People v. Anglo-American Savings & Loan Ass'n

69 N.Y.S. 1054

This text of 69 N.Y.S. 1054 (People v. Anglo-American Savings & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Anglo-American Savings & Loan Ass'n, 69 N.Y.S. 1054 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

GOODRICH, P. J.

Owing to the haste in which the appeal was-presented to this court, the record is meager, but I have ascertained the facts partly from the unprinted files and the concessions of counsel in brief and on argument. The Anglo-American Savings & Loan Association of New York (hereinafter called the “Association”) was organized in 1891, under chapter 122 of the Laws of 1851, as amended by chapter 564 of the Laws of 1875. The first section of the act reads as follows:.

“Section 1. Any number of persons, not less than nine, may associate and form an incorporated company for the purpose of accumulating a fund for the purchase of real estate, the erection of buildings, or the making of other improvements on lands, or to pay off incumbrances thereon, or to aid its. members in acquiring real estate, making improvements thereon, and removing incumbrances therefrom; and for the further purpose of accumulating a fund to be returned to its members, who do not obtain advances as above-mentioned, when the funds of such association shall amount to a certain sum. per share, to be specified in the articles of association.”

The articles of association declare the purpose of the corporation in the precise language of the section quoted. Article 10 reads in part as follows f

“The funds of this corporation which shall belong to the loan fund shall be-loaned to the applicants offering to pay the highest premium therefor in addition to the stipulated six per cent, per annum by way of interest, upon such, terms and security' as the board of directors may from time to time approve; provided, that the rate of interest shall be six per cent, per annum, and the-amount loaned shall not be more than fifty per cent, of the appraised cash value of the property offered as security. All loans (except those made on a. member’s shares) shall be secured by improved real estate first mortgages.”

[1056]*1056Article 11, § 6, provides:

“The board of directors shall invest the funds of the corporation in improved real estate first mortgages not exceeding in amount fifty per cent, of the appraised cash value of the mortgaged property: provided, that in the event there shall be a surplus in the treasury for which such investments cannot be found, then the board of directors may invest such surplus in bonds of the United States or in and upon such loans and mortgages as savings banks in the state of New York are permitted by law to make investments.”

The association continued in business until November, 1900, when it became insolvent. The condition of its affairs on November 13th is shown by the following statement taken from its books:

Close of Business, November 13, 1900. Assets.
Installment mortgages ................ 8 390,606 27
Straight mortgages ................. 200,384 02
Pearce mortgages .................... .. 84,342,872 04
Less prior incumbrances.............. .. 2,225,82,7 50
In effect, equities in property......... 2,117,044 54
Loans on stock....................... Real estate .......................... .. 8 420,577 45 54,351 50
Less prior incumbrances............. 232,003 11
188,574 34
256 12 Insurance advanced .................
3,306 61 Bills receivable .....................
3,643 74 Furniture and fixtures............... .........
10,911 52 Individual accounts .................
12,967 87 Interest, premium, and fines due......
3,024 00 Cash deposited in Curran case........
28,235 06 Cash ...............................
83,013,305 59
Liabilities.
Installment stock (a)......a.....................8 638,705 43
do. (b)............................ 135,484 41
8 774,189 84
Prepaid stock (a)............................ 81,188,410 00
do. (b)........ 7,745 00
do. (c)............................ 349,850 00
1,546,005 00
Bills payable ........................... 262,140 51
Canceled stock ......................... 3,388 72
Real estate sold on contract.............. 2,060 40
Individual accounts ..................... 55 01
Advances by directors to protect property 79,678 51
Earned dividends and surplus............ 345,787 60
83,013,305 59

On November 20th the directors of the association addressed to the stockholders a circular letter setting out the statement of its affairs (supra), informing them “that, in order to realize such value, the properties of the association must be protected and carried until sales can be made at their fair values, and that, unless some suitable plan is at once adopted to this end, the properties will be sacrificed under forced sales at a most serious loss”; and that a real-estate corporation (Empire State Realty Company) had been incorporated, which proposed to take over all the properties in which the association is in[1057]*1057terested at their book cost value to the association, giving back the bonds and mortgages of the realty company covering the properties, at five per cent, interest. The circular also contained the following:

“The members of the association are given the privilege, and are earnestly requested, to exchange their stock in this association at book value for stock in the real-estate company at par; and stock in the real-estate company, exclusive of preferred stock, will be issued only to the amount of such exchanges. To the extent of such exchanges of stock the mortgages given by the real-estate company to the association will be surrendered and canceled. From time to time, as sales of the properties are made, and the proceeds accumulate, the real-estate company can distribute the same to its stockholders by a corresponding reduction of its capital; and its articles of incorporation provide that upon any such distribution prior to final dissolution twenty-five per cent, of the funds distributed shall be applied upon the preferred stock, and the remaining seventy-five per cent, upon the common stock. In order to provide cash for carrying and selling the properties, the real-estate company will issue its preferred accumulative five per cent, stock for cash, at par, in such amounts as shall be requisite for such purposes, not exceeding in any case the sum of $175,000, and no such stock will be issued for other purposes; and the members of this association are given the privilege of subscribing for such preferred stock at par. The excess of the appraised value of the properties over the book cost value will warrant the issue of preferred stock for the purpose of procuring cash to carry and sell the properties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 N.Y.S. 1054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-anglo-american-savings-loan-assn-nyappdiv-1901.