43 Neb. 79 | Neb. | 1894
George W. Brewster brought this suit in equity in the district court of Brown county against the Bank of Ainsworth, William F. Brewster, and R. L. Miller. He alleged that on the 8th day of September, 1890, he was indebted to the Bank of Ainsworth; that to secure the payment of such indebtedness he delivered to the bank certain notes owned by him which had been executed by W. F. Brewster and secured by a chattel mortgage on a printing establishment sold by him, G. W. Brewster, to W. F. Brewster; and that R. L. Miller had purchased such printing establishment and assumed the payment of said notes. He further alleged that his indebtedness to the Bank of Ainsworth had been extinguished and that the bank was threatening to enforce the collection of said notes. He prayed for an injunction restraining the bank from collecting the notes and restraining W. F. Brewster and R. L. Miller from
1. It appears from the record that in April, 1887, George "W. Brewster gave his note to the Bank of Ainsworth for $500, due in ninety days. This note was given for money ■borrowed by Brewster from the bank at that time. Brewster received from the bank $470 in money, $30 being reserved by the bank as interest on the $500 for ninety days at the rate of two per cent per month. It also appears that Brewster paid the bank interest on this note at said usurious rate of interest until the 8th of September, 1890. At that time Brewster owed the bank a balance on this $500 note of $521.60; and on that date he executed and delivered .a note for said sum of money, as he contends, to the bank, and to secure the payment of this note he deposited the note of W. E. Brewster mentioned above. This note of September 8, 1890, drew interest at the rate of two per cent per month, and was due in six months. Brewster paid interest on it from time to time according to his usurious contract, and the bank applied some of the collections made on the collateral notes also towards the payment of the note, and it continued to run until the 9th of October, 1891. At that time Brewster was owing on the note of September 8, 1890, $498.10; and on that date he executed to the bank a note for that amount, due in thirty days, drawing interest at the rate of two per cent a month, the W. E. Brewster notes remaining in the bank as collateral security. The theory of George W. Brewster then in this case is this,
2. There remains then only the question of the correctness of the decree of the court as to the amount which he found due to the bank from Brewster on the note dated October 9, 1891. The court found that there was still due the bank from Brewster on this note $405.90, but the court recites in its decree that, notwithstanding this latter note was usurious, as it drew two per cent a month, he found and decreed that the bank was entitled to recover the amount of the note, $498.10, and seven per cent interest thereon from the date of the note to the date of the decree, deducting from that amount the interest payments made on the note by Brewster and credits made on the note by the bank from the proceeds of the collateral notes. In this the learned district court was in error. Section 5, chapter 44, Compiled Statutes, 1893, provides: “If a greater rate of interest than is hereinbefore allowed [ten per cent per annum] shall be contracted for or received or reserved, the contract shall not, therefore, be void; but if in any action on such contract proof be made that illegal interest has been directly or indirectly contracted for, or taken, or reserved, the plaintiff shall only recover the principal, without interest, and the defendant shall recover costs.” The court having found that the note made by Brewster to the bank on the 9th of October, 1891, was tainted with usury, the bank then could only recover the actual amount of money which it loaned Brewster on said note, and from that amount should have been deducted all payments of interest which he had made on the note, together with any credits to which the note was entitled by reason of collections made of collateral notes, and the judgment should have been only for that amount, and would have drawn
Reversed and remanded.