54 A.2d 641 | D.C. | 1947
According to the undisputed facts, plaintiff Samuel Wolf, together with his wife and another, borrowed from defendant insurance company in May-1940 the sum of $32,000. • As evidence .of the indebtedness they gave their promissory note in that amount, secured by a first deed of trust on real estate, providing for interest at the rate of 4% percent per annum on the unpaid .balance. Payment was required to be made in monthly installments of $244.80, begin,ning June 1, 1940 and running for fifteen years thereafter. Neither the note nor the deed of trust contained any provision permitting repayment before the specified date of maturity nor vested any right or option of acceleration in the borrowers;
In November 1944 appellee became the sole owner of the property covered by the deed of trust. In order to finance this transfer he negotiated with ■ appellant through its broker and agent for an increase of the first trust loan to $40,000. Appellant was willing to make this larger loan if the value of the property .justified it. It was also willing, if it did not make the increased loan and if appellee obtained it elsewhere, to permit him to prepay the entire amount outstanding on the loan. But it prescribed as conditions for accepting such prepayment that it be made in January 1945 together with a charge of 4% percent of the outstanding balance (which was then $24,239.30). Appellee obtained the loan elsewhere and paid off appellant through a title company. Among other items included in the payment was, the 4% percent premium demanded by appellant amounting to $1,090.77. Claiming that the charge was usurious, Mr. Wolf brought this action.
The trial judge filed a memorandum in which he held that the premium charged for the privilege of prepayment was interest; that it was usurious and therefore in violation of the District of Columbia Code, § 28—2704. He ordered finding for the plaintiff for $1,127.12, which represents the amount of the prepayment charge plus $36.-35 accrued interest on the principal. Defendant prosecutes this appeal.
We must decide (1) whether the premium or charge exacted of the plaintiff can be considered interest and (2) assuming that it was interest, whether the rate charged was in excess - of that fixed by law.
We- think the payment of the premium or charge involved cannot be considered as interest. The note constituted a contract which provided for payment of the loan on specified terms over a period of fifteen years. Unlike. many notes of this kind it contained no “on or before” provision and no other language reserving to the borrower any option or right to accelerate
The law gave the lender the right to expect performance of the loan agreement according to its terms, and the right to expect the agreed flow'of payments, including' interest, over the fifteen-year term of the loan. That right is not affected by debtor’s election to pay the loan in advance of maturity. “A debtor cannot by his voluntary act render a transaction usurious which, but for such circumstance, would be entirely free from a claim of usury.”
A loan transaction which would be free from usury if the loan were paid at the agreed maturity date is not rendered usurious by the borrower’s voluntary repayment of the loan before maturity, even though, by reason of such repayment, the amount of interest received by the lender exceeds lawful interest computed to the day the loan is -paid; provided, of course,that the total interest received by the lender does not exceed lawful interest computed to the maturity date stipulated in the loan contract.
During the time the borrower had the use of the money, the amount paid, aside from principal but including both the am’ount paid as interest and the extra payment of $1,127.12 was $7,115.22. During the same period, and giving credit for payments on account of principal, the amount chargeable at 8 percent (the legal interest rate in the District of Colunjbia on written contracts
Reversed.
French v. Mortgage Guarantee Co., 16 Cal.2d 26, 104 P.2d 655, 659, 30 A.L.R. 67.
Smithwick v. Whitley, 152 N.C. 366, 67 S.E. 914, 28 L.R.A.,N.S., 113, 20 Ann.Cas.1348.
See cases collected at 130 A.L.R. 73 et seq.
Code 1940, § 28—2702; Bowen v. Mt. Vernon Sav. Bank, 70 App.D.C. 273, 105 F.2d 796.