Vought v. Eastern Building & Loan Ass'n

65 N.E. 496, 172 N.Y. 508, 10 Bedell 508, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 697
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 65 N.E. 496 (Vought v. Eastern Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vought v. Eastern Building & Loan Ass'n, 65 N.E. 496, 172 N.Y. 508, 10 Bedell 508, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 697 (N.Y. 1902).

Opinion

Martin, J.

This action was to recover one thousand dollars, the par or maturity value of ten shares of stock issued by the defendant, five shares to the plaintiff and five shares that were assigned to her which were originally issued to one H. E. FTewton. The contract or certificates of shares made and issued by the defendant to the plaintiff and her assignor constituted them shareholders, and provided that in consideration of the membership fee of one dollar upon each share, together with the agreements and statements contained in the application for membership in the association, and full compliance with the terms, conditions and by-laws printed on the front and back of each certificate, the defendant would pay to such shareholder, or his or her executors, administrators, or assigns, the sum of one hundred dollars for each of said shares at the end of seventy-eight months from the date thereof.

*512 Indorsed upon each of these certificates was the' name of the shareholder, his residence, and a statement that the monthly installments were three dollars and seventy-five cents. Indorsed upon the certificate issued to the plaintiff was, “ Date of issue Dec. 1st, 1891. Maturity, June 1st, 1898,” while upon the certificate originally issued to Newton and transferred to the plaintiff was indorsed, “ Date of issue Oct. 1, 1890. Maturity, April 1, 1897.” The terms and conditions referred to provided, in considerable detail, for the withdrawal of shares by a shareholder before the period of maturity, the time and method of such withdrawal, and the terms upon which it might be made.

As the defendant is a going association, and the questions here presented do not arise upon its insolvency or dissolution, it is perhaps doubtful if the articles of association are to be regarded as a part of the contract between the parties. Yet, in the consideration of this case, we shall treat them as material in determining the character and effect of the agreement and the rights of the parties under it. The certificates issued provide that the terms, conditions and by-laws printed on the front and back thereof are made a part of the contract, and, hence, taken together, they constitute the agreement between the parties and the standard by which their rights and liabilities are to be determined. (People ex rel. Atty.-Gen. v. Life & R. Assn., 150 N. Y. 94, 108 ; Matter of Equitable R. F. L. Assn., 131 N. Y. 354, 369.)

At the threshold of this investigation we find an absolute and unqualified promise upon the part of the defendant to pay to each of the holders of the stock owned by the plaintiff the sum of one hundred dollars for each share at the end of seventy-eight months from the date of the certificate, and also an indorsement thereon of the actual time when the shares were to mature. Therefore, as that time had expired and the required payments had been made, it is manifest that the plaintiff was entitled to recover, unless there is some other part of the contract which modifies or changes that provision.

It is contended by the respondent that such a change is *513 wrought by the other provisions contained in the terms, conditions, by-laws and articles of association, and that this agreement to pay at the expiration of seventy-eight months must, in the light of such provisions, be read and construed as an estimated, and not an actual, time of payment. Its contention is that the provisions of paragraph one of the terms and conditions printed upon the certificate, which provide that the shareholder shall pay seventy-five cents a month on each share until the share matures or is withdrawn ¡ section 14 of article 14 of the by-laws, stating that all shareholders shall pay a monthly installment of seventy-five cents on each share, until the same shall be full/y paid; the fifteenth paragraph of the articles. of association, which declares that the amount to be paid to the owners of shares at maturity shall be one hundred dollars per share; the sixth paragraph of the terms and conditions, which provides that at stated periods the profits arising from interest, premiums, fines and other sources shall be apportioned among the shares in good standing, and article eleven of the by-laws, which declares that no money can be drawn from the loan fund for any other purpose than the making of loans on security and to pay amounts due withdrawing shareholders, when given their obvious meaning, effect an utter alteration of the provision by which the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff one hundred dollars upon each share at the expiration of the term actually designated. If such change or modification is wrought it can only be upon the ground that the provisions of the contract relied upon by the defendant are inconsistent with its promise to pay at the time named and clearly show t]iat the intention of the parties was that such payment should be made only in the event that upon the shares owned by the plaintiff there had been paid a sum which, together with the profits apportioned to them, would amount to the face of. the shares. In other words, the defendant’s contention is that those provisions were sufficient to change an absolute promise to pay into a conditional one dependent upon the success of its enterprise. We find nothing in these provisions which would *514 justify any such conclusion. The provision in paragraph one that the plaintiff should pay until the share is paid or withdrawn, is entirely consistent with the agreement for absolute payment for the shares by the defendant at the time named, as by its contract it agreed that the plaintiff’s shares should mature at that time. The provision of section 14, article 14, of the by-laws obviously refers to the agreement in the certificate by which such payments were to be continued for seventy-eight months, and when payments had been made for that period clearly the shares became fully paid. The same may be said as to the fifteenth paragraph of the articles of association, which declares that the amount to be paid to the owners of the shares at maturity shall be one hundred dollars per share. Where shares are to be paid for by paying the sum of severity-five cents monthly upon each for the period of seventy-eight months, and such payments have been made, it is extremely difficult to discover any theory upon which it can be properly held that such shares have not been fully paid and matured, if or do we see how the provision for apportioning profits among the shares in any way relieved the defendant from or modified its promise to pay at the time named.

But it is further contended by the respondent that inasmuch as it is provided by article eleven of the by-laws that no money can be drawn from the loan fund for any other purpose except making loans on security and to pay amounts due withdrawing shareholders, the defendant had no authority to pay this claim because the loan fund was the only one from which such payments could be made. If that be true, and the plaintiff is not to be regarded as a withdrawing shareholder, we are unable to see how it could pay the plaintiff’s claim even if she had already paid" more than the face thereof, as all the receipts of the association are divided into two classes, the loan fund and the expense fund.

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.E. 496, 172 N.Y. 508, 10 Bedell 508, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vought-v-eastern-building-loan-assn-ny-1902.