22 Tenn. 666 | Tenn. | 1842
delivered the opinion of the court.
We learn from the record that complainant and defendant, prior to the year 1823, had been partners in a mercantile concern. In that year a dissolution took place. The business had been prosperous and profitable, and the defendant, by the contract of dissolution, received for his share of the profits ten thousand dollars in cash notes due to the firm; and as the complainant proposed to continue in business, it was agreed, that the defendant should permit his share of the capital advanced, eight thousand dollars, to remain in the hands of the complainant so long as he might wish to retain it, provided the defendant deemed it secure, on the terms of the complainant paying to the defendant interest at the rate of ten per centum per annum. In pursuance of this agreement, at the date referred to, complainant executed to defendant his note for eight thousand dollars, due twelve months after date, and, also, his note for eight hundred dollars, due at the same rime, to secure the interest at the rate stipulated. At the end of the year the note for the eight thousand dollars was renewed, the note for the eight hundred paid, and a new note given for eight hundred dollars to secure the payment of the stipulated interest upon the eight thousand dollar note; and so on, from year to year, these notes of eight thousand and eight' hundred dollars were concurrently given; the larger note being uniformly renewed, and the smaller note uniformly paid and taken up, and another of the same amount and for the same purpose executed, till the 4th of March, 1833,
The facts above set forth are all stated in the answer. The defendant, however, relies and insists upon the statute of limitations of three and six years, accordingly as the court may suppose one or the other to apply. The decree below was in favor of the complainant.
On the one side it has been contended that this was a continuous contract, from 1823, till 1840, the annual payments and securities being but steps and processes in that contract, and made in pursuance thereto, and that the statute would not begin to run until, by application of the annual excess of interest to the priucipal as payment, the principal itself should be exhausted; and the time at which this took place being in 1837, something less than six years of the filing of the bill, that the statute constitutes no bar in the case.
On the other side it has been urged with much zeal and ingenuity, that the statute does apply; that an action at law might have been annually brought for the excess of interest over six per cent., so soon as the same might have been paid, in which action, the principal note having been renewed for twelve months, the court of law would not have turned the plaintiff round by applying the excess of usury as a payment to the principal. We doubt whether this would have been so. For the court at law would not have ascertained that there had been an excess of interest but by 'proof' that the eight hundred dollar note taken up and paid, was intended for the concurrent in
As to the abatement claimed by the defendant, on the ground that the notes for interest were, to some extent, paid in goods and in common currency, of less value than the nominal amount at which they were received, and that the real estate taken in payment, on final settlement, was not worth the estimated amount, we are of opinion that the abatement claimed cannot be allowed. The prices fixed upon property by parties themselves, when fairly done, cannot be changed or controlled by courts of justice. If, indeed, such prices be fraudulent or co-lorable, to evade usury, a different rule would exist. But here, neither the general complexion of the transaction, the paticular facts of the case, or the condition and relation of the parties to each other, will justify such inference. Upon the whole the decree of the chancellor will be affirmed.