Shankland v. Nelson

1 Tenn. Ch. R. 459
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 459 (Shankland v. Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shankland v. Nelson, 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 459 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1873).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

The object of this bill is to recover usury taken by the defendant, the Nashville Building Association, from the complainant himself, or from third persons under whom the complainant claims as assignee or as judgment-creditor.

The bill alleges that on or about the 11th of December, 1856, the said Association was indebted to him, the complainant ; the said Association having received from him the sum of five dollars on the last day of July, 1854, and a like sum for each and every month up to the 11th of December, [460]*4601856. That on this latter date complainant borrowed from said defendant $620, to secure which he executed a mortgage on certain land, and gayé his bond for $2,000, conditioned to pay the sum of $1,000 to said Association by monthly instalments of $10 each, until the Association might terminate, or said sum of $1,000 be fhlly paid. That complainant continued these monthly payments of $10 from the date of said mortgage to the latter part of the year 1860. That about July, 1858, he became entitled to a credit of $2 per month for each month after June, 1854, “by reason of the purchase of such credit or such amount of interest in said Association,” from oneW. H. Long, and, after such purchase, complainant continued the monthly payment of $2 until the latter part of the year 1860. He also paid the Association many fines and penalties. That these payments were a discharge of complainant’s indebtedness, but the Association refused to cancel the mortgage, except upon the additional payment of $-, he haying on or about the 6th of September, 1866, paid said Association between $400 and $500 to obtain two releases of his property, one of which applied to the mortgage aforesaid. That after making proper credits and calculations, he has paid the association over and above their lawful claims not far from $500.

The bill then sets out similar transactions between the Association and the persons under whom he claims as assignee, viz., W. H. Long, J. O. Wright, and J. W. Felts, or creditor, viz., Jno. Coltart, and avers that the Association is an incorporated body in full life, that its charter has never expired, or been surrendered, nor have there been any judicial proceedings directed to its dissolution. The bill concludes •thus:

‘ ‘ All of the premises relating to the excess of money paid .to said Association, your orator charges to be contrary to ■equity, in that the same was obtained through fraudulent •means; that the rules and regulations, by means of which ■the said defendants conducted their business, were contrary ,to law, yet so plausible upon their face as to deceive your [461]*461orator, and involve Mm in a complication which has proved to be highly usurious, oppressive, and injurious. Hence he invokes the exercise of the powers of this honorable court to afford him relief.”

The prayer is that an account be had between him and defendant, and Coltart and def’t, and that he recover the overpayments made to release his property.

The complainant claims that he purchased lands mortgaged by Long, Wright and Felts severally to the Association, to secure similar loans to the one made to him, the amount secured being in every instance larger than the amount actually received. His purchase of the land mortgaged by Long was made on the 29th of April, 1859 ; of the land mortgaged by Wright on the 7th of March, 1857 ; of the land mortgaged by Felts on the — day of —, 185-.

The deeds filed as evidence of these purchases show that the complainant bound himself, in part consideration of the purchase, to pay the amount remaining due to the Building Association upon the mortgages executed as aforesaid. And the bill shows that the complainant made payments upon said mortgages, and obtained a release of the Long mortgage, that being one of the mortgages released by the payment of between $400 and $500 on the 6th of September, 1866, as herein before stated. The bill alleges that the actual debt has been paid on the other mortgages, if an account be taken on the same basis as the account between him and the Association, but that the Association refuses to release.

As to the Coltart overpayment, the complainant seeks to reach it as a judgment-creditor of Coltart, who has exhausted his legal remedy.

The answer admits the facts in relation to the several transactions detailed in the bill to be substantially as therein set forth. It says, however, that the defendant was a corporation, chartered by the legislature, and with bye-laws, as shown in a printed pamphlet made an exhibit. That it commenced business in July, 1854, and complainant became a [462]*462subscriber for stock, and subscribed for fiye shares, which were to be paid for by paying to the treasurer of the company one dollar on each share on the first day of every month, and that he made such payments until the 11th December, 1856. That the sum thus paid was, by the contract, a payment on stock. That on said last date the sum of $1,000 was put up, under the laws of said Association, to be bid for, and complainant was the highest bidder therefor, and received $620. That thereafter, by the rules of the Association, which were well known to the complainant, he was to pay $10 a month, of which $5 was to be credited upon his subscription for stock, and the other $5 on the loan, and these payments were continued up to 1860. The defendant relies upon the statutes of limitation.

The answer makes similar statements in regard to the subscription of stock and payments thereon, borrowing of money and payments thereon, of the other persons under whom the complainant claims, admitting substantially the dates, amounts, &c., as stated in the bill. And as to’ complainant’s claim of the purchase of the lands severally mortgaged, they say he bound himself, in part consideration, to pay the residue of the mortgage debt, and cannot complain of the transaction. The answer relies upon the statute of limitations as to any demands growing out of these claims.

The object of the bill, as already stated, is to recover usury exacted from the complainant, and the other parties under whom the complainant sets up claim, and to obtain a release of the mortgages on the lands bought up by complainant, on the ground that the mortgage debts- had been paid.

It will be noticed that the payments made by the complainant, and said other parties, to the Building Association were in part before there was any loan of money by the’ Association to said parties. These payments, it appears from the charter and bye-laws of the Association exhibited with the bill, were made on the subscriptions of said parties to the capital stock of the company. It also appears that one-half [463]*463of the monthly payments made after the several loans were, under said charter and bye-laws, intended to be credited on the stock, and the other half on the loan. Prima facie, such payments on the stock would not create an indebtedness from the Association to the stockholders, but would go in extinguishment of the indebtedness of the stockholder to the capital stock of the Association by virtue of his subscription. But the bill goes upon the idea that such payments created an indebtedness of the corporation to the payor, for which a credit could be claimed in the adjustment of accounts between the stockholders and the Association.

This view of the relative rights of the parties is rested upon the decision of the supreme court in the case of Martin against this same Association, reported in 2 Cold. 418.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. Ch. R. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shankland-v-nelson-tennctapp-1873.