Stewart v. Workingmen's Building & Loan Ass'n

68 A. 887, 106 Md. 675, 1907 Md. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 68 A. 887 (Stewart v. Workingmen's Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Workingmen's Building & Loan Ass'n, 68 A. 887, 106 Md. 675, 1907 Md. LEXIS 118 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

. This is ari appeal from an order of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County as a Court of equity, overruling exceptions to the ratification of a sale of mortgaged premises, made under a power of sale contained in the mortgage. This mortgage was made September 20th, 1898, by Rachel PI. Stewart and her husband to “The Workingmen’s Building and Loan Association of Annapolis, Anne Arundel County, Maryland,” (which will hereafter be designated The Association), a body corporate under the laws of Maryland, to secure an advance made to said Rachel PC Stewart as the holder of certain stock in said Association. It recites that she was at that date a member of the Association, and the holder of five shares of its *677 unredeemed stock, and that she had received from the Association an advance of $1650, “being the full par value of said five shares of stock when fully paid up and completed, in the contemplation of the object and purposes of said Association +. * * ¡n accordance with its present constitution.” The mortgagors covenanted therein as follows: “to pay to . the mortgagee or its assigns, on the principal sum, the weekly sum of one dollar and seventy-five cents (being thirty-five cents on each share) on every Saturday night in each week, for the period of ten years from the date hereof, or until the aggregate of said weekly payments so made, together with the said shareholder's accredited dividend of the profits of said Association, shall, exclusive of all losses and liabilities, and fines and pen: altie.s imposed, amount to the said advanced sum of $650, and to payas interest on said advanced sum, on every Saturday night during said period the further weekly sum of fifteen cents on each of said shares of stock, the said weekly interest of fifteen cents ceasing on each share only when the par value thereof ($ 130) clear of all losses, and liabilities, fines and penalties, shall have been repaid.”

They also covenanted to pay all ground rent, taxes and as-r sessments of all kinds upon the mortgaged property, and ail fines and penalties imposed upon the said Rachel E. Stewart in accordance with the constitution of the Association, and ito insure the buildings on the mortgaged premises to the amount of at least $500 for the protection of the mortgagee.. • >

The power of sale in event of default in the performance of any of the covenants was in the form commonly used in such mortgages, except that it provided for a fee of $40 to the attorney named in the mortgage or other party making sale thereunder, “in lieu of the commissions usually allowed.”

Default was made by Mrs. Stewart, and on February 2nd» 1907, the mortgaged premises, after due advertisement, were sold by the attorney named therein, for $975, and the sale was duly reported to the Court for ratification, the amount claimed by the mortgagee up to the day of sale being $680, besides costs and commissions to be added, as appears from mortgagee’s account A set out in the record.

*678 The exceptions of Mrs. Stewart allege that on the day of sale, and before the sale began, she tendered in legal currency both to the attorney making the sale, and to the president of said association, the sum of $605.15, being, as she alleges, the full amount properly due upon said mortgage, including all costs and commissions, but that the tender was refused, and she filed with said exceptions a statement or account showing how said amount was reached, which is set out in the record and is designated Exhibit R. E. S. No. 4. This account alleges the total amount due on the mortgage to be $539.21, but she tendered $550 to cover any possible error in calculation, and added for costs as stated in the exceptions, $55.15, making the total tender $605.15. The exceptions allege that the claim of the association was “fraudulent, usurious, oppressive, contrary to law, and null and void,”- and prayed the Court “(a) to set aside said sale; or (b) to refer the papers in the proceedings to a special auditor to be appointed by the Court, to state the accounts between your petitioner and the said association, and report the same to this Court folks final action thereon.” The solicitor for the exceptant being the regular auditor of the Court, the papers were by order of the Court referred to a special auditor to state an account and report the same to the Court with leave to take such testimony as he should think proper.

An agreed statement of facts was filed by the parties, from which it appears that the said association has “continually, at stated periods since 1898, declared dividends and paid the same or credited the same to the parties entitled thereto on all matured stock, and on the stock of the non-borrowing members,” but “that no dividend has ever been-paid Rachel E. Stewart on account of her payments to the said association.” It was also admitted that the tender was made and refused as alleged, and that the items composing the tender were as alleged in the exceptions, and that the statement filed and designated R. E. S. No. 4, “shows fully all payments made by her .during the existence of the mortgage,” and that no certificate for said five shares of stock was ever delivered *679 to her by the association; also that the statement filed by the association, and designated Mortgagors Account A, was a correct statement of her ledger account, so far as the same professes to give her payments and the charges against her.

The special auditor reported that he had taken no testimony because counsel had agreed that the statements filed by the contending parties were arithmetically correct; that he had examined each of them, and had found them to be arithmetically correct, and therefore submitted them both to the Court for its action, and the Court thereupon ordered “that the exceptions filed by Rachel E, Stewart, be and the same are hereby overruled, and that Mortgagees /Account A filed March 9th, 1907, be and the same is hereby finally ratified, and that the exceptant pay the costs.” The appellants account is made up on the theory that the transaction between the parties is usurious, and in violation of the law regulating advances by building associations to their members, and that in consequence, the relation between these parties is that of borrower and lender, and that the mortgage indebtedness is to be settled accordingly.

The account of the appellee, on the other hand, is made up on the theory that the transaction is in strict accord with all the requirements of the law regulating such advances; and that the amount due upon the mortgage is to be ascertained by the application of the rule established by this Court in Oak Cottage Building Association v. Eastman and Rogers, 31 Md. 556. In that case, Eastman and Rogers having received an advance from the association upon certain shares of stock, availed themselves about a year later of the privilege secured to them by .the constitution of the association, of redeeming the property mortgaged, by repaying the money due the association, and paid it the sum exacted by it. They then brought suit to recover an alleged excess so exacted, this being before the passage of the Act of 1876, ch.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A. 887, 106 Md. 675, 1907 Md. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-workingmens-building-loan-assn-md-1907.