35 Ala. 580 | Ala. | 1860
An injunction may be dissolved, either on account of the denial in the defendant’s answer of the equity of complainant’s bill, or on account of the want of equity in the bill. The two subjects of inquiry, therefore, involved in the revision of the chancellor’s decree dissolving the complainant’s injunction, are the sufficiency of the denials of tlfe answer to authorize the decree, and the equity of the bill. To the former of those inquiries we will first direct our attention.
Do not these admissions of the answer sustain the charge of usury, notwithstanding the express denial ? In order that we may answer this question, “ we mustget at the nature and substance of the transaction: the view of the parties must be ascertainedand if there was, in real truth, a loan of money, “the wit of man cannot find a shift to take it out of the statute.” — Floyer v. Edwards, 1 Cowp. 114; Dubose v. Parker, 18 Ala. 780. The object in such inquiries must be, to ascertain the intention of the parties. If a loan was not within their intention, there was no taint of usury. If a loan for illegal interest was intended, whatever color or disguise ingenuity may have thrown over the transaction, there is usury. — Bank of the United States v. Waggenor, 9 Peters, 878-879; Ely v. McClung, 4 Port. 136. Coming to the precise point involved, we must decide, whether there was a real, truthful sale of cotton to the complainant, or whether the sale was a more covering for a loan of the proceeds of the sale of the cotton at an interest equal to the excess above the value which the complainant agreed to pay. If the latter was the true character of the transaction, then the contract was usurious, to the extent to which such excess would exceed legal interest. The sale of wares, for a price beyond their real value, seems to have been frequently resorted to, as a plan for tlie evasion of the usury laws: and where goods have been sold to the buyer’, at a price beyond their real value, for the purpose of enabling Mm, by selling them at what they will bring, immediately to relieve bis necessities; and where the seller gets in the excess of price an undue compensation for the credit, the
In cases with features not so strong as those presented by the defendant’s answer, the contract has been pronounced usurious, as will be seen by reference to the authorities above cited. The complainant in this case desired to borrow money — not to speculate in cotton. This was known to the defendant, who met the proposition to borrow by the declaration, that he had no money to loan, but that he had cotton to sell; which was tantamount to saying, “I have no money to loan, but I have cotton which you can convert into money.” The defendant knew that the object of the purchase of the cotton by the complainant was to convert it into money, and with its proceeds to meet the pressure of his necessities ; for he does not deny, but almost admits, that the complainant made at the time a calculation of the per cent, which he would lose in the process of procuring the money, and that he assisted in making the calculation. In addition to this, the defendant, although cotton was then high, and he wanted to sell it, exacted a price beyond its value as represented by his factor; and the complainant, knowing the excess of the price above the value, consented to give it; and this was done under the pressure of the complainant’s necessities. We cannot hesitate to hold such a contract usurious. It was an arrangement, by which complainant procured money to meet his necessities, and the defendant enabled him to obtain it through the machinery of a sale of cotton, exacting a compensation beyond the interest, under the guise of an excess of price.
Having nothing to guide us upon this interlocutory motion to disolve the injunction, save the bill and answer
Our conclusion, that the injunction should be retained as to all the price of the cotton, save the value stated by the bill, is sustained by the decision in Maulden, Montague & Co. v. Armistead, 18 Ala. 500. In that case, an injunction was retained, notwithstanding the denials of the answer showed that there was no right toan injunction as to a part of the judgment, because the answer did not afford the means of ascertaining how much of the judgment was improperly enjoined.
This case differs from that in the fact, that the bill itself shows the absence of all right to a continuance of the injunction as to the price of the cotton beyond its estimated value of ten cents; and therefore we cannot in this case, as was done in that, retain the injunction for the entire amount. But we are left without any criterion by which to fix a value, if wo go beyond ten centsper pound, and we think the injunction ought to be retained as to the entire price beyond.
It is not an unbending rule, that an injunction shall be dissolved, even when the equity of the bill is denied. The court may, notwithstanding such denial, retain it, when
The decree of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the foregoing opinion. The appellee must pay the costs of the appeal.