22 Ill. 606 | Ill. | 1859
The second plea, is in bar of the per centage agreed to be paid, after the money became due, in case it was not promptly paid, as well as the usurious interest included in the note itself, and seems to be disposed of by the case of Lawrence v. Cowles, 13 Ill. R. 577, which case is supported by the uniform current of decisions, and must be adhered to, although were it a new question, we might hesitate before arriving at the same conclusion. The demurrer to that plea was properly sustained.
The third plea, is in bar of only one hundred and sixty-five dollars, which it avers, was included in the note for the loan and forbearance of two thousand dollars for one hundred and seventeen days. That plea avers, with all necessary form and circumstance, that the note was made in the State of Iowa, where the parties resided, and with reference to the laws of that State; that the defendant borrowed of the plaintiffs two thousand dollars for one hundred and seventeen days, and that it was corruptly agreed between the parties, that the defendant should give the plaintiffs for the loan and forbearance of that money, for that time, one hundred and sixty-five dollars, and that in pursuance of such corrupt agreement the note was made, including the one hundred and sixty-five dollars. The plea then recites the statute of Iowa on the subject of interest, by the second section of which parties are allowed to agree in writing to receive ten per cent, interest per annum for the forbearance of money. The fourth section forbids the taking of a greater rate of interest than by that statute allowed. The fifth section, is as follows: “ If it shall be ascertained in any suit brought on any contract that a rate of interest has been contracted for greater than is authorized by this act, either directly or indirectly, in money, property or other valuable thing, the same shall work a forfeiture of ten per cent, per annum, upon the amount of such contract to the school fund of the county in which the suit is brought, and the plaintiff shall have judgment for the principal sum without either interest or costs. The court in which said suit is prosecuted, shall render judgment for the amount of interest forfeited as aforesaid against the defendant, in favor of the State of Iowa, for the use of the school fund of said county, whether the said suit is contested or not, and in all cases where the unlawful interest is not apparent on the contract or writing, the person contracting to pay the unlawful interest, shall be a competent witness to prove that the contract is usurious ; and in no case when unlawful interest is contracted for, shall the plaintiff have judgment for more than the principal sum, whether the unlawful interest be incorporated with the principal or not.”
The note on which this action was brought was made under this law, and was expected and intended that it should be subject to its influence. The parties understood and knew, that it fixed the measure of their rights and liabilities. When the plaintiff took this note couched in terms which are stated in this record, he knew that the legal effect of it, so far as the maker was concerned, was precisely the same as if it had expressly stipulated that he should only be entitled at maturity to the principal sum loaned. So the law dictated, and such the parties knew to be its legal effect. If such was the nature and meaning of the contract in Iowa, it must be the same in Illinois and everywhere, and all courts are bound to enforce the contract according to its legal effect. We must enforce the obligation which the contract created between the parties. Iowa had the right to make such laws as she pleased, as to the meaning and effect of certain contracts made within her borders, and it is not for the legal tribunals to question their policy, but it is their duty to enforce them as they are made, by the law and the parties. The reason of this is simply because the law is so, and it ought to be so. Otherwise a contract would be one thing in one jurisdiction and another in another jurisdiction. Were it otherwise, the rights and liabilities under a contract would depend, not upon its legal efficacy, but upon the place where it is enforced. Can it be that this defendant was legally bound to pay one hundred and sixty-five dollars more on one side of the Mississippi river, than on the other ? If that be so, a new law of comity has lately arisen among these States. We do not so understand it. The law where the contract was made declares that “ in no case where unlawful interest is contracted for, shall the plaintiff have judgment for more than the principal sum, whether the unlawful interest be incorporated with the principal or not.” Here unlawful interest was contracted for, and the interest was incorporated with the principal, and the law in effect says that the interest shall be expunged from, the note, and it shall be read and adjudged the same as if the principal sum alone had been expressed in dollars and cents, and this law entering into and forming a part of the contract goes wiih it, wherever it goes. It is admitted that such would be the effect of this law, if it had declared that the plaintiff should have judgment, for nothing. How much more so in common sense and common reason where it allows him to take judgment for the principal sum loaned. The distinction in the two cases is not only without reason but is against all reason and all sound law and the philosophy of law.
So much for the influence of this law upon the contract itself, and the rights and liabilities of the parties as between themselves, arising under it. With the penalties imposed by the law upon the usurers for their violation of it, we have nothing to do. That is a matter between the State of Iowa and her citizens. We cannot punish her citizens for violating the laws to which they owe allegiance. We cannot render judgment in favor of that State for the benefit of her school funds for the penalty or forfeiture of ten per cent, per annum, which this law imposes. We have no jurisdiction to vindicate the violated majesty of her laws, as was held in Shuman v. Gassett, 4 Gilm. R. 521. That task must be left to her own tribunals. We can enforce contracts made there according to her laws. We can read them in the light of her statutes, because in that light were they written. But it is only with the parties to the contract and the cause, that we have to do. The State is a third party which may appear in her own courts and claim the penalty imposed by her offended laws, but in our courts she is a stranger, except as the law maker. When she descends to a lower sphere and seeks to become a party to the controversy, she must look to her own courts as her proper theatre.
The demurrer to the third plea must be overruled, and because it was sustained, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.