140 P. 310 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1914
In this action the plaintiff seeks to foreclose a chattel mortgage given to secure a note for the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars loaned by the plaintiff, a broker, to the defendant. Judgment on the pleadings was entered as prayed for by the plaintiff, and the defendant appeals therefrom.
The note provides that defendant shall repay said sum of three hundred and fifty dollars in installments of fifty dollars each month; also pay interest "at the rate of three per cent per month from date until paid, interest payable monthly, and if not so paid to be compounded monthly from date due, and bear the same rate of interest as the principal." There are various other stringent terms of note and mortgage which we need not repeat here.
The appellant claims that, since the note provides for interest at a rate greater than two per cent per month, the *89 transaction is one forbidden by the statute relating to personal property brokers. (Stats. 1909, p. 969, as amended in 1911; Stats. 1911, p. 978.) Respondent admits that the transaction was invalid if the above mentioned statute is constitutional. He contends, however, that said statute is unconstitutional and void: 1. Because it conflicts with the requirement that all laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation (Const., art. I, sec. 11); 2. Because it grants to some classes of citizens special privileges and immunities which upon the same terms are not granted to other citizens (Const., art. I, sec. 21); and 3. Because it conflicts with the provisions of the constitution of the United States prohibiting the various states from making or enforcing laws abridging the privileges or immunities of citizens and depriving persons of property without due process of law (U.S. Const., amdt. XIV, sec. 1).
The portions of the statute here called in question are as follows:
"Section 1. That every person or corporation engaged in the business of loaning or advancing money or other thing and taking in whole or in part as security for such loan or advance any chattel mortgage, bill of sale, or other obligation or contract involving the forfeiture of rights in or to personal property, the use or possessison of which is retained by other than the mortgagee or lender, or engaged in the business of loaning or advancing money or other thing, and taking either in whole or in part as security therefor any lien on, assignment of or power of attorney relative to wages, salary, earnings, income or commissions, shall be held, and, for the uses and purposes of this act is hereby declared to be a personal property broker.
"Section 2. Such personal property broker may charge, receive and collect a benefit or percentage upon money or other thing advanced, or for the use and forbearance thereof, of two per centum per month where such loan or advance is made upon security properly falling within the scope of business as set forth in section 1 hereof.
"Section 3. No other or further charges either for recording, insuring or examining the security or property, or for the drawing, executing or filing of papers, or for any services or upon any pretext whatsoever beyond the aforesaid charge *90 for interest or discount shall be asked, charged, or in any way received, where the same would thereby make a greater charge for the money or thing advanced than the aforesaid rate of two per centum per month, and where made, all such charges shall be considered and be of the same effect as so much added interest; provided, however, that with the consent of the borrower he may be required to pay the fees or charges actually expended where the same are made necessary by law to give full legal effect to any instrument given hereunder.
"Section 4. No contract of any kind or nature made by any personal property broker which comes within the scope of business as set forth in section 1 hereof, or which in any way involves any security given to secure the performance of such contract, shall be valid, or of any force, virtue or effect, either at law or in equity, if there is therein or thereon directly or indirectly charged, accepted, or contracted to be received or paid, either in money, goods, discount, or thing in action, or in any other way, a greater benefit, rate of discount, or interest than the rate of two per centum per month; . . ."
This legislation has been preceded by other acts whereby the legislature attempted to limit the rates of interest and charges upon loans on chattel mortgage on certain personal property. (See Stats. 1905, p. 422, approved March 20, 1905.) This last mentioned act was the subject of attack before the supreme court upon the same grounds as those above stated, inEx parte Sohncke,
The act of 1909, as amended in 1911, applies equally to all classes of personal property and to all loans regardless of the amount thereof. In these respects at least it is not subject to the objections which were sustained as against the former statute. But the respondent insists, nevertheless, that the statute attempts to pick out certain money lenders, to wit: those engaged in lending money and taking as security chattel mortgages, or bills of sale, or assignments of salary, etc., and to define such money lenders as personal property brokers, and to prescribe for them alone a maximum amount of interest which they may charge; and to impose upon them alone the burden of issuing tickets to borrowers, designating the nature of the security, etc. It is pointed out that the statute by its terms does not include loans upon pledge, or loans without security, or loans upon the security of bank books, *92 bank deposits, interests in estates, or contracts, or loans secured by mortgage on real property. It is further suggested that the act by its terms applies to "every person or corporation engaged in the business of loaning or advancing money," etc., and therefore does not include those who make occasional loans, although not engaged in the business of making loans.
In its decision sustaining the law limiting the interest charges of pawnbrokers, in Ex parte Lichtenstein,
The later statutes to which we have referred indicate that the legislature has discovered other varieties of money-lending business, in addition to that of licensed pawnbrokers, where advantage of the necessities of the needy and improvident is habitually taken. A man engaged in the business which the statute here under review calls "personal property broker," also "does a business peculiar to himself." We find no difficulty in observing that there is a well-marked distinction between the transacting of certain business as a regular occupation and an isolated transaction of some item of business within the ordinary scope of that occupation. (Levinson v. Boas,
In like manner we reach the conclusion that the objections made by respondent to the present statute respecting personal property brokers are without merit. Since the legislature has not included in the prohibitions of this act those persons who make loans without security, we may reasonably assume that the legislature has not found any abuse in that business requiring *94
public correction, if indeed it could find such business in existence at all. And since the lending of money upon the security of real estate, or of bank deposits, or of interests in estates, or of contracts, has not been included within the prohibitions of this statute, we may reasonably assume that the legislature has not found that the businesses pertaining to such loans are usually accompanied by the abuses which the legislature was seeking to remedy. The exclusion from this act, of the business of taking pledges as security for loans, is accounted for by the terms of the laws already in existence, controlling the business of pawnbrokers. (Pen. Code, sec. 338, et seq.; Levinson v. Boas,
Laws enacted to guard against unreasonable rates of interest are laws against oppression, and should be favorably regarded, as they always have been favored by the common law of England. When there comes into existence in a state a class of business (even though it be within a more general class) wherein it is customary and habitual for those conducting that business to charge excessive rates of interest and take mortgages upon the personal goods, or assignments of the wages of the borrower as security therefor, the legislature may take cognizance of the fact that such business is in existence as a distinct occupation, and may set it apart as a business subject to regulation peculiar to itself, in order to avoid the wrongs incidental to such business when unregulated. Such legislation, as instanced in the present case, is not arbitrary. It is based upon differences which in some reasonable degree, as said in the Miller case, "will account for or justify the peculiar legislation."
The contract in this case being within the description of business defined in the statute, and providing for a rate of interest in excess of two per cent per month, is not "of any force, virtue or effect, either at law or in equity," and the plaintiff has no cause of action thereon.
The judgment is reversed.
James, J., and Shaw, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on April 25, 1914. *95