National Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n v. Brahan

80 Miss. 407
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 80 Miss. 407 (National Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n v. Brahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n v. Brahan, 80 Miss. 407 (Mich. 1902).

Opinion

Whitkield, O. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This ease is controlled on the direct appeal, as to the loan made under the code of 1892, by the cases of National Building & Loan Association v. Wilson, 78 Miss., 993 (30 South., 56) ; Shannon v. Georgia State Building & Loan Association, 78 Miss., 955 (30 South., 51), and the authorities therein cited; and Association v. Burch (May, 1900), 124 Mich., at p. 63 (82 N. W., 839), wherein this very appellant was appellant, and the same conclusion reached by us in the first two cases above, was reached by the supreme court of Michigan, the court saying: “It is said the contract is a blew York contract, and must be governed by the New York law, and for that reason can be enforced. We do not think it at all clear that this is a New York contract, or that it was so understood to be when it was made. While, by the terms of the mortgage the loan was to be paid in New York, it was expected the money would be paid to the treasurer of the local branch at Muskegon, and most of it was paid to him.” And emphatically to the same effect are the very thoroughly considered cases of Association v. Stanley, 38 Or., 340 (63 Pac., 489 — decided in 1901), and Association v. Kidder, 9 Kan. App., 390 (58 Pac., 798— decided in 1899),' and Association v. Atkinson, 20 Tex. Civ. App., 516 (50 S. W., 170). In Stanley’s case, at pages 340, 341, 38 Or., p. 495, 63 Pac., Judge Wolverton, in the course of. a masterly opinion, says with great power-: “The plaintiff contends,-however, that the agreement must be treated as a Wáshington contract, and therefore-should be construed'with [417]*417reference to the usury laws of that state, and incidentally, that the transaction of making the loan, and taking a note payable at Seattle, Wash., and a mortgage upon lands in Oregon, to secure its payment, was not doing business within the state. It is strange reasoning to insist, on the one hand, that, in order to enable the plaintiff to sue in our courts, it has complied with the law with that particularity which will enable it to do business in the state, and yet, when it is suggested that it has violated the laws of usury here by a transaction consummated under the same authority that authorizes the suit, to insist that it has not done business within the state. The very purpose of the act is to enable those associations having their domiciles in other states to do and transact business and sue and be sued here, and it ought to be alike effective under all conditions. When they come here under the statute, and have the license olythe secretary of state to do business here, they become pro hac vice domestic corporations, and must operate as if actually domiciled in the state. They submit and render themselves amenable to the laws of the state, which must be taken to govern all their transactions entered into and consummated therein. Our own citizens would not be permitted to make contracts here payable in another state, and then insist upon having them construed here according to the laws of such state; and it does not seem consistent with principle and reason that a foreign corporation, securing citizenship in this state for the purpose of promoting its business, can insist upon making its contracts payable elsewhere and then invoke the authority and process! of our courts to enforce them according to laws othei; than our own. If such were to be recognized as good law it would in many instances give foreign corporations, although domiciled in this state, advantages over those organized under its laws and having their principal place of business here. But the transaction, under the conditions attending it, must be regarded as doing business within this state. Bank v. Page, 6 Or., 431; Hacheny v. Leary, 12 Or., 40 (7 Pac., 329); Manu[418]*418facturing Co. v. Ferguson, 113 U. S., 727 (5 Sup. Ct., 739, 28 L. Ed., 1137). The contract was made in Oregon, and must be construed and enforced according to our laws. The application for stock and the loan was made in Oregon, to and by an association domiciled and doing business therein, through a resident solicitor. The mortgage was given upon an Oregon farm, and was executed and acknowledged here. The money ivas used here, and this suit Avas instituted in the county in which the mortgage premises are situated, as contemplated by the association when it acquired the license to do business in the state. All this, notwithstanding the mortgage stipulation to the effect that it is a Washington contract, clearly shows its Oregon nativity, and it is therefore solvable by the laws thereof. Meroney v. Association, 116 N. C., 882 (21 S. E., 924, 47 Am. St. Rep., 841); Martin v. Johnson, 84 Ga., 481 (10 S. E., 1092, 8 L. R. A., 170); Dickinson v. Edwards, 77 N. Y., 573 (33 Am. Rep., 671); Jackson v. Mortgage Co., 88 Ga., 756 (15 S. E., 812).”

All this is in exact line with what we held in Shannon’s and Wilson’s cases as to what constituted “doing business” in a state, and as to the clear duty of the court to go behind the paper recital to the actual facts of the case as to the board being the agent of the company and the money being really payable here. In Kidder’s case the whole contract was made by correspondence through the mail — there was not only no local board, but not even an agent of the corporation in Kansas, and yet the court said: “These contracts were entered into by correspondence; they were drawn by plaintiff in New York and sent to defendants at Scandia, who executed and returned them to the plaintiff. All payments were to be made to the secretary of the association at Geneva, N. Y. . . . The contract for the purchase of stock and for the loan of money was made by correspondence between Kidder, in the state of Kansas, and the association, in New York; the place of performance as fixed was at the office of the association in the [419]*419latter state. This contract, so far as its language could control, was entered into with reference to the laws of the state of New York, and was to be there performed; that is, the purchase price of the stock and the principal and interest upon the loan were to be paid at the association’s office. However, the mortgage could only be enforced in the state of Kansas. A contract usually is entered into with reference to the laws of the state or country where it is made, or to be performed; but where a contract must be enforced in a particular place, the laws of that state may apply to such provisions of the contract as are in conflict with the laws thereof. In the foreclosure of a real estate mortgage the usury law of the state in which the land is situated will govern, although payment of the loan in another state is provided for by the terms of the contract. The contract amounts to an evasion of the usury laws, and it cannot be enforced. ... It seems, however, that while the association desires to claim all the benefits of a New York contract as an abstract proposition, it desires the courts of this state to enforce the same as a Kansas contract, for the purpose of enabling it to secure the foreclosure of its lien upon Kansas soil for the payment of a usurious contract. This contract made as it was by correspondence, with a view of being enforced in this state, is a Kansas contract.”

This goes far beyond our holding in the Shannon and Wilson cases. In Atkinson’s case in 20 Tex. Civ. App., 516 (50 S.

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

Related

Johnson v. Knight
459 F. Supp. 962 (N.D. Mississippi, 1978)
Chevron Oil Co. v. Sutton Ex Rel. Sutton
515 P.2d 1283 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1973)
Plaza Amusement Co. v. Rothenberg
131 So. 350 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1930)
M. Levy & Sons v. Jeffords
105 So. 1 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1925)
Swanson v. City of Ottumwa
106 N.W. 9 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1906)
National Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n v. Farnham
81 Miss. 364 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 Miss. 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-mutual-building-loan-assn-v-brahan-miss-1902.