133 Mass. 248 | Mass. | 1882
The act of Congress to establish a national
currency superseded the state laws on the subject of usury so far as they might otherwise be applicable to national banks. U. S. St.. June 3, 1864, § 30. U. S. Rev. Sts. §§ 5197, 5198. Central National Bank v. Pratt, 115 Mass. 539. Davis v. Randall, 115 Mass. 547. The power vested in Congress to' establish a bank and to authorize it to lend money, involves ■the power to fix the rate of interest it may take, and to prescribe the penalties for taking a greater rate. The rate of interest which under this legislation a national bank was entitled to charge upon loans, was that which was legal in the State, Territory or District where it was located. U. S. Rev. Sts. § 5197. The legal rate of interest in New Hampshire, where this bank is located and where the note in suit was made, is six per cent. Gen. Laws of N. H. of 1878, c. 232, §§ 2, 3. The loan upon which it is founded was originally made on August 31, 1868, for the sum of $600, and a noté for that amount was then given, signed by Amzi Childs, for whose benefit the transaction took place, and who paid the discount, and by Henry Childs, which note was renewed from time to time with the same signers, until November 17, 1871, when a note was given
Under this statute, the defendants contend that the note in suit, being the last in a series of renewals of the original loan of August 31, 1868, is the same debt then contracted; that none of the notes could have borne interest, for the reason that their interest-bearing power was destroyed by the illegal agreement ; and that the payments of discount or interest were in effect payments of the principal, and that they should now be deducted from the note in suit. Even if we treat the parties to the present suit as identical with those who were parties to the loan when it was originally made, and the note in suit as affected by all the transactions which have occurred since, whatever changes may have taken place in the form of the security, to this construction there appear to be obvious objections. It treats as payments on the principal those sums which were
Again, it is sought to impose upon the plaintiff a penalty different from any prescribed by the statute of the United States. That nowhere provides for a forfeiture of the illegal interest, actually paid by a deduction from the, note or other security when sued. It does not even provide for a recovery of the same by action, although it exposes the party receiving the same to a penal action, the penalty in case of recovery being double the amount of illegal interest paid. Its effect, so far as the note in suit is concerned, is only to destroy its interest-bearing capacity, which may involve a loss greater or less than the illegal interest stipulated for or paid, according to circumstances.
Where a statute creates a new right or offence, and also specific remedies or penalties, they alone apply. Such provisions are exclusive. Farmers' & Mechanics' National Bank v. Dearing, 91 U. S. 29.
There is, however, most respectable authority in the cases cited by the defendants for the position assumed by them. In Overholt v. Mt. Pleasant National Bank, 82 Penn. St. 490, it was held that, in an action by a national bank to recover the amount of a note, which was given in renewal of other notes, the defendant is entitled, where illegal interest has been exacted, to credit for all' the interest he has paid from the beginning on the loan, and not merely to the excess above the lawful rate. See also Lucas v. Government National Bank, 78 Penn. St. 228; Cake v. Lebanon National Bank, 86 Penn. St. 303; Brown v. Erie National Bank, 72 Penn. St. 209; Shunk v. Galion National Bank, 22 Ohio St. 508; Stephens v. Monongahela National Bank, 88 Penn. St. 157; In re Wild, 11 Blatch. C. C. 243; Auburn National Bank v. Lewis, 75 N. Y. 516.
On the other hand, in Barnet v. National Bank, 98 U. S. 555, it was held that, where illegal interest has been paid upon the
While the defendants upon proper proofs were entitled to recover double the amount of the illegal interest paid by them, they could only do so by resorting to a suit brought specially for that purpose within the time limited by law. The right to avail themselves of such payments in set-off was not given by statute, and the deductions claimed by them cannot be made.
There remains the single inquiry whether the plaintiff is entitled to any interest upon the note now in suit. This the plaintiff claims at least from the date of the writ. It is found that the sum of $11.16 was the amount of illegal discount paid upon
The effect of the first clause seems to us inadvertently stated by the learned judge in this, that it fails to include all the contingencies provided for by that clause, which applies the forfeiture of interest upon the note or other security, not merely where illegal interest has been stipulated for but not paid, but also where it has been knowingly taken, received or reserved. This analysis is used by Mr. Justice Swayne argumentatively, and does not affect the points decided by the case or involved in the judgment of the court, Which determines only two questions: first, that payments of usurious interest cannot be applied in offset or payment to the bill of exchange in suit; and, second, that a claim to recover double the amount of illegal interest, paid by way of counter-claim in the pending suit on the bill, cannot be maintained. The category provided for by the first clause of the section is here found to exist, because it is found that illegal interest was knowingly paid to the amount of $11.16 on the note in suit. The forfeiture of the interest which the note carries with it, or which has been stipulated to be paid thereon, is attached to the instrument itself. It may be insisted upon by way of defence to the note whenever it is sued. Nor is it so limited that it must be set up within two years, although the penal action provided for by the second clause of the section must be brought within that time. Peterborough National Bank v. Childs, 130 Mass. 519. As the note can be made the foundation only of a judgment which does not include interest upon it, had the illegal interest of $11.16 been reserved from the note instead of having been paid upon it, the note would have carried