Liberator Building Society Explained

Liberator Building Society
Type:Building society
Industry:Financial services
Founder:Jabez Balfour
Fate:Failed due to speculation and fraud
Hq Location City:London
Hq Location Country:England
Key People:Jabez Balfour
Products:Loans, mortgages and savings accounts

The Liberator Building Society was a British building society that was formed in 1868 by Jabez Balfour and failed in 1892 due to fraud perpetrated by its founder.

Balfour used his widespread non-conformist and temperance connections to raise funds, it became the largest building society in the country by the 1890s. However, by the end, most of the mortgages were to finance speculative developments by other Balfour-controlled companies at prices which were fraudulent.

In 1892, Balfour’s bank collapsed, followed by some of his development companies. The Liberator Building Society was unable to meet the demand from withdrawals and in October 1892 a liquidator was appointed. More than £8m. was lost to the Liberator and its associates.

History

The early years

The Building Societies Gazette reported 30 cases of fraud between 1871 and 1891 but the collapse of the Liberator in 1892 was of an altogether different scale. [1] The society was founded in 1868 as The Liberator Permanent Building and Investment Society, a name it kept till the end. [2] Jabez Spencer Balfour was first its vice-chairman, then secretary, managing director and president. Whatever the position, he was “the main force behind the Society”. His father was a director of the Temperance Building Society, a model for the early years of the Liberator; [3] his mother, a celebrated lecturer, writer and temperance campaigner.[4] As a result, his connections were extensive and he surrounded himself with prominent Baptists, Congregationalists and temperance leaders.[3] He achieved national prominence and among extensive appointments he was MP for Tamworth in 1880, first mayor of Croydon in 1883, and MP for Burnley in 1889.[5]

Balfour announced that the main objects of the proposed society was “to assist the building of Nonconformist chapels and to afford facilities to persons desirous of purchasing house property on desirous terms”. Founders included one Lord, four MPs and six ministers and laymen. It is difficult to exaggerate the prominence and connections of those on the notepaper. The growth of the society was to be implemented through an extensive network of agencies among non-conformist and temperance members, paying generous commission; within a few years there were over 500 ministers and laymen on the agency roll. For the first few years, advances were made on small houses for owner occupation spread across southern England and Wales. Assets exceeded £1m after ten years and the Liberator was the largest society after 15 years.[2] [3]

After four years the process of dealing with single houses was considered slow and therefore Balfour formed independent companies to build hundreds of houses, the object being to finance their construction and then mortgage the individual houses. For ten years the Liberator continued with ordinary business but the loans to Lands Allotment Company and to House and Land Investment Company took an increasingly large percentage of assets; by 1880, mortgages to these two accounted for 20% of the Liberator assets. Both these companies were quoted on the London Stock Exchange in the early 1880s, as was the National Model Dwellings Company[6] All three had a minimum of Balfour and the Liberator Chairman on their Boards. The business of the Liberator was clearly changing. Conventional building society business declined and by 1885 accounted for only 15% of assets. Instead, the Liberator was increasingly lending to its associate companies’ speculative non-housing developments. Amongst others, these included blocks of flats, hotels, land reclamation on the Isle of Wight, chemical works and collieries. This was inherently riskier than conventional house mortgages but the real danger was that the lending was fraudulent.[2] [3]

The Fraud

The fraud centred on the relationship between the Liberator and the various other development companies associated with or controlled by Balfour. The technique was the simple one of buying a property and selling it on at an excessive price to another Balfour company. This asset would then be mortgaged to the Liberator in full at the new price. Frequently, the property company could not make money at that inflated price nor pay interest to the Liberator; that interest was then capitalised (added to the value of the loan). Although several Balfour companies had dealings with the Liberator, two thirds of the mortgages were with the builder J. W. Hobbs, which went public in 1885. In 1887, the auditors did issue a warning to the directors about the security of the interest the Liberator paid to its depositors, but in the absence of any response from the well-remunerated directors, the auditors still issued a certificate stating that the balance sheet agreed with the books.[2] [3]

The Failure

Eventually the inflow of new money became insufficient to pay depositors and Balfour started to borrow money on the strength of its first and second mortgages, reportedly as high as 17% and 22%. During 1892 rumours about the Liberator increased and questions were being asked which in turn led to heavy withdrawals from the society and two allied companies – London & General Bank and House and Land Investment Trust. On 2 September 1892, Balfour’s London & General Bank suspended payment. Immediately, the Liberator was unable meet withdrawals and depositors were told that they could only be paid in rotation.[2] [3] The directors called a preliminary meeting of the largest shareholders and depositors “to discuss a scheme whereby the assets of the society will be preserved for its shareholders and depositors”. The directors stood by the asset valuations and claimed the society was still solvent and asked for time to effect a reconstruction. [7] The shareholders duly held their own meeting to propose an alternative scheme of reconstruction, while recognising that the run on deposits made it difficult to provide funds necessary to complete the associate companies’ buildings.[8]

No agreement on refinancing could be reached and on 4 October the Liberator was the subject of a compulsory winding up order. Traditional house mortgages were now less than 2% of the Liberator’s mortgage assets; 93% were second or third mortgages with three Balfour companies, all of which went into liquidation. Nearly one million pounds of unpaid interest by the Balfour companies was capitalised in the Liberator accounts. The total loss to the Liberator and its associated companies was more than £8m. The collapse led to the Building Societies Act 1874, which required tighter restriction on lending and greater disclosure.[2] [3]

Hobbs and other building associates were charged the following year. Balfour fled to the Argentine but was brought back in dramatic fashion in 1895 and sentenced to 14 years.[4]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Herbert Ashworth, The Building Society Story, 1980, London
  2. Seymour J Price, Building Societies Their Origin and History, 1958, Cambridge
  3. E J Cleary, The Building Society Movement, 1965. London
  4. Web site: Journal of Liberal History. 52. A 'sincere, thorough and hearty Liberal', Autumn 2006.
  5. Web site: Jabez Spencer Balfour, Liberal M.P. Burnley 1889-1893, "Genial Rogue". Lancashire County Council. 5 July 2021.
  6. The Stock Exchange Year-Book 1882
  7. The Times 7 and 15 September 1892
  8. The Times 21 September