Parker v. U. S. Building, Land & Loan Ass'n

19 W. Va. 744, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 19
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 W. Va. 744 (Parker v. U. S. Building, Land & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. U. S. Building, Land & Loan Ass'n, 19 W. Va. 744, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 19 (W. Va. 1882).

Opinion

Green, Judge,

announced the opinion of the Court:

This suit was commenced by a bill being presented to the judge of the county court of Ohio in vacation asking an injunction to a sale by the trustee, which had been advertised, of a lot in Wheeling to secure the payment of a note by the complainant J. E. Parker executed to the defendant, The United States Building Land and Loan Association of Wheeling for the sum of 1900.00, dated July 18, 1876 payable six years after its date with interest from date payable quarterly in ad-[753]*753vanee and further to secure to said defendant the prompt payment of said interest on said note and of all dues, fines and other charges, with which said complainant might be assessed as a member of said association, and the repayment of all sums, which it might have to pay for taxes, insurance or other charges on the property conveyed. And it is recited in the deed of trust, that it was agreed, that the trustee might not only sell upon default in the payment of the principal of this note, when due, but upon default in the payment, when due, of any instalment of interest or upon default in the payment of any dues, fines or other charges, with which the complainant might be assessed as a member of this association, or upon his failure to keep the buildings therein conveyed insured, when the whole of the principal of said note should be considered due, and the trustee might sell. The bill alleges, that this note was given on the redemption of six shares of stock in the association, for which he received $624.75 at the time, when the note was given, and was a loan of that sum; that he had paid in weekly dues on this loan and otherwise about $226.50. Upon these allegations made in this rather vague manner the bill alleges that this money was lent at usurious interest; and it prays an injunction of the sale, and that said defendant might be required to render an account and discover on oath, what usurious interest has been paid on this loan, and that it may be applied to the principal and for further relief.

The judge of the county court in vacation granted an injunction as prayed for; and before any other action was taken in the county court, the cause was removed to the circuit-court, when a full answer was filed by said defendant setting forth the facts fully, as stated in the statement of this cause, which precedes this opinion.

The first question raised in this cause by the counsel for the appellees is, that the county court had no jurisdiction. The counsel in his printed notes says: “ The injunction in this cause (which was granted by the county court of Ohio county) was properly dissolved by the circuit court for the following ‘ reasons in addition to those which have been stated : Because of want of jurisdiction in the county court to award it. By section 27 of article VIII of the Constitu-[754]*754tipn, the jurisdiction of the county court in equity cases might be limited by law, and even if power to enjoin is implied in a grant of equity jurisdiction, section 4 of chapter 133 of the Code of 1868 has taken away that power from the county courts.” The counsel then adds a number of supposed defects on the face of the bill, which it is argued made it fatally defective on demurrer.

These positions of appellant’s counsel are untenable. The act or provision creating the county court of Ohio county, chapter 21, Acts of 1872-3, in section 2 expressly provides, that it shall have jurisdiction in all suits in equity. This clearly gave it jurisdiction in a proper case to award an injunction ; and this, it strikes me, is obviously not affected or controlled, as is argued, by section 4 of chaper 133 of our Code, page 631. This simply provides, that “ jurisdiction of a bill of injunction to any act or proceeding, shall be in the circuit court of the county, in which the act or proceeding is to be done, is doing, or is apprehended.” This act of 1868 it seems to me, obviously can have no effect on a jurisdiction of a county court conferred in 1863. For when this act of 1868 in the Code was passed there was no county court in exis-tene; and the act simply meant to point out, in which of the circuit courts there should be authority and jurisdiction in injunction cases, such jurisdiction being as a matter of course confined then to the circuit courts, there being then no county courts.

Nor is there any soundness in the position of counsel, that the facts alleged in the bill were insufficient to justify the awarding of an injunction. It is true they are alleged rather vaguely, and some important facts brought into the case by the answer and not stated in the bill. But the bill does allege facts, which, as the law governing building associations is •interpreted by this Court, show clearly, that the debt sought to be enforced under the deed of trust by the sale about to be made was tainted with usury. This abundantly appears from the abstract of the bill set out in the statement of the case preceding this opinion. And in such case the authority of a court of equity to enjoin the sale till the usury is purged is unquestionable. But as I understand the record, the appellee’s counsel was laboring under a mistake, when he alleged, that [755]*755the injunction in this case was granted by the county court of Ohio county. The record shows, that it was granted by the judge of the county court of Ohio county in vacation. And while the county court of Ohio had I think clearly jurisdiction to award such injunction, it is equally clear, that the judge of the county court of Ohio county had no such authority or jurisdiction, as none such was conferred on him by statute-law.

But the case being in the county court, when it was removed to the circuit court, as the bill on its face showed a good ground for awarding an injunction as prayed for in it, the circuit court of Ohio county on the removal of the case ought to have done, what should have been done by the county court before the removal of the cause, and indeed as soon as the bill was filed, that is, award the injunction as prayed for in the bill, having first set aside the injunction-order made by the judge of the county court of Ohio county in vacation, as made by a judge, who had no authority to make such an order. The circuit court ought therefore to have awarded the injunction prayed for in the bill and have continued the same, till the case was heard and disposed of by the court on its merits, or until the injunction was dissolved on motion after the answer had been filed, if it was such as to justify the dissolution.

Upon the merits of the case the appellant’s counsel insists that the injunction ought not to have been dissolved and the bill dismissed, as it was by the circuit court by its decree of Ma-ch .1, 1879, because the contract made by the United States Building, Land and Loan Association of Wheeling with the appellant, John E. Parker, and the note and security taken of him were not authorized by law ; that they were ultra vires and could not therefore be enforced. In support of this it is argued, that the statute of our Code authorizing the formation of homestead and building associations authorized them to be formed for the purpose of raising money to be used among their members in buying lots or houses or in building and repairing houses and for no other purpose whatsoever; that it differs from the Ohio statute in this important particular, that the Ohio statute after describing in this same language the use to be made of the money of such association adds the important words or other purpose;” [756]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 W. Va. 744, 1882 W. Va. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-u-s-building-land-loan-assn-wva-1882.