78 Ky. 367 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1880
delivered the opinion of ti-ie court.
There is some controversy in this case as to the facts, but for the purposes of this opinion we shall assume the facts to be as claimed by the appellants.
In November, 1872, W. L. Gist borrowed of Jacob S. Smith the sum of $3,748.70, and executed his note for-$3,835, bearing ten per cent, interest from date, and payable in one year.
Gist paid on the note, March 1, 1874, $692.50; March 1, 1875» $540, and in January, 1876, $3,755.20.
The note embraced $86.30 in excess of the sum loaned, and interest was paid on the amount of the note at ten per cent, per annum from the time the loan was made until the debt was discharged in full by the payment made in January, 1876.
Gist transferred to his wife his supposed right to reclaim the usury paid to Smith, and thereupon Gist and wife ■brought this suit.
They claim that, as the interest paid and the amount deducted from the note exceeded ten per cent, on the amount loaned for the period during which the loan was continued, the whole interest was forfeited, and that they are entitled to recover back all that was paid in excess of the sum actually loaned.
The court below gave them a judgment for the excess paid over ten per cent., and not content with that, they prosecute this appeal.
The loan was made while the conventional interest law of March 14, 1871, was in force.
But section 5 provided: “That if any rate of interest exceeding the rate authorized by the first section of this act shall be charged, the whole interest shall be forfeited; and if the lender in such, usurious contract refuse, before suit brought, a tender of the principal without interest, he may, in any suit brought on such contract or assurance, recover the principal, but shall pay the cost of such suit.”
Counsel for Smith contend that the statute, although it declares that if more than ten per cent, interest be contracted for, the whole interest should be forfeited, does not declare the contract for interest to be void, and that the contract not being void, but only subject to forfeiture, the forfeiture may be waived, and is waived, unless it be taken advantage of in the mode pointed out in the statute, i. e., by a tender of the principal before suit brought.
We cannot accept the conclusion reached as correct. To so construe the statute would be to render the provision for a forfeiture of the interest of no practical benefit.
By the express words of the statute, the tender provided for must be made before suit is commenced. Suit may be commenced on the day succeeding that on which the debt falls due, and the debtor has no right to pay before the day on which the debt falls due; so'that, in'order to take advantage of the forfeiture, he must see the creditor on the very day the debt matures and tender the money. This would be often impracticable, and the debtor will so generally be unable to make the tender that we cannot suppose the legislature intended to make the right to insist upon the forfeit
Usury laws are made to protect the weak against the strong, and should not receive a construction which will deprive all persons of their protection, except such as may be able to meet their engagements on the day of their maturity.
Moreover, the language of the act clearly indicates that the only purpose of the provision in regard to tender was to subject the usurer who should refuse the principal, when tendered, to the cost of the suit in addition to the forfeiture of all the interest. The language is, “the whole interest shall be forfeited; ” and if the lender, &c., refuse, before suit brought, a tender, &c., he “shall pay the cost of such suit.”
Counsel next contend that a voluntary payment is a waiver •of the forfeiture, and that Gist, having paid the debt and interest, cannot recover back more than the excess over ten per cent. In this we think they are right.
There is a plain distinction between a provision in a statute that a contract for interest above a certain rate shall be void as to the whole interest contracted for, and a provision that the whole interest shall be forfeited.
A forfeiture may be waived by the person in whose favor it is declared, and money paid upon a contract which the •obligee might have resisted as forfeited should be presumed to have been paid, because the person paying had elected to waive the forfeiture.
But money paid upon a contract declared by statute to be void is not paid under any contract at all, it is paid without consideration, either good or valuable, and may be recovered ■back, unless the transaction is of such a character that the
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.