8 S.D. 214 | S.D. | 1896
The respondents, as plaintiffs, brought this action against defendant, a national bank, to recover the statutory penalty provided in Sec. 5198, Rev. St. U. S. It is alleged that from the 25th day of August, 1882, to the 23d day of November, 1883, the plaintiff paid to the defendant certain sums of money as usurious interest, upon contracts not in writing. During the time named the defendant bank carried upon its books an open account in the name of John H. Davey, but in which it is conceded both parties plaintiff were interested. The evidence tended to show that the plaintiffs were carrying on a large mining, milling, and smelting business, and were constant borrowers of the defendant bank; that the sums so borrowed and advanced were generally paid on checks drawn against the account. It also seems to have been the custom that, when plaintiffs had bullion ready for shipment, it was delivered to the bank, and credit given the account for its estimated value. When refined, and its exact value ascertained, the difference between its supposed and its ascertained value was credited or charged to the account, as the case might be. Generally the account was overdrawn, and interest charged upon the overdraft. This was done by the use of memorandum checks made by the officers of the bank, the amount of the
The main questions are two: Whether the facts proved shpw that the amounts so charged as interest were ever in fact paid by plaintiffs, and whether the interest charged can be justified on the theory that there was an express contract in writing fixing the rate of interest. Simply charging interest against plaintiff’s account, thereby enlarging their overdraft, obviously would not entitle plaintiffs to recover the penalty sued for in this-action; for that is recoverable only “in case' the greater rate of interest has been paid. ” Rev. St. U. S. § 5198; Brown v. Bank, 72 Pa. St. 209; Hall v. Bank, 30 Neb. 99, 46 N. W. 150. If this interest so charged to plaintiffs was ever actually paid by them, it was either through their deposits of bullion or by their notes, for these were the only credits claimed or proved. We do not think the bullion deposits could have had this effect, for the fair meaning and force of the undisputed evidence is that, by a well-understood arrangement between the
. This evidence satisfies us that, so far as the advances or credits on account of bullion shipments were concerned, there was no appropriation, either by the plaintiffs or by the bank, to the payment of these interest charges, but, on the contrary, that the plaintiffs turned it over to the bank, and the bank received it, with the understanding that the credits arising therefrom should be used for other purposes, to wit, to pay the cur