Court Opinion

ID: 3319907
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 17:37:31.027624+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:58:11.235696
License: Public Domain

Section 4134 of the General Statutes provides that "every person who shall loan money upon a note secured by mortgage upon personal property, in which the sum of money loaned is stated to be greater than the amount actually loaned, or in which the rate of interest to be charged is greater than the rate allowed by law to be charged by pawnbrokers," shall be fined, or imprisoned, or both, and that the mortgage and note shall be void. This statute is distinctly penal and should therefore receive a strict construction, and no act should be held to be in violation of it which does not fall within its spirit and the fair import of its language. Daggett v. State, 4 Conn. 60,63; State v. Brown, 16 id. 54, 57. With so much of the section as relates to the interest rate we have now no concern. As for the rest, the penalty and forfeiture prescribed are expressed to attach to loans of money upon a note secured by mortgage upon personal property in which the sum loaned is stated to be greater than the amount actually loaned.
The instrument by which the defendant's note to the plaintiff was secured was a bill of sale, absolute in form, and without any condition, reservation, or clause of defeasance. A court of equity, if appealed to, might give it the effect of a mortgage. Lovell v. Hammond Co.,66 Conn. 500, 510, 34 A. 511. Whether it would do so if it should appear that the consequence would be to permit the grantor, appealing to the judicial conscience, to receive back his former property without payment and thus avoid his just debt, is a question we need not now consider. Whatever might be the result under such conditions, certain it is that the instrument is neither in form nor name a mortgage. It is not one to which the law attaches any peculiar virtue when recorded. It had no place upon the records and could serve no legal purpose there. Its execution and delivery accomplished nothing, aside from its value *Page 341 
as proof, which a parol agreement would not. The law looks upon it as a feature of the transaction between the parties, purely voluntary with them and personal to them, which could possess no significance to others, whether executed or not executed, recorded or not recorded. Its existence, although recorded, could affect nobody injuriously if possession of the property was retained; if possession passed, the writing was a needless incident of the transaction which, if not made public, could have harmed or misled nobody, and if made public, by recording or otherwise, was entitled to be relied upon by nobody save as any other pretense or token might be. If the giving of the bill of sale was sufficient under the statute to avoid the note, it would, of course, have had the same effect had it never been recorded and its existence had been undisclosed. What evil the General Assembly could have seen in such a situation, or in any situation which might be created by the giving of such a gratuitous and ineffective writing, which could have been deemed sufficient to call for the drastic penalties of the Act, it is difficult to discover.
The statute evidently requires some other explanation, and it is to be readily found in the fact that our statutes do provide for the execution in a prescribed form and the recording of mortgages of certain personal property, which shall be effectual as security against all the world. These instruments so drawn are mortgages in both form and name, and when recorded are mortgages in effect. The same potent reasons which have led to the requirement that mortgages of realty should correctly state the debt secured thereby, in order that the required notice to the world through our recording system should not convey false information, exist why these recorded mortgages of personality should not overstate the debt for the security of which they are given. It is such instruments as these, which the law requires to be publicly promulgated by recording, and to which, when recorded, the law attaches a peculiar importance and accords a peculiar protection, which are within the spirit and fair import of the language of the statute *Page 342 
recited. One like the present bill of sale we think is not.
The trial court, therefore, correctly held that the defense that the notes sued upon were void must fail.
   There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.