incorporation, under the general principles of law, but it is, and always has been, against the policy of the State to permit corporations to accumulate landed estates, or to own real estate beyond what is necessary for their corporate business or such as is acquired in the collection of debts. (Carroll v. City of East St. Louis, 67 Ill. 568; United States Trust Co. v. Lee, 73 id. 142; People v. Pullman Palace Car Co. 175 id. 125; First M. E. Church of Chicago v. Dixon, 178 id. 260.) It is also a settled principle of American jurisprudence. (5 Thompson’s Law of Corporations, sec. 5772.) If a building- and loan association were permitted to invest its money in the purchase of real estate or to traffic" or trade in such property instead of keeping- within the powers conferred upon it by loaning such money and collecting it, it would not only be exercising powers not granted, but it would be carrying on a business inconsistent with the purpose of its creation and against the fixed and uniform policy of the State. In People ex rel. v. Chicago Gas Trust Co. 130 Ill. 268, it was said (p. 292): “The word ‘unlawful,’ as applied to corporations, is not used exclusively in the sense of malum in se or malum prohibitum. It is also used to designate powers which corporations are not authorized to exercise, or contracts which they are not authorized to make, or acts which they are not authorized to do,—or, in other words, such acts, powers and contracts as are ultra vires.” In Central Transportation Co. v. Pullman Palace Car Co.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City Savings Ass'n v. INTERNATIONAL GUARANTY AND INS. CO.
162 N.E.2d 345 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1959)
Odd Fellows Oakridge Cemetery Ass'n v. Oakridge Cemetery Corp.
144 N.E.2d 853 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1957)
Joyce v. First Nat. Bank of Snyder
99 S.W.2d 1092 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)
Bejot v. Ainsworth Lodge No. 130
259 N.W. 745 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1935)
Marvin v. First Nat. Bank of Aurora, Ill.
10 F. Supp. 275 (N.D. Illinois, 1935)
Knass v. Madison & Kedzie State Bank
188 N.E. 836 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1933)
Lifter v. Ruth Gordon Building & Loan Ass'n
19 Pa. D. & C. 160 (Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, 1933)
Edward Hines Western Pine Co. v. First Nat. Bank
61 F.2d 503 (Seventh Circuit, 1932)
Green v. Ashland Sixty-Third State Bank
178 N.E. 468 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1931)
Anna Loan & Improvement Co. v. Dorris
174 N.E. 865 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1931)
Succession of Jones
126 So. 730 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1930)
Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. v. Aleman Planting & Mfg. Co.
117 So. 554 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1928)
Roxana Petroleum Co. v. Covington State Bank
1928 OK 166 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1928)
Smith v. Bath Loan & Building Ass'n
136 A. 284 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1927)
Handelsman v. Chicago Fuel Co.
6 F.2d 163 (E.D. Illinois, 1925)
Hummel v. Shelby
2 F.2d 334 (Seventh Circuit, 1924)
North American Union v. Johnson
219 S.W. 769 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1920)
McIlvaine v. Foreman
126 N.E. 749 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1920)
Taylor Feed Pen Co. v. Taylor Nat. Bank
215 S.W. 850 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1919)
Orpheum Theatre & Realty Co. v. Seavey & Flarsheim Brokerage Co.
199 S.W. 257 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 L.R.A. 399, 181 Ill. 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-home-building-loan-assn-v-home-savings-bank-ill-1899.