Court Opinion

ID: 6532003
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 20:20:08.29114+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:45.110183
License: Public Domain

WICKERSHAM, District Judge.
The facts disclosed by the answer are that defendants gave the principal note for $2,500, due in one year, bearing interest only aftér maturity; also 12 interest notes, due monthly, for $75 each, bearing interest only after maturity. Each of these interest notes was given for a month’s interest on the principal note at 36 per cent, per annum. Defendants paid seven of thfese interest notes, and when sued on the principal note seek ¡to counterclaim double the sum thereof against the judgment.
Section 255 of the Civil Code of Alaska provides that the rate of interest in the district shall be 8 per centum per annum, and no more; but on contracts interest at the rate of 12 per centum may be charged by express agreement of the parties, and no more. Section 256 specially prohibits the taking or receipt of more than the rate fixed by section 255,; and section 257 provides the penalty for taking such usurious rate as follows:
“See. 257. If usurious interest, as defined by tbe preceding sections, shall hereafter be received or collected the person or persons paying the same, or their legal representatives, may, by action brought in any eourt of competent jurisdiction, within two years after such payment, recover from the person, firm, or corporation receiving the same double the amount of the interest so received or collected.”
Counsel for defendants contend that their counterclaim is justified by chapter 8 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Section 64 provides:
“Sec. 64. The counterclaim mentioned in the last preceding section must be one existing in favor of the defendant and against a plaintiff between whom a several judgment might be had in the action, and arising out of the following causes of action: First. 'A cause of *221action arising out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim. Second. In an action arising on contract, any other cause of action arising also on contract, and existing at the commencement of the action.”
On careful consideration it will be apparent that the counterclaim of defendants is not within the statute allowing counterclaims to be pleaded. True, it is between the same parties. But the cause of action set out in the counterclaim does not arise out of the original contract or transaction. The original contract was that defendants should pay those interest notes, and they did so; and that closed both the contract and the transaction. Defendants had no agreement with the plaintiff about returning the usury. The statute created that cause of action. Without the statute it has no existence. It has no legal connection with the original contract or transaction, and is not a .cause of action arising on contract. It is a cause of action created by a penal statute, similar to that created by the national banking act, and cannot be set off against the original demand. Barnet v. Muncie Nat. Bank, 98 U. S. 555, 25 L. Ed. 212; Driesbach v. Second Nat. Bank, 104 U. S. 52, 26 L. Ed. 658; Stephens v. Monongahela Nat. Bank, 111 U. S. 197, 4 Sup. Ct. 336, 28 L. Ed. 399; Carter v. Carusi, 112 U. S. 478, 5 Sup. Ct. 281, 28 L. Ed. 820.
Defendants must bring the action provided for by the penal section 257, as that is the only and exclusive form of relief provided in such cases by the law.