Court Opinion

ID: 7968188
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:52:37.20833+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:41.406303
License: Public Domain

Gilpillan, C. J.
Action to enjoin the foreclosure under the power of a mortgage upon real estate alleged to have been usurious. Smith executed to Parsons thirty promissory notes, aggregating in amount $20,000, and he and wife executed a mortgage upon real estate situated in this state to secure the same, all dated October 1, 1883, and payable October 1, 1S88, with interest, payable semiannually, at the rate of seven per cent, per annum. The mortgage was duly recorded. The papers were executed, not upon a loan made at the time, but upon an application to Parsons for a loan; and they were forwarded from Minnesota, where Smith resided, to him, at Hartford, Conn., in which state he resided, for his examination and acceptance or rejection; and a considerable time appears to have elapsed between their execution and Parsons’ determination to accept them, and make the loan. On the trial the facts were found that at the time of agreeing to the loan, and as part of the transaction, Smith agreed to pay, and he afterwards paid, to Parsons, as a bonus or commission for making the loan, 5 per cent, on the $20,000, and also to render certain services, which he did render, and which were of the value of $500. The loan was not paid to Smith at once, but, according to the testimony of one witness, the agreement was that, if enough of it to satisfy one prior lien on the property (amounting to $3,947.18) were paid at once, the remainder might be paid within a reasonable time; according to another witness, that, on enough to satisfy that lien being paid, the remainder might be paid in installments convenient to Parsons. The jury, to whom certain questions were submitted, found, as they had a right to do, the fact to be as testified by the second witness. The court also made findings of fact, among them that the loan was accepted February 21, 1884; that the agreement was as follows: “That said Parsons would then accept said mortgage and notes, and make to said plaintiff John F. Smith thereon, as of that date, a loan of twenty thousand dollars; that the payment of said sum should be deferred, and that the same should be paid over to said Smith in installments *526..convenient to the defendant Parsons;” that the two bonuses we have 'mentioned should be paid, and “that said Smith should pay interest ..on said notes from their date at the rate of seven per cent, per annum, according to their terms;” and also “that said agreement to defer the payments on said loan, to pay the bonus of one thousand dollars .for the services of Smith in obtaining life insurance risks, to pay interest on money before received and not received, were devices ..entered into to evade the usury laws of this state, and were mere ..covers for usury.”
The notes were made payable at Hartford, and in them was this .clause: “It is expressly agreed and declared that these notes are made and executed under, and are in all respects to be construed .by, the laws of the state of Minnesota.”
The findings of fact above quoted, leaving out the last quotation, •which óonsists of an inference from the other facts, were fully sustained by the evidence. Parsons may have concluded — probably ;had — to accept Smith’s application, and make the loans, prior to February 21st, but he did not communicate his decision to Smith until -.that date.
To be usurious, a contract must be so when it is made. It cannot :be made so by any default to carry out its provisions; so that the fact that in some way, not explained, there was a failure to advance ;to Smith' about $1,000 of the amount agreed, that not being contemplated by the agreement, is not to be taken into account in determining whether it was usurious. The test of that question is, will the contract, if performed, result in producing to the lender a rate of interest greater than is allowed by law, and was that result •intended?
When the agreement exacts from the borrower a “bonus” to be paid to the lender for making the loan, that, on the question of ¡usury, must be taken out as of the date when it is to be paid by the ¿terms of the agreement. If payable at the time of advancing the loan, it is for the purpose of determining what rate of interest the ¿.agreement reserves to the borrower, to be deducted as of that date ¡from the amount of loan nominally agreed on, and the computation „of interest made on the remainder. The law is not bound by the names parties apply to their transactions, but it regards the substance and effect of what they do or agree to do. So if A. and B. *527agree that A. shall loan to B. a certain sum, and that B. shall at the same time pay a certain sum to A. as a consideration for making the loan, it is in substance and effect an agreement to loan the difference between the two sums.
And, though the parties call it “interest in advance,” if it will result in reserving to the lender a rate greater than the rate permitted by law on the amount to be actually retained by the borrower, it is usury. The only exception to this is that provided for in the clause in Laws 1879, ch. G6, § 3, in force when this loan was made, as follows: “Provided that the payment of interest in advance for one year at a rate not exceeding ten per centum per annum shall not be •construed to be usury.” This was, doubtless, inserted in reference to the custom among bankers of taking interest in advance, calculated, not on the sum the borrower will receive and retain after taking out the interest, but on the principal sum he agrees to repay at the end of the term. When calculated in that way, the borrower pays more than the agreed rate on what he actually gets. If the agreed rate be 10 per cent., he pays more than 10 per cent, on what he gets, and that would be usury, but for the above clause. The clause sanctions that mode of calculating interest when paid in advance, limiting the time, however, for which interest at the permitted rate may be so calculated and taken in advance to one year. In all other cases the retaining by the lender of interest calculated in that way will be usury if the amount retained be more than the permitted rate on the amount the borrower receives and retains.
The agreement that the money should be advanced to Smith, after the first installment, in installments at the convenience of Parsons, could not be construed to leave to the latter to determine what dates and amounts would be convenient for him, nor to justify him in taking no steps to malee it convenient to advance the installments. The construction, if it were necessary to make one, would probably be that the installments were to be advanced at times and in amounts reasonable in view of the purposes for which the money was borrowed, if known to the lender.
The money, after the first installment, was advanced by Parsons to Smith on different dates, and in different amounts; the last— which they seem to have regarded as making up the full advance of $20,000 — being November 4,1884. This may be taken as a practical *528construction of the agreement, and as establishing what were the convenient or reasonable times and amounts contemplated by it. We are-to assume, therefore, that the agreement contemplated that the last installment should be paid November 4,1884.
No times were agreed on for the payment of the bonuses, but, as they were to be paid for making the entire loan of $20,000, we must assume the parties, intended they should be paid when that sum was made up by the various installments.
These considerations furnish a basis for making a computation to ascertain if the interest or -compensation for the use of the money actually to be received and retained by the borrower was at the rate of more than ten per cent, per annum on that amount or those amounts. The interest on the several amounts, at that rate, from the dates of the advances to the time of paying the last installment, November 4,1884, was about $930. By the terms of the notes there was payable on and before October 1,1884, as interest, $1,400. It is a mode of computation which defendants cannot complain of, to deduct the bonuses from the principal $20,000 as of the date of November 4,1884, and calculate the interest on the remainder, $18,500, at the rate of ten per cent, from that date to the maturity of the notes; add the $930 to that, and to their sum add the principal retained by the borrower, $18,500, aggregating $26,553, and compare that with what by the terms of the notes and mortgage the borrower was to repay to the lender, $20,000 principal, and $7,000 interest. The usurious character of the transaction is apparent.
The clause in-Laws 1879, ch. 66, §'3, above referred to, excepting bona fide purchasers of negotiable paper from the operation of the usury law, is confined to the paper itself, and does not extend to a mortgage given to secure such paper. That is in accordance with what this court has always held in regard to securities for commercial paper in the hands of a bona fide purchaser. It has always held that the privileges and immunities belonging to that kind of paper do not extend to a mortgage given to secure it, and we must presume the legislature had that rule in view when enacting the usury law. The purpose was evidently to preserve to such paper, where tainted with usury, the same immunities and exemptions as apply to the same kind of paper in respect to other defenses.
It is in accord with the weight of authority and with principle *529that where two parties make a contract of loan in one state to be performed in another they may, acting in good faith', and without intent to evade the law, agree that the law of either state shall control as to the rate of interest. 2 Kent, Comm. (12th Ed.) 460; Robinson v. Bland, 2 Burrows, 1077; Miller v. Tiffany, 1 Wall. 298.
(Opinion published 57 It. W. Kep. 311.)
When parties living in different states execute a contract in one, or partly in one and partly in the other, and it is to be performed in the other, it has often been a matter of great nicety to decide by the law of which state the contract is to be construed, and its validity determined. In the reports are a vast number of cases in which the question has arisen. Parties ought to be permitted, when making their contract, to avoid such question by determining for themselves, especially where, had they taken the trouble, they might have executed the contract in the state in which they have provided it shall be performed, or might have providéd for its performance in the state where executed.
In this case the makers of the notes and mortgage lived in this state, the land mortgaged is situated here, the instruments were made here; and, notwithstanding they were to be accepted as security for the loan in Connecticut, and the notes were payable there, we think if was competent for them to agree, when making the contract, that its construction and validity should be determined by the law of this state. This makes it unnecessary to determine by the law of which state it would have to be decided had they not so agreed.
The assignment of error upon rulings of the court admitting or excluding evidence, and on findings of fact other than as to the facts herein recited, need not be considered, for such evidence and findings could have no bearing on the question decisive of the case —that of usury.
Order .affirmed.