Stumph v. Wheat Belt Building & Loan Ass'n

79 P.2d 896, 148 Kan. 25, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 11, 1938
DocketNo. 33,721
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 896 (Stumph v. Wheat Belt Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stumph v. Wheat Belt Building & Loan Ass'n, 79 P.2d 896, 148 Kan. 25, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 136 (kan 1938).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This was an action to compel release of a mortgage and to recover statutory damages and attorney’s fees because of the mortgagee’s refusal to release.

On March 28, 1922, Jessie J. Steward and her husband borrowed $3,000 of the defendant, hereafter referred to as the association, securing the same by a mortgage on real property in Pratt county, Kansas. When the loan was made, in accordance with the statutes applicable to building and loan associations, the borrowers purchased from the association thirty shares of class G installment stock, evidenced by a certificate which will be referred to later in more detail. This stock was pledged for payment of the debt. At the same time, the borrowers executed and delivered to the association a note reciting that on maturity of the stock pledged they would pay the association the $3,000 advanced, with interest at the rate of ten percent per annum payable monthly on the 25th day of each month until the principal sum had been fully paid, and that they pledged and assigned to the association as collateral security, the capital stock evidenced by the above-mentioned certificate and that they agreed to pay the monthly dues on the stock amounting to $10.80 and the monthly installments of interest amounting to $25.20, together with all fines chargeable upon arrears.

“Until such time as said stock shall reach the ultimate- value thereof and fully mature and be fully paid in and of the value of $100 per share, according to the terms and provisions thereof, and of the said constitution and bylaws; when, if all the terms and conditions of this note and the mortgage securing the same, have been fully complied with, such stock shall be accepted by said association at its face value, in settlement of this note and the said loan and indebtedness; unless said loan shall be otherwise sooner paid, canceled and discharged.”

To secure payment of this note the borrowers executed and delivered to the association a mortgage describing the above note and reciting:

“The first parties expressly agree that they will pay to second party, or its [27]*27successors or assigns, on or before the fifteenth day of each month, the sum of $10.80 as dues on thirty (30) shares of class G installment stock certificate No. 90 of said association assigned and pledged as collateral security to said association, and the sum of $25.20 as interest on said sum of $3,000 and also fines that may be assessed against said stock until said stock shall become fully paid up and of par value of one hundred dollars per share under the provisions of the constitution and bylaws of said second party, and to secure the per-, formanee of all the terms and conditions expressed in said promissory note.”

The stock certificate above mentioned, in general, complied with the requirements of Laws 1911, ch. 131, sec. 2, then in force, and showed that Jessie J. Steward was the owner of class G shares of the capital stock of the association and that it was issued in accordance with the following provisions of the bylaws, which, in part, were as follows:

“Class G Installment Stock
' ARTICLE VI
“Sec. 8. Class G installment stock shall be issued only to members desiring loans upon real estate, upon the association’s definite contract plan and shall be dated the day of the month in which issued. The stockholder shall be required to make monthly payments as stated in the following table, and at the expiration of the number of months specified therein his stock shall be due, and the proceeds thereof shall be applicable for the payment of the loan for which they were given as security. Excess payments permitted on class G shares, the same to participate in dividends in the same proportion as regular payments. (Italics ours.)
“Table op Monthly Rate for Each Share of $100
Terms of payments Payment monthly 144 months .38
“The power is given the board of directors to change the above payments when deemed for the best interest of the association; such change, however, shall not affect outstanding certificates in this class.”

The following paragraph also appeared on the certificate:

“In consideration of a guarantee by the holders of the permanent stock to declare dividends at a rate sufficient to mature this certificate within the term prescribed, and the guaranteed withdrawal privileges, the holder hereof hereby agrees to waive his right to any earnings in excess of the amount necessary to realize such guarantee.”

On the back of the certificate was endorsed:

“Number 90 Class G.
Number of Shares, 30; $3,000; Year, 12; Series in. . . .”
“Issued to Jessie J. Steward; Date, 3-28-22 Address-.
Read your certificate. It is your contract with the association.”

Sometime thereafter, Mrs. Steward and her husband sold the real estate to one Walter E. Baker, and at that time assigned their in[28]*28terest in the building and loan stock to him. Baker continued to own the property until about January, 1933, when he sold it to the present plaintiff, to whom the building and loan stock was transferred. The plaintiff made payment of the monthly installments of $36, and on May 3,1934, he made payment of the 144th installment due and demanded release of the mortgage. Without reciting the details here, the association refused to release the mortgage, claiming that the pledged stock was not matured to its face value, and that there was a balance due and owing bn it to make it worth its par value of $100 per share. On October 31, 1934, the plaintiff brought his action to compel release. The association answered that the note secured by the mortgage had not been fully paid according to its terms, the bylaws of the association and the statutes of the state of Kansas, and that a balance remained due and unpaid; that the stock certificate, note, mortgage and bylaws did not guarantee the loan would be fully paid upon payment of 144 monthly installments of $10.80 each and 144 monthly installments of $25.20 each, but in order to fully pay the indebtedness it was necessary that dividends be declared and credited to the holder; that the certificate provided for payments in the sum of 38 cents per month on each $100 share, or a total of .$11.40 per month, but that plaintiff paid only $10.80 per month, and that owing to the unprecedented financial conditions and the depression, said association did not pay dividends to the holders of this or any other class of stock for the two years last past, and that by reason thereof the stock has not fully matured, and—

“That any attempted guarantee in said stock was made only by the holders of the permanent stock of said association and not by said association, and that said association could not under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Kansas guarantee the maturity of said stock, and any attempted guarantee would be ultra vires and void.”

The answer further alleged that the note was unpaid and unsatisfied ; that the stock had not matured, and the plaintiff was not entitled to cancellation or release of the mortgage.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 896, 148 Kan. 25, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stumph-v-wheat-belt-building-loan-assn-kan-1938.