Ch. Tyrrell L. & B. Ass'n v. Haley
Ch. Tyrrell L. & B. Ass'n v. Haley
Opinion of the Court
OPINION,
The plaintiff below is a building association ; the defendant is a stockholder in the same. He procured a loan of money from the association, and gave his bond and mortgage therefor. After his stock had matured, as he alleges, the association entered judgment upon the bond, by virtue of the warrant of attorney attached. This judgment was opened by the court below upon his application, and a trial had to ascertain how much was due upon the mortgage. The result was a verdict for the full amount. The defence was that the stock of the series to which the defendant belonged, had fully matured, and was worth par, viz., two hundred dollars per share.
If the defendant is right in his contention, he certainly ought to have an opportunity of showing it, under his equitable plea of payment. As the case stands, he has a judgment at law
While the case was not very fully or clearly presented, there appears to have been a dispute between the association and the defendant as to the maturity of the stock. The series to which the defendant belonged was started in 1877. He had nothing to do with the other series ; as to them he was not a member of the association. With the profits or losses, of other series he had no concern. He claimed, and, upon the trial below, offered to prove by Joseph Sheehan, a witness called by him, that “ the stock, in the series in which defendant was a stockholder and had borrowed the loan in controversy, had reached a value of two hundred dollars; and, further, that the stock upon which he had borrowed the loan in controversy was worth, in November, 1887, two hundred and eighteen dollars and twenty-four cents a share.” This offer was objected to by the plaintiff, because “ the constitution and by-laws provide a method for division of profits, and witness could testify onljr as a matter of judgment.” The objection was sustained by the court below.
The witness was not a member of the association, and may not have had any knowledge upon the subject; yet, as the offer was rejected, we must assume he would have sustained the offer. His means of knowledge could have been tested upon his cross-examination. The objection was -to the competency of the evidence, not to that of the witness. If we concede that the constitution and by-laws provide a method of the division of profife, it does not follow that the evidence, if re
If the defendant can sustain his offer, he has a full defence to the mortgage, and we are of opinion the evidence should have been admitted.
The judgment is reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CH. TYRRELL L. & B. ASS'N v. JERE. HALEY
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- [To be reported.] 1. When stock in a building association lias matured, the debt oí a borrowing stockholder is paid, and he is entitled to a return of the securities given therefor; and, if such maturity has occurred in point of fact, even though not declared by the association, it has no right to recover a judgment against one of its stockholders for the amount of his loan. 2. The fact that the constitution and by-laws of such an association provide for a division of assets at a meeting of the stockholders “ when it shall be ascertained that” the stock has matured, does not preclude a borrowing member from showing, when sued upon a security given for the loan, that on a proper application of the profits of the association his stock is worth par. 3. It may be that such borrower would be entitled to a mandamus to compel the corporation to make a proper application and division of profits and to declare the stock matured, or might file a bill in equity for a like purpose; but he is not bound to assume the position of an actor, and to involve himself in the expense attendant upon either of those proceedings. 4. For, if his stock has matured, he is entitled to stop paying and rely upon the surrender of his securities by the association at the proper time; and if, instead of so doing, the association bring suit thereon, he may set up an equitable defence and show that the stock has matured, such defence being a substitute for a bill in equity for that purpose. 5. In passing upon the refusal of an offer to show by a witness, not a member of the plaintiff association, that on a certain date the value of each share of its stock was $218.24, the Supreme Court will assume the witness had sufficient knowledge upon the subject to enable him to sustain the offer, where nothing was shown to the contrary and no objection to his competency was made.