Flinn v. Mechanics Building Ass'n

93 Mo. App. 444 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902

GOODE, J.

The appellant, Frances H. Flinn, sued to recover the sum of twelve hundred and sixty-five dollars and thirty cents, alleged to have been unlawfully exacted from her by the respondent as nominally, premiums, but in fact usurious interest on a loan made to her by the respondent in February, 1890. ■ The sum really in controversy is eight hundred and eleven dollars and seventy cents, which appellant claims was extorted from her by a threat to foreclose a deed of trust given on her property to secure the loan after she had paid the full amount she had borrowed, together with all legal charges thereon.

In our opinion, the disposition of this appeal depends entirely on whether appellant paid the sum of money last mentioned voluntarily, or under circumstances which constituted duress; not that we hold she did not owe any part of the *448sum, or that all of it consisted of usurious interest for lack of competitive bidding to fix the premium when the loan was made; but because we are of the opinion that whatever portion of it was usury can not be recovered if it was paid voluntarily. Ransom v. Hays, 39 Mo. 445; Kirkpatrick v. Smith, 55 Mo. 389; Peters v. Lowenstein, 44 Mo. App. (St. L.) 406. That was unquestionably the law of this State prior to the enactment of the statute of 1891 (RJ S. 1899, secs. 3709, 3710) but appellant claims that statute changed the rule. It did change it so far as it undertook to; that is, to the extent of pi'oviding that usurious interest which has been paid shall be credited on the principal debt, when usury is pleaded as a defense to an action, so that the creditor may recover judgment for no more than the amount due on the principal debt with legal interest after deducting therefrom all usurious payments. The statute further provides that in an action for the enforcement of a lien on personal property pledged or mortgaged to secure indebtedness, or, in a case where the validity of such a lien is drawn in question, proof that the party holding the lien has received or exacted usurious interest renders the lien void.

Neither of those provisions reaches this case or enables a party to voluntarily pay usury and thereafter maintain an action to recover back the money paid, but leaves that matter as it was before; wherefore a .debtor from whom a creditor seeks to collect usurious interest must resist the attempt and in default of so doing, has no standing to get back his money unless he is excused from resisting payment because of duress.

The question then is, was the money which appellant seeks to recover extorted from her by the respondent by conduct and under circumstances which amounted to duress? There may be such duress of property or goods as will entitle a person, thereby coerced into making payment, to reimbursement, as where an owner is compelled to yield to an extortion*449ate demand to obtain possession of his property. Wilkerson v. Hood, 65 Mo. App. (St. L.) 491. Bnt the circumstances under which appellant paid this money as testified to by herself, do not lend the slightest countenance to the notion that she was duressed or coerced; but on the other hand show a purely voluntary payment.

As this is the pivotal point of the case, her version of • the affair is the best means of deciding it and had better be given, together with some preliminary statements. She was a music teacher in the city of Hannibal, and had been paying rent for a long while, and desiring to purchase a home at a moderate cost and near the business part of the city, she applied to Llewellyn W. Boswell, who is a lawyer and real estate agent, and also secretary of the Mechanics Building Association, to find her such a pioperty. Thereafter he submitted a proposition to sell her a home at about the cost she desired, owned by Mrs. Mary J. Rhodes. Appellant had but little money to pay on the purchase price and Boswell suggested to her that she pay two hundred dollars in cash and borrow the balance from the building association.

It should be stated that this controversy is one of many growing out of the failure of building associations to mature their stock as soon as their -officers and stockholders expected.

Mrs. Elinn claims that Boswell represented to her that she would only have to pay eight years on her loan, by which time her stock would be paid up — that he made that statement over and over again and she relied on it and borrowed from the company on the faith of it. Boswell told her that she would have to take stock in the company and bid not less than twenty-five per cent premium to get the loan of nineteen hundred dollars.

Here is what she says as to that:

“A. He said with regard to the premium, that I would be obliged to bid twenty-five per cent of $1,900. I said, ‘I *450•want to know what that means?’ I had'never heard of the premium before. He said that every one who borrowed •money of the building association was obliged to pay a premium of twenty-five per cent of their loan, and I then refused to go any farther. I said, ‘Well, if I have got to do that, I will not go any farther.’ ‘Well,’ he says, ‘If you are not willing to do so, you might as well stop right here.’ Then I realized that there were other people in building associations who thought it was a good investment.
“Q. Never mind about your opinion — just state the facts.
“A. I said then, ‘How am I to bid that?’ He said, ‘Tou should go to a meeting of the directors and bid it in yourself.’ I said, ‘Where do the directors meet?’ He said that they met in a down-town office, and he mentioned the office (I have forgotten where it is) but he says, ‘If you want, I can bid it in your name,’ and I asked in regard to the amount. I said*, ‘Must I bid twenty-five per cent?’ He said, ‘No one gets a dollar of the building association for less than twenty-five per cent premium.’ After talking it over I decided to do it and gave Mr. Boswell power to bid for me the twenty-five per cent which he said was called for.”

She authorized Boswell to make the bid for her, he telling her that she would have to give a note for twenty-five hundred and thirty-five dollars in order to get the nineteen hundred dollars in cash which she desired. The loan was duly made, although she claims an excessive charge was exacted at the time, a contention not made good by the proof and not important to be considered now. She paid on the loan for eight years or thereabouts and then concluded that she had paid enough to entitle her to have her note returned and the deed of trust cancelled according to the aforesaid statement she claims Boswell made to her, that she would only have to pay for eight years. When she investigated the matter, the company claimed she still owed eight hundred and eleven dollars, *451which sum'she paid, and the question is whether this payment was voluntary or under duress ?

Here is her testimony on the subject which we will set out rather fully because of its importance:

“A. ... I paid during those nine months still my $25.70, and when at the end of that month I made up my mind that I must pay out, and I had in the meantime spoken to two of the directors beside Mr. Boswell. One of them said ‘Oh, it might run fifteen years or longer than that for all we know.’ So I felt the only way for me was to pay out. I asked Mr. Boswell for the amount when I paid the June¿ 1898, payment. It seems it was the 17th.
“Q. What date did you-make the final payment?
“A. I suppose it was the 17th or a day or two before because it was the 17th the card is dated and he said he would have to look it up., My book will show.
“Q. I will just suggest that June 30 is the time and there is no controversy about that ?
“A. I asked him then to tell me again how much I had to pay. I had paid for nine months, $225, and he sent me that card saying I had yet to pay $811. I had paid on the $986, $225 and yet had $811 to pay, and I borrowed the money the next day and paid it; not because for a moment I felt it was just. I felt it was only, as I remarked to every single one that I have spoken to on this subject, legalized robbery. I have paid over $3,200, and I borrowed $1,900.
“Q. Did you have an interview with Mr. Boswell, the secretary of the defendant, at his office, with relation to what would be the action of the defendant if you ceased to make any further payments, and if so, just state what it was ?
“A. Yes; at the time that I paid out my eight years, I said, ‘Well, suppose I don’t pay anything more, what will you do?’ He says, ‘I shall have to charge you up fines.’ I says ‘What are the fines ?’ (I had never been behind a payment). He says, ‘fifty,cents a month for each share.’ That *452would be $6.50 each mouth and added to my $25.10 would make a very good bill, and it would run on, as he said for sis months and then, as he said, tossing his head, ‘The law must take its course,’ which you know I understood, knowing that he held my mortgage with power of sale, 'he could sell my home from me at any time and I had no reason to think he would not do it and gladly.
“Q. Did that interview with Mr. Boswell cause you to make this payment?
“A. Yes, sir; it did. It made me feel that my only safety from everlasting payments or from losing my place rested on that, as from two of the members I received the information that it might run fifteen years or even longer, they didn’t know.
“Q. I will ask you if all the payments that you made to the defendant were made to apply on the principal and interest of this $1,900 loan?
“A. Everything, and they are all regularly indorsed . there in the book.
“Q. I will ask you if you willingly made the payment of June 30, 1898, when you paid off the loan ?
“A. Never, for one moment. It was only a choice between evils, I thought; only to get away from where I could be fined or sold out.
“Q. Did you ask the defendant for a release of your property before you made this last payment, and if so, state what you did.
“A. I said to him, ‘I have paid my full payments just as you said they should be, and now I want my papers.
“Q. Well, did he give them to you?
“A. Oh, no; he said it was not paid out and he didn’t-know when it would be.
“Q. Well, did the defendant refuse at that time to-release your property ?
*453"A. Why, certainly, unless I paid this amount named on the postal card; in that case he would release the property.
“Q. I will ask you this question; if you, at any time intended to ratify or approve any irregular or unlawful act of the defendant?
“A. I never at any time. I knew very well -that I never for a moment did anything but say that the thing was wrong from beginning to end, and that though I paid it, I paid it under protest.
"Q. Tour answer is with reference to matters that occurred subsequent to September and in September ?
“A. Tes, sir; entirely.
“Q. I will repeat the question and localize the time. Did you at any time in negotiating, or at the time of the purchase, or when Mr. Boswell-brought any papers to your residence to sign in 1890, intend by ratifying or approving—
“Q. With reference to the transaction of the loan and the bidding off of the premium and when you signed the bond and deed of trust, did you intend to ratify and approve any irregular or unlawful act of the defendant ?
“A. No; I did not. I supposed that in signing those papers, I signed them just exactly according to agreement, not only according to agreement, but as everyone else did, I gave Mr. Boswell permission to bid for me twenty-five per cent of $1,900 and I didn’t look at the papers close enough to find that instead of bidding that, he bid thirty-three per cent of $1,900, a sum which I never would have bid. They call it, I believe, twenty-five per cent of the gross sum which is a very different thing from’ twenty-five per cent of the $1,900. That was one point that I didn’t understand, but I supposed that my papers were made out just as the- papers should be, the- deeds and all, and as I say, I didn't understand them when I read them. I was in a hurry and signed them because I supposed they were just as Mr. Boswell said they were — straight and right.”

*454Boswell and the other officers of the association testified that the payment was entirely voluntary on the appellant’s part, for instead of threatening to sell her property or foreclose the mortgage in any way, they did not want the loan paid, since the appellant was prompt with her monthly dues and it was to the interest of the association to have it run.

Boswell says:

“Q. State whether you ever demanded that sum of the plaintiff ?
“A. Never, no, sir; we didn’t want it. We would rather have had the loan continued.
“Q. State whether you ever told Mrs. Elinn that you would foreclose, or that the company would foreclose that mortgage ?
“A. No, sir; from the very fact that we had no occasion to. She never made default in any of her payments and had lived up to her contract up to that time and we had no right or reason to say we would make a foreclosure. We would have been glad to have it continue if she had wanted to.”

In our judgment, plaintiff’s own testimony shows beyond’ all doubt that this payment was wholly voluntary and made simply to get her property released from the lien of the deed of trust; in fact, she practically says so. She says she conversed with three of the officers of the company besides Boswell in regard to her indebtedness and one of them said the loan might run for fifteen years. She asked Clark, a director, about it, and her conversation with him was unsatisfactory:

“Q. When was it you asked him ? (that is, as to how long the loan would have to run).
“A. It was during this present year; I don’t know just when, but it was largely my conversation with Mr. Clark that made me feel that I wanted to get away from the company. It was not a pleasant conversation.
*455“Q. When were yon told that your signature was necessary ; that was after the transaction had been closed ?
“A. Yes, sir; with Mr. Wilson.
“Q. It was simply telling you that in order to transfer your stock, you would have to give your signature ?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. That is the way you understood it?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You were under no coercion ?
“A. It was simply that I had got to sign that paper.
“Q. You couldn’t transfer without signing and that is all that was meant by its being necessary ?
“A. That was all that was meant.
“Q. Was that conversation with Captain Chamberlain before or after this payment of $811 ?
“A. It was before it.
“Q. Then it was before June 30, 1898 ?
“A. Yes, sir; it must have been because it was before I paid out.
“Q. Do you correct your answer then ? You told Judge Bacon it was since June, 1898 ?
“A. Yes, sir; I do. I was'wrong. It was before I paid out, but it was after I had made up my mind that I would.”

It is impossible to hold the payment made under the circumstances above related was induced by coercion or compulsion amounting to duress; for appellant was not even threatened with a sale of her property. Morgan v. Joy, 121 Mo. 677.

The judgment is affirmed.

Bland, P. J., and Barclay, J., concur.
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