Court Opinion

ID: 3518948
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:30:35.485292+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:45:16.321620
License: Public Domain

* Headnote 1. Banks and Banking, 7 C.J., Section 240 (1926 Anno).
This is an appeal from a decree overruling a demurrer to a bill of complaint filed by the appellee for the purpose of canceling a deed from R.P. Wilson, trustee, to appellants as a cloud upon his title to certain land therein described, and for other relief.
The bill of complaint avers that through the First National Bank of Pontotoc, Miss., the complainant loaned the sum of three thousand dollars to one J.W. McKnight and wife, the loan being evidenced by a note for three thousand one hundred and eighty dollars bearing six per cent, interest after maturity and secured by a first mortgage or deed of trust on the lands described in the bill of complaint; that the said note was payable to the First *Page 672 
National Bank, but the note and deed of trust securing the same were by written assignment transferred to the appellee on the same day they were executed; that this deed of trust was promptly recorded, but by oversight the assignment thereof was not entered of record until March 20, 1924. The bill further avers that, after appellee's deed of trust had been recorded, the bank itself made a loan to the same parties and to secure the same took a second deed of trust on the same lands which was recorded long after the deed of trust to appellee had been recorded; that default was made in the payment of this indebtedness to the bank and this second deed of trust was foreclosed, the appellants being the purchasers of the land at the trustee's sale; that the appellee attended this trustee's sale, and before the sale notified all the bidders that he held a first mortgage or deed of trust on the lands, and that appellants had actual as well as constructive notice of his prior lien; that default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness due him, he thereafter foreclosed his deed of trust and at the trustee's sale purchased the land described therein for the sum of one thousand dollars and secured a proper trustee's deed conveying the same to him. To this bill of complaint the appellants demurred on the ground that, under and by reason of the provisions of section 267, Code of 1906 (section 3527, Hemingway's Code), the note and deed of trust from J.W. McKnight and wife to the appellee were void. This demurrer was overruled, and this appeal was prosecuted from the order overruling the same.
Section 267, Code of 1906 (section 3527, Hemingway's Code), was originally enacted as section 1 of chapter 107, Laws of 1906, and reads as follows:
"It shall be unlawful for any bank or corporation liable to taxation on its capital stock to permit any person to use its name in taking promissory notes, mortgages or deeds of trust, or to permit such instruments to indicate on their face that they are payable to such bank or corporation when the money to secure which instruments *Page 673 
are taken is not actually advanced, or is not intended to be advanced by such bank or corporation, and it shall also be unlawful for any person to use the name of such bank or corporation in making loans of money; and should any such bank or corporation or individual violate the provisions of this act they shall be liable to the penalty of twenty-five per cent. of the amount of such loan, to be recovered by the state revenue agent in the same manner as back taxes are recovered by him."
Section 2 of the said chapter 107, Laws of 1906, which now appears as section 2795, Code of 1906 (section 2296, Hemingway's Code), provides that all assignments of indebtedness secured by mortgage, deed of trust, or other lien of record, shall be entered of record within thirty days from the day of the assignment, and, for a failure to comply with this provision, that the assignee shall forfeit to the debtor ten per cent. of the amount of the indebtedness.
In construing this act both sections thereof should be considered together; regard being had, not only to the language of the act, but also to the objects and purposes for which it was enacted and the evil which it was sought thereby to remedy. While the act is conceivably of incidental benefit to the debtor in requiring all assignments of an indebtedness to be entered of record, the dominant purpose of the entire act is in aid of revenue. The prohibition of section 1 of the act is not directed at the business of loaning money generally, but only at a bank or corporation liable to taxation on its capital stock which permits a person to use its name in lending money, and at the person so using the name of a bank or corporation which is liable to taxation on its capital stock. There is no prohibition against a person loaning money in the name of another individual, or a partnership which paid taxes on its solvent credit, but only against using the name of a corporation which pays taxes on its capital stock, but not on solvent credits standing in its name. Before the enactment of this statute the money lender *Page 674 
could escape all taxes on money loaned by the simple expedient of lending his money in the name of a friendly bank. Where money is loaned in the name of an individual and secured by a recorded lien, it is readily accessible to the tax assessor, and this statute provides a penalty of sufficient severity to render the practice of loaning money in the name of a friendly corporation extremely hazardous. It provides a penalty of twenty-five per cent. of the amount of the loan against both the corporation and the individual violating the provisions of the act, to be collected by the state revenue agent in the same manner as back taxes are recovered by him, and we conclude that the dominant purpose of the act was the protection of the public revenue.
The act contains no declaration making void contracts made in violation of its provisions, and our court has expressly recognized the doctrine that in cases involving revenue the contract is not void because of the prohibition of the statute, unless expressly made so by the provisions of the statute. In the case of Young v. State Life Ins. Co., 91 Miss. 710, 45 So. 706, this court said:
"It is practically decided by our state in Bohn v. Lowery,77 Miss. 426, 27 So. 604, that in cases involving revenue the contract is not void because of the penalty. In this decision this court followed the line of decisions cited in the opinion, and adopted that reasoning discriminating between contractsmalum in se and those merely malum prohibitum, and that, if the penalty is merely to protect revenue, the legislature intended to rely on the penalty only to correct the evil and did not make the contract per se void."
In volume 6, R.C.L., section 105, at page 700, it is said: "The rule that a contract is invalid if it conflicts with a statute is, however, not an inflexible one. It is only when the statute is silent and contains nothing from which the contrary is to be inferred that the contract is void. Therefore, where a statute which prohibits a contract at the same time also limits the effect, or declares the consequences which shall attach to the making of *Page 675 
it, the general rule that contracts prohibited by statute are void does not apply."
It is inconceivable that the legislature intended to declare the contract void when money was loaned in violation of the provisions of the act, and in addition thereto penalized the lender an additional amount of twenty-five per cent. of the amount of the loan, and we think the penalty provided by the act is the full measure of punishment that may be invoked for a violation of its provision.
The decree of the court below overruling the demurrer to the bill of complaint will therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.