77 Ga. 362 | Ga. | 1886
On the 14th of November, 1879, a note was made payable six- months after date, with interest at 10 per cent., upon which note were credits of interest paid amounting in all to $770.00; and if deducted from $1,400.00, the principal of the note, would leave only $630.00; if applied to interest as specified in the credits, the recovery would be for $1,400.00, the original principal sum due. The judge presiding held that the payments should be applied to the principal, and rendered judgment for six hundred and thirty dollars, principal, forfeiting interest and excess of interest. Error is assigned upon this judgment.
The act of October 14th, 1879, and decision in Lilly vs. DeLaperiere, 76 Ga. 348, control the case, as the note was made on the 14th of November, 1879, prior to the amendment of the act of the 14th of October, 1879, by the act of 27th of September, 1881, which repeals the 4th section of the act of 14th of October, 1879. See Acts of 1878-9, p. 184, and Acts of 1880-81, pp. 149,150.
The act of 27th September, 1881, amended the act of 1873, forfeiting only excess of in place of all interest, besides repeating the 4th section of that act.
That 4th section is as follows : “ That in all suits hereafter brought in any of the courts of this State upon any
This section was law when this note was made “and fell due ; and in the case of Lilly et al. vs. DeLaperiere, decided at the March term, 1886, it was held that on a note, dated between the passage of the act of October 14th, 1879, and that of the 27th of September, 1881, credits made, one of which was expressly for interest, as all are in the case at bar, must be applied to principal and not to interest, because it appeared that more than 8 per cent, was charged, though nominally only 8 per cent, was to be paid, and therefore all interest was forfeited.
In this case, ten per cent, is charged in the face of the note distinctly. In the case cited, it appeared less distinctly, being nominally 8 per cent, but really more.
We see no substantial difference between the two cases; and we conclude that Lilly et al. vs. DeLaperiere covers this case. Since the act of 1879 has been amended by later statutes, especially by the act of 1881 supra, of course the principle derived from the act as passed and applied to promissory notes or contracts made pending its unaltered existence, will not necessarily be extended to cases arising since the amendments, but will be modified by such changes of law.
This principle is applicable in full force only to cases of contracts made when the act of 1879'was in unaltered force.
Judgment affirmed.