80 Wash. 2d 690 | Wash. | 1972
Lead Opinion
Plaintiffs bring this declaratory judgment action under RCW 19.52.032 to ascertain whether a promissory note on which they are makers is usurious. Defendants are holders of the note and seeming mortgage, having acquired the documents from Liberty Mortgage, Inc. For convenience we will refer to the parties in the singular.
Liberty Mortgage, Inc., is engaged in second mortgage financing in the Seattle area. In the fall of 1968 it advertised its business in the classified section of a Seattle daily newspaper. Plaintiff, Mr. Hynes, is a certified public accountant, who, being desirous of obtaining a loan, re
Plaintiff entered into an agreement with Liberty Mortgage whereby the latter would seek funds for the plaintiff from third parties. Such loan was to be on a note secured by a second mortgage. Plaintiff agreed to pay the costs of obtaining and closing the loan, together with a commission to Liberty Mortgage for its services. Liberty Mortgage was in fact and to the knowledge of plaintiff acting solely as a broker on plaintiff’s behalf to obtain the requested loan. Plaintiff also knew that the funds for this loan were to come from a sale of the note and mortgage at discount to a third party.
Prior' to executing the proffered loan papers, plaintiff consulted legal counsel. The proposed transaction was discussed in detail with counsel who informed plaintiff that in his (counsel’s) opinion the transaction could be usurious. Counsel also informed plaintiff of the penalties for usury. At the time plaintiff executed the loan documents, he believed the transaction to be usurious and intended to use the usury statutes against any purchaser of the note and mortgage.
On September 6 and 7, 1968, plaintiff executed a note, mortgage and other security documents in favor of Liberty Mortgage, Inc. The note was in the face amount of $5,300 and provided for interest at 10 per cent per annum. Plaintiff neither received nor expected value from Liberty Mortgage for the note and security documents.
Meanwhile, Liberty Mortgage approached prospective “purchasers” of the note informing them that it had loaned money to plaintiff and offering to sell the note and mortgage at discount. In an effort to get the best rate for its client, these prospective lenders were invited to bid on the
Defendant delivered the $4,600 to an escrow agent which closed the loan. Plaintiff received a check for $4,400, the remaining $200 being withheld for transaction costs.. Plaintiff immediately delivered his check for $400 to Liberty Mortgage as its commission.
The trial court found that defendant was an innocent purchaser for value and would suffer substantial financial loss if plaintiff were allowed the benefit of the usury penalties. From this the court concluded that plaintiff was es-topped to plead usury as he would be unjustly enriched. Nonetheless, it felt constrained by Baske v. Russell, infra, to combine the discount taken by defendant with the interest rate on plaintiff’s note, thereby rendering the transaction usurious. However, the court fashioned a mode of equitable relief whereby defendant was allowed to recover only the $4,600 actually advanced plus interest at the legal rate, rather than at the contract rate. Both parties appeal.
The compulsion felt by the trial court derived solely from that court’s understanding of our language in Baske v. Russell, 67 Wn.2d 268, 273, 407 P.2d 434 (1965):
We hold that a note for which value has once been given can be discounted at any rate, but that the discount of paper for which no value has been previously given must be added to the interest provided for in determining the interest rate, and if this exceeds the rate of interest allowed by the statute, the defense of usury is available.
Absent the addition of the discount in this case, the subject transaction is not usurious. Therefore, the immediate
In his oral opinion, the trial judge expressly stated that, were it not for what he construed to be our holding in Baske, he would rule that defendant, being an innocent purchaser, was entitled to recover the amount of the note according to its terms. In his cross-appeal, the defendant does not suggest that Baske should be overruled. Rather, he contends that neither the holding nor the spirit of our decision in Baske precludes the defense of estoppel to assert usury. We agree that the trial court’s reading of Baske was too restrictive, but not for the reasons submitted by defendant.
To be sure, the above quoted language from Baske could be taken in the stringent sense understood by the trial court. But the proper understanding of that language must take account of the factual context in which it was expressed. The basis of disagreement between the majority and dissent in Baske lies in the differing conclusions as to the character of the agency relationship there existing. The dissent based its position on the premise that the intermediary mortgage financing company was solely the agent of the borrowers. A contrary understanding, regarding the intermediary as agent of both borrower 'and lender, is implicit in the majority’s emphasis on the lender’s initiative in the transaction. Such understanding by the majority clearly underlies its treatment of the intermediary’s commission as part of the “discount,” rather than as part of the net amount received by the borrower. See Busk v. Hoard, 65 Wn.2d 126, 396 P.2d 171 (1964). While this difference in premise might have been more clearly expressed, we think that difference is inescapably clear upon scrutiny of the opinion in Baske.
The importance to our opinion in Baske of treating the intermediary as dual agent becomes evident when the following provision of our usury statute (RCW 19.52.030) is recalled:
[Wjhere the same person acts as agent of the borrower*694 and lender, he shall be deemed the agent of the lender for the purposes of this act.
In such context, the lender is chargeable with the knowledge of his agent and in such situations, even if the lender had no personal knowledge of a lack of antecedent payment of value, “the discounted paper for which no value has been previously given must be added to the interest provided for in determining the interest rate.” That is the meaning of Baske.
Here, the agency relationship is quite different. As previously discussed, the facts of this case establish that Liberty Mortgage, Inc., was solely the agent of the borrower, not of the lender. This difference distinguishes our holding in Baske.
The trial court concluded that defendant was an innocent purchaser for value and entitled to recover according to the terms of the note, but for that court’s understanding of Baske, an understanding which is now seen to have been too restrictive. Plaintiff’s sole argument against the conclusion that defendant was the innocent purchaser for value is that this conclusion cannot stand in the face of the earlier quoted language from Baske. In light of our clarification of the Baske holding, that argument loses all force.
The dispositive effect of our preceding discussion makes it unnecessary to reach the remaining assignments of error. Reversed and remanded for judgment in accordance herewith.
Hamilton, C.J., Finley, Rosellini, Hunter, and Stafford, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) — Plaintiff signed and delivered a $5,300 note and mortgage carrying 10 per cent interest but received only $4,400 for them. On its face, as his counsel advised and the trial court held, the transaction was usurious, particularly under Baske v. Russell, 67 Wn.2d 268, 407 P.2d 434 (1965). The court’s opinion now I think, rather than clarifying that case, tends to nullify it.
When one lends money on commercial paper or a mort
I would therefore, under Busk v. Hoard, 65 Wn.2d 126, 396 P.2d 171 (1964), Baske v. Russell, supra, and Palmer v. Stevens-Norton, Inc., 75 Wn.2d 155, 449 P.2d 689 (1969), affirm.
Ott, J. Pro Tern., concurs with Hale, J.