North Cambridge Cooperative Bank v. Hetherston

8 Mass. App. Div. 201

This text of 8 Mass. App. Div. 201 (North Cambridge Cooperative Bank v. Hetherston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Cambridge Cooperative Bank v. Hetherston, 8 Mass. App. Div. 201 (Mass. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Wilson, J.

This is an action of contract brought by a co-operative bank, organized and doing business under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 170, as amended, to recover a deficiency after foreclosure of a real estate mortgage in the co-operative bank form.

The answer of the defendant is a general denial, payment, the statute of limitations, and the illegality of the note.

The note was introduced in evidence at the trial. So far as now material, it is as follows:

“ $2700.00 North Cambridge, Mass., October 24, 1934
“I hereby pledge and transfer to THE NORTH CAMBRIDGE CO-OPERATIVE BANK, a Corporation duly established by law, . . . Fourteen (14) . . . [202]*202shares, of its Capital Stock, said shares being in the . . . 90th . . . series, as Collateral Security for the performance of the conditions of this note and the accompanying mortgage, upon which shares the sum of . . Twenty-seven Hundred ($2700.00) . . . Dollars, has been advanced to me by said Corporation; and
“For value received, I promise to pay to said Corporation, or order, the sum of . . . Twenty-seven and 50/100 Dollars . -. . monthly, at the stated monthly meetings of said Corporation on the Second Tuesday of each and every month hereafter, being the amount of the monthly dues on said shares and of the -monthly interest and premium upon said loan or advance of . . . Twenty-seven Hundred ($2700.00) Dollars . . . for which said shares are pledged and this note and the accompanying mortgage given, together with all fines chargeable by the By-Laws of said Corporation upon arrears of such payments, until said shares shall reach the ultimate value of two hundred dollars each, or otherwise sooner to pay to said Corporation or order, said sum of . . . Twenty-seven Hundred ($2700.-00) Dollars, together with the said interest, premiums and fines as aforesaid to the time of such payment.
“In case of the non-payment of said monthly dues, interest, premiums or fines for the period of four months after any payment thereof shall be due, or upon any other default in the performance or observance of the conditions of this- note or of the accompanying mortgage, the entire indebtedness in respect hereof shall become due and payable forthwith.
“Signed in the presence of
Euth C. Hetherston”

There was also evidence at the trial and the court found as follows:

“This is an action in contract by the plaintiff, a cooperative bank, to recover a deficiency after foreclosure on a co-operative bank note secured by a mortgage of real estate. The writ is dated March 6th, 1942. The note, a photostatic copy of which is annexed to the declaration and may be referred to, was dated October 24th, 1934, in the, sum of twenty-seven hundred ($2700) [203]*203dollars, secured by a mortgage of real estate in the then regular co-operative bank form, with monthly payments of twenty seven ($27) 00/100' dollars for principal and interest at six (6) per cent, with fourteen (14) shares of capital stock of said bank pledged as collateral; said note was duly executed by the defendant but not witnessed.
“An entry was made by said bank under said mortgage June 12th, 1936, and foreclosure sale was held March 16th, 1937, at which the mortgaged real estate was sold to the mortgagee bank for eighteen hundred ($1800) dollars, the bank claims a balance due as of the date of the writ, in the amount of nine hundred eight and 69/100 ($908.69) dollars.
“The last voluntary payment was made by the defendant in October 1935 to the plaintiff on this account. Without agreement with or consent of the defendant, said bank collected rent from the mortgaged real estate in March 1936, in the amount of seven ($7) dollars, and in April 1936, in the amount of twenty-four ($24) dollars, and in said last named month the plaintiff applied twenty-six and 38/100 ($26.38) dollars of these rents, which it held in a separate account, to the payment due from the defendant for the month of July 1935, on said note; similarly in May 1936, rent was collected of thirty-five ($35) dollars, and held in a separate account and subsequently twenty-six and 38/100 ($26.38) dollars of same was applied by the plaintiff to the monthly payment due on said note from the defendant for the month of August 1935; subsequently rentals were similarly collected and held in a separate account and ultimately applied by the plaintiff to the monthly payments on said mortgage note.
“I find on all the credible evidence that on March 18th, 1936, the payments on the note, in any event, had been overdue for a period of four months and on said date the statutory twenty-one days’ notice as provided in Acts 1933, Chap. 144, Sec. 36, was sent by the plaintiff by mail to the defendant, at her last known address, and the account of the defendant was duly debited and her shares credited as provided in said section.”

[204]*204The defendant seasonably presented eleven requests for rulings of law. Those now material are numbered 1, 2, 4 and 11, which were refused, and are as follows:

‘ ‘ 1. There is evidence warranting a finding for. the defendant. 2. Recovery is denied to the plaintiff because of the running of the Statute of Limitations. 4. There is no evidence that the bank credited any payments made by the defendant to the note. 11. A proviso that a note shall become due on a partial default without words of option or election, matures the debt. ’ ’

In addition to the findings of fact above set forth, the court made the following ruling:

“I rule as a matter of law that in spite of the wording of note (see last paragraph thereof) the balance of the account on said note was not due and payable until at least twenty-one days subsequent to March 18th, 1936, that is April 8th, 1936, and that the six year statute of limitations applicable to this instrument had not run at the time the writ was brought.
“I find for the plaintiff in the amount of Nine Hundred Eight and 69/100 ($908.69) dollars, with interest from March 16th, 1937, at six (6%) per cent in the amount of Two Hundred Seventy and 86/100 ($270.86) dollars.
“If, as a matter of law, the statute of limitations had run on said note at the date of the writ, I make an alternative finding in favor of the defendant.”

No question is now raised as to the amount of the finding if the plaintiff is entitled to recover. We consider the rulings filed by the defendant, denial of which is now claimed to be prejudicial error.

With respect to the first request, if a finding for the defendant was supportable on the evidence, he was entitled to the ruling requested or to a statement of the findings of fact made by the judge sufficient to show that he did consider all the evidence in arriving at his decision. His findings of fact amply supported his finding for the plain[205]*205tiff. Bresnick v. Heath, 292 Mass. 293, 298. Strong v. Haverhill Electric Co., 299 Mass. 455, 456. Hurley v. Ornsteen, 311 Mass. 477, 480. Marquis v. Messier, 303 Mass. 553, 555. See also Memishian v. Phipps, 311 Mass. 521, 524, and cases there cited.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Mass. App. Div. 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-cambridge-cooperative-bank-v-hetherston-massdistctapp-1943.