Saunders v. State Savings & Loan Ass'n

237 N.W. 572, 121 Neb. 473, 1931 Neb. LEXIS 183
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1931
DocketNo. 27815
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 237 N.W. 572 (Saunders v. State Savings & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saunders v. State Savings & Loan Ass'n, 237 N.W. 572, 121 Neb. 473, 1931 Neb. LEXIS 183 (Neb. 1931).

Opinion

Goss, C. J.

This suit in equity involves a controversy between borrowing stockholders and a savings and loan association as to whether interest shall continue to run after its stated date of maturity on a note given by the borrowers. From a decree against it, the association appeals.

Horatio B. Saunders and Belle Saunders, his wife, were stockholders in State Savings & Loan Association. No formal or other certificate of stock than their pass book is shown by the evidence, but there is no dispute about the balance thereon May 25, 1929, which is the date of the note given by the borrowers. In its answer the defendant admits that on said date “the plaintiffs were the owners of stock in the defendant association of the face value of $4,592.47, represented by pass book No. 2062.” Shares were $100 each. The above value had resulted as a new entry in the pass book as of January 1, 1929, by reason of a 5 per cent, annual dividend credited each six months on the balance six months earlier. On this pass book there had been no deposits for over five years and only one withdrawal, of $100, in that time.

April 9, 1929, Mrs. Saunders, for plaintiffs, wrote defendant they were desirous of withdrawing $2,000, asking how much “interest” they would lose if they took it May 25, and how much if they left it until July 1, 1929. In an undated letter, probably written the next day, the defendant wrote plaintiffs, inclosing a withdrawal notice to sign, explaining that amounts withdrawn between dividend dates do not draw dividends for that period, and that the best way to withdraw money from such an association is to give a 30 day notice on January 1 or July 1. The letter then continued:

“If the need is urgent, and a customer cannot wait until the next dividend paying date, we have what we call stock loans. These loans are made on pass book security. On your account, for instance, if you wished to withdraw $2,000 on May 25th you would send in your pass book as [475]*475security. We would send you a note and you would pay, on this amount, to August 1st, $21.66., We would pay you your full dividend July 1st, or $50 on this amount. Yo,ur dividend would be credited to your account, in full, July 1st. On August 1st we would charge off $2,021.66 and send you your pass book.”

Under date of April 15, 1929, plaintiffs wrote defendant, stating they had to pay $2,000 at Eau Claire, Wisconsin, the first of June. While they might be able to sell some property in Polk, Nebraska, their home town, yet in case they caniiot sell, they will have to get the money from defendant; so the letter requests a note be forwarded, dated May 25, 1929, to run until August 1, 1929. The letter, which was written by Mrs. Saunders, further says: “I will * * * just simply send you. the note properly signed with my pass book on May 25th and then you send me the money retaining the pass book until the first of Aug., when you send me the book with the proper reduction and also my note.”

Also, under same date, April 15, 1929, defendant wrote plaintiff, Mrs. Saunders: “In accordance with your request we are inclosing a stock loan note dated May 25th, and you may return it to us, together with your pass book, so that it will reach us on this date, and we will send you your check for $2,000. Please tell us just where you wish it sent.”

On May 23, 1929, Mrs. Saunders wrote defendant, inclosing the pass book and the $2,000 note of plaintiffs, with a request that the money be sent to J. W. Morrill, 426 Summit Ave., Eau Claire, Wisconsin, so as to reach there not later than May 29. The note was for $2,000, dated May 25, 1929, due August 1, 1929, with interest at $10 per month and was signed by the plaintiffs. It contained this collateral assignment: “I hereby assign and transfer to said association my 25 shares of stock, represented by Certificate No. 2062 in said association, as collateral security for the payment of this note. In case of failure [476]*476to pay the same at maturity, I authorize said association, or its assigns, to withdraw and pay the amount on this note.”

The defendant, on May 25, 1929, wrote Mrs. Saunders they were mailing a $2,000 check to Wisconsin as instructed, and further said: “We will hold your pass book together with your note in our files until further notice from you, or until August 1st — if we do not hear from you.”

On May 28, 1929, the defendant’s board of directors, on the recommendation of an examiner of the department of trade and commerce, ceased to accept deposits and, on May 31, placed the association in the hands of the department for liquidation. Comp. St. 1929, sec. 8-319. The evidence shows it was insolvent. On June 5, 1929, the stockholders determined upon voluntary liquidation under the statute and the association has ever since been in the hands of the board of directors as liquidating agents. Comp. St. 1929, sec. 8-323.

Payment on the $2,000 check had been stopped, but later either that check was paid or a new check for that amount was issued and paid. After August 1, 1929, plaintiffs demanded a return of the note and pass book, but it was refused. On August 20, 1929, defendant wrote the plaintiffs the reason for not returning the pass book was that the association was in process of liquidation and the board of directors had not yet given authority to charge the note against the account. Such authority was not given and this suit was begun March' 22, 1930.

At the time of the introduction of the note in evidence at the trial, November 21, 1930, defendant had credited on the note three liquidation payments, attributable to the interests of plaintiffs in the association as shown by the pass book. These payments as to amounts, dates and application, are as follows: First payment, total $459.24, applied to pay interest to September 26, 1929, $40.33, to principal $418.91; second payment, $229.62, applied to pay [477]*477interest to January 15, 1930, $29.19, to principal $200.43; third payment, $459.24, applied to pay interest to June 20, 1930, $35.65, to principal $423.59. These liquidation payments or dividends represent a total of 25 per cent. There was evidence to the effect that, depending on the real estate market remaining as it is now for the next four or five years, voluntary liquidation may result in total payments of 80 per cent, of their principal to the stockholders.

Plaintiffs in their petition allege the fadts substantially as we have stated them, plead that the defendant continues to charge interest on the note from its maturity, whereas, under the contract, as they interpret it, the note should have been charged off as paid on August 1, 1929, as an item of $2,021.66 against the total of the $4,592.47, leaving $2,570.81 on which liquidation payments should be and should have been computed and forthwith paid to plaintiffs instead of being applied on the note. They prayed for an accounting and for such a decree.

The defendant states in its brief: “There is no issue as to the facts in this case. The controversy grows out of the proper interpretation of the facts as well as the questions of law involved.” In its view the plaintiffs chose the option to borrow on the security of their stock rather than to give the legal withdrawal notice; and that the defendant has, in the circumstances, no right to charge the indebtedness against the stock, but was required, under the law, to demand payment of the note, and, in default thereof, to apply the liquidating payments on the note, without abatement of interest until the note is fully paid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 N.W. 572, 121 Neb. 473, 1931 Neb. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-state-savings-loan-assn-neb-1931.