147 S.E. 815 | N.C. | 1929
Plaintiffs allege that on 15 August, 1927, they borrowed from the defendant bank the sum of $1,700, but that said defendant required *121 them to execute sixty notes in the sum of $42.50 each, payable on the first day of each month until the entire sum had been discharged; that in order to secure the payment of said notes plaintiffs executed and delivered to the individual defendants a deed of trust upon certain land in Guilford County. Plaintiffs further allege that they had paid twelve monthly installments of $42.50 each, and that the transaction was usurious in that the sum of $658.18 represented money in excess of the legal rate and the penalty allowed by law. Plaintiffs demand judgment "that the sum of $658.18 of the aforesaid deed of trust and notes be adjudged to be usurious and void; that the same be declared a cloud upon the title of plaintiffs and be canceled and removed; that the amount which is due upon said notes and deed of trust be adjudged to be $1,190, payable monthly at the rate of $42.50 per month, without interest," etc.
The defendants demurred to the complaint upon several grounds, and in particular that the complaint did not state a cause of action for removing the cloud upon the title of plaintiffs.
The trial judge sustained the demurrer, and the plaintiffs appealed. If a note secured by a mortgage or deed of trust is tainted with usury, can the makers thereof have the usurious element adjudged a cloud upon the title and removed under the provisions of C. S., 1743?
The remedy prescribed by law for usurious transactions is thus stated inRipple v. Mortgage Corp.,
It is manifest that the note is not a cloud upon title. The cloud, if any, is formed by the mortgage or deed of trust. It was formerly held inGlisson v. Newton,
In construing the present statute upon the subject of usury it has been held that the usury complained of did not affect or impair the obligation and validity of the mortgage or deed of trust securing the note. Thus, inSpivey v. Grant,
Plaintiffs do not contend that the deed of trust is entirely invalid, but that it is partially so. C. S., 1743, does not apply to such a fact situation. The statute was intended to remove clouds not merely to determine their size.
Affirmed.