Skinner v. Southern Home Building & Loan Ass'n

46 Fla. 547
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 46 Fla. 547 (Skinner v. Southern Home Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skinner v. Southern Home Building & Loan Ass'n, 46 Fla. 547 (Fla. 1903).

Opinions

Cockreul, J.

This case was taken up for consideration by Division B, but there being a difference of opinion, was referred by it to the whole court for decision.

This is a suit in equity instituted by a foreign corporation to enforce a mortgage lien, to which was interposed among other defenses that of usury.

One of the defendants, Lee B. Skinner, on March 31, 1896, secured from the Southern Flome Building and Loan Association, hereafter referred to as the association, in which he held twenty-five shares of the par value of one [549]*549hundred dollars per share, a loan of twenty-five hundred dollars, to secure which loan he pledged said shares, and also gave a bond and mortgage on certain realty in this State, his wife joining him in the execution thereof. The association claims in its bill that by this contract the defendant obligated himself to pay the association as long as it should exist or as might be provided by its by-laws, rules and regulations the sum of fifteen dollars monthly, as installments due on said stock and the further sum of t.wenty-five dollars monthly as interest and premium on said advance; that under its by-laws the members holding stock pay one dollar per share for the first installment and sixty cents per month dues; that the membership fee of one dollar per share and the sum of ten cents per month per share is known as the-expense fund and does not go to the credit of the stock, and a fine of ten cents a share is levied upon failure to pay promptly the installments due each month; that in case of foreclosure the withdrawal value of the shares held by a borrowing member may be credited to the amount due, the withdrawal value being fifty cents out of each sixty cents paid per share with six per cent, interest on the same for the average time, provided all the payments have been made thereon.

A statement of its claim, filed as an exhibit to the bill, itemizes the account as follows: Loan on real estate $2,500, 15 months dues, premium and interest $600, 14 months fines $35, balance insurance premium $8.00, total $3,143. By withdrawal balance 25 shares 32 months to Dec. 1, 1898, $429.50. Amount due Dec. 1, 1898, $2,713.50. The mortgage sought to be enforced gave the association the right and power to sell the realty “according to the statute of Florida in such cases made and provided.” The defendants in their answer, to which an exception for impertinence was sustained, allege that this association did not put up its money at auction to the member bidding the highest premium, but required all borrowing members to pay a fixed premium of six per cent, per annum and a fixed interest at [550]*550six per cent, per annum, and that said defendant was so required to pay.

We have not the benefit of a brief from the appellee in disposing of the question thus raised, and have been put to considerable labor in seeking to settle the question correctly. Our usury statute is drastic and is quoted in full, with comment on its uniqueness, in Maxwell v. Jacksonville Loan & Improvement Co., 45 Fla. 425, 34 South. Rep. 255-267. The second section of that statute reads as follows: “That it shall not be lawful for any person, company or corporation, to reserve, charge or take, for any loan or advance of money, or forbearance to enforce the collection of any sum of money, a rate of interest greater than ten per centum per annum, either directly or indirectly, b)' way of commissions for advances, discounts, exchange, or by any contract, contrivance or device whatever, whereby the debtor is required or obligated to pay a greater sum than the 'actual principal sum received, together with interest at the rate of ten per centum per annum as aforesaid; provided, however, that the business of and loans made by building and loan and other mutual benefit associations to its members, when made and conducted under the provisions of chapter 3709, laws of Florida, approved May 31, 1887, and acts amendatory thereof, and such other acts as may hereafter be passed regulating the conduct of such associations shall not be considered usurious within the intent and meaning of this act.”

Omitting for the present the act of 1893, the “provisions of chapter 3709, laws of Florida, approved May 31, 1887, and acts amendatory thereof, and such other acts as may hereafter be passed regulating the conduct of such associations,” referred to in this section of the usury statute, are all found in sections 2205-2213 of the Revised Statutes. Section 2207 regulates the method of loans as follows: “The officers shall hold stated meetings at which the money in the treasury, if over the fixed value of a share, shall be offered for loan in open meeting, and the stockholder who shall bid the highest premium for the preference [551]*551of priority of loan shall be entitled to receive a loan of not more than the amount fixed by charter as the full value of a share, for each share of stock held by such stockholder * * * .” We can not therefore entertain for a moment the thought that the court below held this contract to have been within the proviso to the usury statute. The court must have relied on section 8, chap. 4158 of the laws of ,1893, an act entitled “An Act in relation to foreign building and loan associations.” That section provides “that no fines, interest or premiums paid on loans made by any building and loan association shall be deemed usurious, and the same may be collected, as debts of like amount are now collected by law in this State, and according to the terms and stipulations of the agreement between the association and the borrower.” Section 4 of the same act reads: “That the naipe ‘building and loan association,’ as used in this act, shall include all corporations, societies, organizations or associations doing a saving and loan investment business on the building society plan, vis: Loaning its funds to its members only, whether issuing certificates of stock which matures at a fixed time or not.” Sections one, two, three, six and seven name the conditions precedent to such associations engaged in business, and section five fixes a penalty upon any agent of such association doing business unless the conditions have been fulfilled. Section nine, the final section, contains merely a repealing clause.

It appearing, therefore, that it was in the legislative mind to place restrictions upon these foreign associations doing business in the State, there will not be imputed to that body an intent to confer higher privileges upon such associations than are conferred upon its own creatures, unless that intent is made clear in the very language of the grant of such privileges.

Section eight is in its terms broad enough to cover domestic as well as foreign building and loan associations, were it not for the context and the restrictive title of the act, and it is not clear what effect such construction may [552]*552have had on the law-makers. It is clear that the legislature had considered the fixing of the premium by competitive bidding an essential feature of the building and loan plan, seeing that it imposed such method on its own corporations of that character. Owing to the various constructions of the courts as to the necessity of leaving the time at which the stock was to mature subject to the possible success of the institution, and thus preserving the partnership feature, of the transaction, a legislative construction is placed upon the meaning of the phrase “building society plan,” and it is declared it shall be immaterial whether the certificates of stock mature at a fixed time or not.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Fla. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skinner-v-southern-home-building-loan-assn-fla-1903.