93 Ky. 151 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the court.
These cases involve tbe same question, and are, therefore, heard together. The defense is, that the original loans, with legal interest, have been over-paid, and that-
It is claimed that this was a novation, equivalent to-payment, and defeats the plea of usury, as our statute bars its recovery after the lapse of a year from its payment.
Indeed, more than this is claimed. It is insisted first, that no usury was ever promised or paid; but if so, that it was, in fact, paid eo nomine as usury, was not embraced in any renewal note, and can not, therefore, be now relied upon as a defense, there having been a novation by the-change of sureties. It was once held that a mere renewal of a debt by the execution of a new note by the parties-to the old one was such a novation as entitled a party to-at once sue for any usury that had been paid, and unless he did so within the statutory period, he was barred of the right. This rule has, however, long since been overturned, and the modern one is that as long as any debt exists, the usury may be reclaimed and relied upon as a-defense, although the evidences of the debt may have been repeatedly renewed. It is said, however, that this-is not so where there has been a change of parties to the note, because a new debt has then been created.
It was, however, held in Fitzpatrick, &c., v. Apperson’s Ex’or, 79 Ky., 272, that while a change of a part of the obligors creates a new contract and releases all obligation upon the old note, yet it does not operate as a payment of the usury. It is true in that case, the usury was carried into and embraced in the new note, and it was held that
It is, however, further said, that if in the case now before us any usury was exacted, it was in fact paid; not embraced in any new note, and that the notes sued upon therefore contain no usury. It is, therefore, urged they are not tainted, and the debtor,-having renewed the debt with other sureties, and not having sued for what was paid as usury, within a year from the payment, can not now rely upon such payment as a defense to the note, but is remediless, although, if what he paid had been applied in discharge of his debt and legal interest, there would, perhaps, be nothing owing, leaving the notes sued upon composed altogether of usury. This question does not appear to have been expressly decided by this court.
It was said, however, in Kendall v. Crouch, 88 Ky., 199 : “Any payments theretofore made will be treated as having been paid upon the principal and legal interest, without regard to how they were in fact made or received. They will be so treated at the election of the debtor, although they were paid as usury; and so far as the usury has been carried into the new note, it is without consideration and can not be recovered. A change of payee, or of a part of the obligors, will discharge those bound upon the old obligation, because it is a new contract, but it is not a payment of usury; and if it be carried into the new obligation as a part of the sum to be paid upon it, it is to that extent tainted, and the usury will, upon plea, be extracted. ”
If any payments, although paid as usury, are at the election of the debtor to be treated as payments of the principal and legal interest, then it logically follows that
If not the rule then this law will, in effect, be of no avail. The debtor is largely at the mercy of the loanor. He feels, and is usually in fact, compelled to obey his request. The latter has only to demand of him the usury, let the rate be what it may, and then require other security; and then if the debtor does not sue him for the usury within a year, he is safe in an evasion of the law. The debtor is not, of course, going to do so, if he still owes the debt; he would not dare to do it. So, unless so long as any claim is being asserted by the loanor by reason of the loan, the debtor can rely upon any payments of usury as against it, the creditor is comparatively safe, and the statute against usury in the main a dead letter. To fairly carry out its spirit and purpose, the debtor •should have the right to require a proper application of the payments, although they may have been made as usury. All payments are made upon the note, and should be so treated, because then there can be no evasion of the law,
"We do not, of course, determine whether any usury was in fact paid, and, if so, how much in this instance. That
He decided the legal question, leaving the facts unreported ; and the lower court confirmed his report and rendered a judgment for the sum reported by him as owing upon the notes sued upon, they being subject to certain admitted credits. The case was not tried on its merits; the facts were not inquired into, the decision being that, the statute of limitation rendered it unnecessary.
The judgments are reversed for further proper proceedings.