51 N.H. 545 | N.H. | 1872
It is, perhaps, alleged with sufficient certainty in the plea that the sum of $166.01, illegal interest, was reckoned in to make up the sum of $966.7Í, for which the two notes were given Jan. 7, 1862. However that may be, the subsequent allegation that the defendants have paid upon said notes the sum of $166.01 over and above the rate of six dollars for the forbearance of one hundred dollars one year, is clearly sufficient, and this cause of demurrer cannot prevail. It also sufficiently appears that the money sued for is the unpaid balance of the debt upon which the illegal interest was thus reckoned and secured.
The fact that the original debt, with the illegal interest added, was secured by two notes instead of one when the matter was adjusted, Jan. 7, 1862, can make no difference; and the payment of one of the notes cannot affect the defendants’ right to the deduction allowed by the statute any more than if the whole sum had been put into one note, and the amount paid were indorsed upon it. The balance still due on the last note, which this suit is brought to recover, is the balance of the money upon which the usurious interest was secured and paid ; and to give the effect contended for by the plaintiff to the form in which the evidence of the debt was put by the parties would, as it seems to us, be a clear evasion of the spirit, and, in fact, of the express terms of the statute. See Gibson v. Stearns, 3 N. H. 185, and authorities cited.
But it is said'that the plea cannot be sustained because the statute upon which it is based — Rev. Stats., cli. 190, sec. 3 — was repealed before the suit was commenced ; and it is urged that the provisions of the Revised Statutes had relation merely to the remedy; that, the deduction allowed was a penalty given by way of punishment for a violation of law; that no one can have such a vested right in a penalty; that it cannot be taken away by the legislature ; and for these reasons it is contended that the repeal of the law put an end to any right the defendants may ever have had to the deduction claimed by the plea.
We have not found it necessary to inquire whether all these views are, upon general principles, correct or not, for we think it admits of no doubt that whatever rights the defendants may have had in the premises, at the time the General Statutes went into effect, were saved to them by section 5 of the repealing act. Gen. Stat., ch. 273, sec. 5. That clause is as follows: “ The repeal of the acts hereinafter mentioned,” among which are the Revised Statutes in a body, “shall not affect any act done or any right accruing, or accrued, or acquired, or established, or any suit or proceeding had or commenced in any civil case, before the time when said repeal shall take effect.”
It is entirely plain that the defendants’ right to a deduction of three times the usury accrued to them, and was acquired and established, the moment the illegal contract for extra interest was consummated by the execution of the notes.
As the law was at the time of the transaction, and when the General Statutes went into effect, they had a defence to that extent, if they chose to avail themselves of it, just as complete and effective as a set-off
The case of Lakeman v. Moore, 32 N. H. 410, is an authority fully in point. That was an action of debt against the defendant, a justice of the peace, to recover the penalty prescribed by section 12, chapter 147, Revised Statutes, for joining in marriage the minor son of the plaintiff without a certificate from the town clerk of the publication of intention of marriage.
The marriage was solemnized on the 29th day of June, 1854, and the action was commenced on the 8th day of September following. On the 14th day of July, 1854, an act was passed repealing that provision of the Revised Statutes which required the publication of intention of marriage. The repealing act contained no saving clause as to penalties already incurred under the old law, but the general saving clause as to all subsequent acts of repeal found in the 26th section of chapter 1, Revised Statutes, was identical in its terms with the saving clause in the General Statutes already quoted. The important question in the case was, whether the repeal of the statute requiring intention of the proposed marriage to be published should operate as a bar. to or abrogation of the right of action in a suit brought subsequent to the repeal for a penalty incurred previous to it. Sawyer, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, admits that no right to recover the penalty had become vested in anybody at the time of the repeal, ben-cause that depended entirely upon the contingency of priority of suit. It was a right which might be established in favor of the parent or guardian of either of the parties, and until fixed and made certain by suit commenced, it could not be regarded as vested in either. But the court held that although the plaintiff had no vested right to the penalty at the time of the repeal, still, by virtue of the general saving clause, he was entitled to recover the penalty; and they say, — “ It is obvious that the legislature intended by this provision to limit repealing acts to a strictly prospective operation. All past proceedings are to stand as before the repeal, unaffected by it. The act which, done before, was, by the law then in force, an offence, and to be followed by the consequences of a liability to a penalty, to be recovered in a civil suit, remains in its character and consequences such as it was before the repeal. Rights accruing under the act repealed are not to be arrested or interrupted by the repeal, but are to be preserved and matured by virtue of the act unrepealed as to them, in the same manner as though it continued in force for all purposes.”
This goes as far as it is necessary to go here, even should we admit that the defendant had no vested right to the deduction at the time of the repeal. That such a vested right to a penalty may exist seems to have been understood by the court in Lakeman v. Moore, and was so decided in Dow v. Norris, 4 N. H. 16.
It is said further, that inasmuch as the plea shows that three times the illegal interest exceeds the whole amount due on the note, it ought
It is well settled- that where the fact is so the usury may be pleaded in bar because it amounts to a full defence to the suit, showing that the whole debt is forfeited. But we have not been referred to any case, and have found none, where a plea in the usual form, concluding with a prayer for the deduction, was held bad because it showed that the illegal interest paid or secured was equal to or exceeded the amount due ; and we are unable to see any good reason why it should be so held.
The plea of usury is said to be sui generis, resembling more a declaration for a penalty than a plea in bar. Copeland v. Jones, 3 N. H. 116; Williams v. Little, 11 N. H. 66. In the latter case, Parker, C. J., says that the technical rules of special pleading do not govern very strictly such pleas under our statute.
. The prayer here follows the terms of the statute, which provides that three times the unlawful interest may be deducted in rendering-judgment. If, upon the coming in of a verdict finding the usury, it appears to be equal to or more than the amount of the debt, the proper judgment would be given upon the whole record, even though it should then appear that the plea might properly have concluded with a prayer for judgment. Gibson v. Stearns, 3 N. H. 185. We are therefore of opinion that the demurrer to the plea
Must .be overruled.