Woods v. Wichita Falls Building & Loan Ass'n

66 S.W.2d 718
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1933
DocketNo. 12901.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 S.W.2d 718 (Woods v. Wichita Falls Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woods v. Wichita Falls Building & Loan Ass'n, 66 S.W.2d 718 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

This is a suit by appellant for the sum of $19,000, being the withdrawal value of two certificates of shares in appellee association. The notice of withdrawal of such value was given on November 29, 1930. The appellee was allowed a year within which to pay same. It did not pay. On a trial the district court found that the appellee "is insolvent."

Section 47 of chapter 61, Acts of Second Called Session of the 41st Legislature, provides: "No building and loan association shall permit any member to withdraw any portion of his investment in excess of $500.00 in any one month without thirty days written notice to the association, and any withdrawal must be made subject to the provisions of the by-laws with respect thereto, providing, however, that whenever the association has on hand idle funds it may pay same out to its members when and as may be determined by the Board of Directors, and provided in by-laws approved by the Banking Commissioner of Texas. The withdrawing shareholder or the legal representative of any deceased shareholder shall be paid the amount of the withdrawal value of the shares, provided, that upon withdrawal of shares pledged to the association for a stock loan, the association shall first deduct therefrom the indebtedness due the association, and withdrawals shall be paid in the order of their filing, except as hereinafter provided, and it shall be the duty of the secretary or other officer discharging such duties to enter upon each notice the order and date of filing. Except as hereinafter provided, not more than one-half of the receipts of the association in any month shall be applied to the payment of withdrawals without the consent of the board of directors. Whenever an application for withdrawal shall have been on file and shall have remained unpaid for a period of twelve months, all of the receipts of the association in any month from dues, loans repaid, and the proceeds of all other investments shall be applied to the payment of withdrawals, and the board of directors or the Banking Commissioner of Texas, in their discretion, may direct that withdrawals thereafter be paid upon a ratable and proportionate basis. After filing notice of withdrawal provided herein, the withdrawing member shall be entitled to the dividends credited to the same class of shares until the final payment of his shares is made, and membership in the association shall remain unimpaired *Page 720 so long as any accumulation remains to his credit. No officer, director attorney, clerk or agent of the association, and no person in any way interested or concerned in the management of its affairs may discount directly or indirectly, or directly or indirectly purchase a share of any such association, whether filed for withdrawal or not, except by the payment therefor of the withdrawal value of such share as determined herein."

The by-laws of appellee, adopted February, 1930, as copied in the statement of facts, are unintelligible. It thus appears that the payment of withdrawals before the application therefor has been on file one year is within the sound discretion of the board of directors.

When the application has been on file one year and shall have remained unpaid, "all the receipts of the association in any month from dues, loans repaid and the proceeds of all other investments shall be applied to the payment of withdrawals and the Board of Directors or the Banking Commissioner in their discretion may direct that withdrawals thereafter be paid upon a ratable and proportionate basis." A reading of the section discloses that the Legislature has been discriminating in the proper use of "may" and "shall," and we conclude that the association is compelled to so apply the funds designated in the command — and this "in the order of their filing." It seems that it was the intention of the Legislature that, when that twelve months' notice had been completed, the right of the withdrawing shareholder to the funds received for any one month could not be thereafter interfered with by directors or commissioner, for the statute specified, upon such application of such one-month funds, "such officers may direct that withdrawals thereafter be paid upon a ratable and proportionate basis." While we are at loss to know why such a basis should be established, it is our business to interpret what is enacted, and the only possible conclusion we have been able to make is that the month referred to is the month next succeeding the twelve months' notice. "Any" should not have the meaning here of "each" or "all" for that could destroy the association by leaving it without means to pay the very help and expenses which are necessary to collect the funds which the statute would apply to the shareholders' withdrawal. This entire section speaks plainly the intention of the Legislature to give the shareholder liquidity to his stock, but surrounded by such safeguards as would prevent him from destroying by hasty demands the value of the other shareholders' stock by insisting on immediate cash payment at a time when the stability of the association would be imperiled to accede to the demand.

On July 9, 1932, the appellee ordered that withdrawals be paid upon a ratable and proportionate basis.

Appellee pleaded that 45 of its stockholders had filed applications to withdraw prior to appellant, and that in all 98 per cent. of the stock of appellee was on file for withdrawal; that the existing industrial depression had so reduced appellee's real estate values and the security for its loans, that, if it were compelled to sell its assets on the market at this time, the proceeds would not equal the outstanding stock of appellee, but that, if it were allowed to continue the ratable payment of said withdrawal as funds were collected in an orderly and businesslike manner in all probability each stockholder would be paid in full. On trial it was shown that this was true, and that the appellee had persuaded all but two of the stockholders to rescind their demands for withdrawal in cash. There was in appellee's possession at the time of trial cash in an amount greater than appellant's claim, but debts direct and contingent existed in an amount greater than the cash.

The court made no finding on whether the appellee was insolvent either on January 28, 1931, or on November 29, 1931. When appellant's claim matured on November 29, 1931, and became enforceable, he became in a qualified sense a creditor of appellee, certainly so as far as the stockholders are concerned, the association being solvent. Law of B. L. Ass'n by Sundheim, p. 154; Young v. Stevenson, 180 Ill. 608,54 N.E. 562, 72 Am.St.Rep. 236; Holyoke Ass'n v. Lewis, 1 Colo. App. 127,27 P. 872; Englehardt v. Fifth Ward Ass'n, 148 N.Y. 281, 42 N.E. 710,35 L.R.A. 289; Enterprise Bldg. Loan Soc. v. Bolin, 12 Colo. App. 304,55 P. 740. And if the association was then a solvent going concern, he is entitled to be ranked as a general creditor. Wise Bros. v. Yazoo Bldg. Loan Ass'n, 105 Miss. 78, 62 So. 1; Bates v. American Ass'n (C.C.A.) 120 F. 1018. Insolvency as to a building and loan association is different from the general rule for corporations and exists when the available and collectable assets are not equal to the stock already paid in plus the demands of creditors. Globe Bldg. Co. v. Wood, 110 Ky. 4,60 S.W. 858, 96 Am.St.Rep. 417.

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Related

Fuzy v. Department of Financial Institutions
37 N.E.2d 24 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1941)
Woods v. Wichita Falls Building & Loan Ass'n
96 S.W.2d 64 (Texas Supreme Court, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W.2d 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-wichita-falls-building-loan-assn-texapp-1933.