53 Ga. App. 107 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1936
On April 16, 1934, D. J. Baker brought suit against Moultrie Banking Company, to recover certain sums alleged to have been paid by him to the bank as interest which was in excess of the legal rate, and to recover also the legal interest which he claimed as forfeited on account of usury. The petition was in three counts. In the first count it was alleged that on May 2,
The plaintiff amended count 3 by alleging that he did not owe the bank anything, by striking from the list of forty-four notes seven of them, and by adding a paragraph alleging that if the payments made to the bank of $29,551.81, all of which were made after May 6, 1933, were applied to the payment of the principal indebtedness of $27,577.84, the bank was indebted to him in the sum of $1973.97, being interest charged by the bank on an indebtedness tainted with usury.
The defendant demurred to each count and to the petition as a whole. These demurrers need not be set out here. In so far as material they will be mentioned later. The plaintiff tendered two amendments which were disallowed on objections by the defendant. The first of these set up that on March 5, 1931, the plaintiff gave the bank a note for $16,883, due September 15, 1931, with interest from maturity at eight per cent., to cover a loan of $3899.68 and prior notes aggregating $12,028.32, making a total of $15,928; that the note contained $282.49 of usury; that it was renewed from time to time and incorporated in other notes, and was paid on May 6, 1933, the total amount paid being $19,102.52; wherefore he prayed judgment for $3174, being the entire interest including the usury. In the second disallowed amendment it was alleged, that, during the years 1931, 1932, and 1933, the plaintiff borrowed large sums from the bank; and he made the same allegations as in the first rejected amendment concerning the $16,883 note, and the same allegations as in counts 1 and 2 of the petition concerning the $4300 note and the $5992 note. It was also alleged that the plaintiff borrowed various sums (sixteen items given) between August 28, 1931, and November 8, 1932, totaling, with the $15,928 and the $4000 mentioned above, $30,154.68, which was the amount of principal due from time to time up to May 6, 1933, and November 4, 1933; that the plaintiff made various payments (dates and amounts being given) from October 27, 1931, to November 4, 1933, totaling $33,398.40; that for said amounts and renewals including interest and usury the plaintiff gave thirty-six notes (dates and amounts being given); that the $16,883 note which contained usury, and the $4300 note which contained usury, and the $5992 note.
After the plaintiff amended count 3, the defendant renewed its demurrers to the petition. The court overruled them as to counts 1 and 2, and sustained them as to count 3 as amended. The plaintiff excepted. The controlling questions raised are whether the court erred in striking count 3, or in disallowing either of his two amendments.
In count 3 the plaintiff’s method of calculating the amount of interest and usury due him, as far as can be seen, was to allege the successive incorporation of two usurious notes in other notes and renewals, whereby the entire indebtedness became contaminated, and therefore, as he alleged, he was entitled to recover eight per cent, interest on the entire indebtedness as a forfeiture in addition to the usury. He alleged that the $23,813 note, having become tainted by the inclusion within it of the usurious $4300 note, was replaced, together with the usurious $5992 note, by four new notes, one for $16,320, another for $442.92, another for $8000, and another for $8269.59, and that these four notes “included the usury above mentioned in the $4300 note and the $5992 note.” Payment of the four notes was alleged to have been made at various times from May 6 to November 4, 1933. Into which of the four new notes did the $4300 note and the $5992 note disappear? And when was the usury paid, in May, or at various times from May 6 to November 4? The schedule of thirty-seven notes is not explained. Count 3 is further defective in that it does not separately set out the amounts of interest and usury which the plaintiff paid. It simply mentions a lump sum of $5344.67 as including interest and usury. The grounds on which the defendant demurred to count 3 were that the plaintiff failed to set out each sum on which
The first amendment, designated as count 4, was properly disallowed, because the usury therein alleged on a note for $16,883 was paid May 6, 1933, and the amendment was tendered on May 18, 1935, which was more than one year after the payment. See McIntosh v. Thomasville Real Estate Co., 141 Ga. 105 (80 S. E. 629). A suit to recover usury must be brought within twelve months from the payment thereof. Code of 1933, § 57-115; Camp Lumber Co. v. Citizens Bank, 142 Ga. 84 (82 S. E. 492). The date when paid and the amount must be shown. Each act of usury gives rise to a separate cause of action. Different acts may be included in one suit, under the Code, § 3-113, which allows claims between the same parties to be joined in the same action. A running account is not barred if the last item is not barred. The present suit is not for an accounting, but is for separate acts of usury. The court did not err in disallowing the amendment designated as count 5, which undertook to amalgamate or combine a number of transactions, all of which were alleged to be usurious, and to show that the plaintiff had overpaid the defendant in the sum of $3243.72, the final payment being in November, 1933.
Judgment affirmed.