69 Wash. 1 | Wash. | 1912
This action was commenced by Equitable Savings & Loan Association, a corporation, against Susan J.
The only issue is the rate of interest respondents contracted to pay. If it was twelve per cent per annum, as contended by appellant, judgment of foreclosure should be entered. If it was seven per cent per annum, as contended by respondents, the note and mortgage were fully paid, and the judgment should be affirmed. The trial judge properly found that, on May 19, 1910, respondents tendered appellant $10 then remaining unpaid; that later they deposited the same with the clerk of the superior court, and that the note and mortgage were thereby fully satisfied. Upon these findings it was decreed that the mortgage be released, and that respondents recover $25 damages, with their costs.
From the evidence we find the following additional facts: On or about May 25, 1907, respondent Susan J. Barnes, acting for herself and her husband, applied to appellant for a loan, telling appellant’s manager she had been informed that appellant made loans at the rate of seven per cent per annum. The manager replied that it did, but stated that the loan with interest thereon would have to be repaid in monthly installments. Mrs. Barnes finally agreed to borrow $1,700 at seven per cent, payable in 108 monthly installments, with the privilege of making full payment and stopping interest at the end of two years. For this loan the respondents executed upon a printed form and delivered to appellant, the following note:-
“Seattle, Washington, June 1, 1907.
“For value received, I, we or either of us, promise to pay in U. S. gold coin of the present standard value, to the order of the Equitable Savings & Loan Association, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Oregon, at the banking house of Dexter Horton & Co., Seattle, Washington, the sum of twenty-seven hundred fifty-four dollars ($2754) in one hundred eight equal monthly installments of twenty-five and fifty hundredths dollai’s ($25.50) payable
“(Signed) Susan J. Barnes.
“(Signed) Fred J. Barnes.”
“We invite your attention to the following illustration of some of the advantages offered by our monthly installment plan of a loan, as compared with the ‘flat’ or ‘straight’ loan. As an example, we will quote the average term of 60 months, or five years, wherein a loan from us of $1,000 calls for 60 monthly payments of $22.24 each, making the total amount to be paid within the 5 years, $1,334.40. (Loans of greater or less amount in the same proportion.) Bear in mind that the sixty monthly payments cover principal and all charges for interest, so that when the 60th payment has been made the entire debt has been paid, and the mortgage is then released.
and all interest charges during the 5 years, amounting to ........................ 334.40
making the total actual cost to you for principal amd interest......................$1,334.40
“Please note that the total interest charges, $334.40, make an average of $66.88 per annum for the 5 years, hence our loan actually costs you less for interest than a ‘flat’ loan for the five years at six and three-quarters per cent interest per annum, for which you would pay $76.50 each year, amounting to $337.50 for the five years. Therefore, any sum that you pay for interest on a flat loan, in excess of six and three-quarters per cent per annum, would be saved to you by borrowing from us.”
We have italicized this excerpt where black-faced type or italics are used in the original. The evident purpose of this leaflet was to convince proposed borrowers that the rate of interest charged was slightly less than seven per cent per annum. The note, although drawn with much detail, studiously avoids any express statement relative to the annual rate of interest. The total principal is mentioned as $1,700, the total interest at $1,054, and the 108 monthly payments as $25.50 each. A careful study of the note discloses the fact to be that the stipulated installments, made monthly, decreased the unpaid principal. These monthly payments were to continue without variation for nine years. It is therefore apparent that the respondents would not have the use of the entire $1,700 loan for all of that period, but that, as the principal constantly decreased, they were paying more than seven per cent for money actually held and used by them. Considerable intelligence and business capacity is required to understand the import and effect of the note, or to compute its exact rate of interest. The evidence convinces us that respondents did not understand the note; that they relied upon the representation of appellant’s manager that they were to pay seven per cent only; that the manager knew
“Time shall be material and of the essence hereof, and if default be made in the payment of any of the sums stipulated in said agreement after the same or any part thereof shall become due, or in the procuring of the insurance as hereinafter specified, or in the payment of the taxes or assessments upon any part of said property, or in any condition or covenant in this mortgage set out, then and in either of such cases the whole sum loaned (first deducting all sums paid in monthly installments on the principal, said credits being ascertained by deducting from the monthly installments paid in accordance with the obligation secured by this mortgage, interest at the rate of twelve per cent per annum payable monthly on balances of unpaid principal), as well as the accrued interest provided in said agreement and secured by this mortgage, shall, at the election of the party of the second part, its successors or assigns, without notice, become immediately due and payable, together with attorney’s fees in such sum as the court may adjudge reasonable upon the sums which shall then be due, . . .”
Mrs. Barnes understood the rate therein mentioned to be penalty interest, which she would have to pay only in the event of a default.
Appellant, citing Sherman v. Sweeny, 29 Wash. 321, 69 Pac. 1117, and Hubenthal v. Spokane & Inland R. Co., 43
“It is true that the respondent could read, and that the written contract was handed to him with the request that he read it, and he did glance over it hurriedly and without reading it carefully; but he testified that he was well acquainted with the agents of appellants, that he had worked for them, and he relied upon them, and that he asked them if the contract was in accordance with his memorandum agreement and was assured that it was, and he thereupon signed it relying solely upon the statement of appellants’ agents that the contract was all right. The contract is long and involved. It covers five pages of typewritten matter, and it is doubtful if any person not accustomed to legal documents would fully comprehend its meaning without very careful study.”
It is shown that respondents failed to comprehend the legal effect of the intricate and involved expressions which the note and mortgage contain. Any express statements that might have warned them of a higher rate than seven per cent were studiously avoided, and they were informed by the manager that the rate was only seven per cent, a statement they believed and acted upon. Had they understood the facts,
The trial court properly held the loan had been paid. The judgment directing the release of the mortgage and for $25 statutory damages awarded under § 8799, Rem. & Bal. Code, should be affirmed. ■ It is so ordered.
Dunbar, C. J., Parker, Chadwick, and Gose, JJ., concur.