13 Neb. 157 | Neb. | 1882
This is an action to foreclose a mortgage. It is alleged in tbe petition that on the twenty-fifth day of November, 1876, the defendant Hendrickson executed and delivered
The question involved in this case is the liability of the principal for the acts of his agent in exacting usurious interest in making the loan.
Sec. 2 of eh. 28 of the Revised Statutes of 1866, which was in force at the time this loan was effected, provided that: “Interest upon the loan or forbearance of money, goods, or things in action, shall be at the rate of ten dollars per year upon one hundred dollars, unless a greater rate, not exceeding twelve per cent per annum, be contracted for by the parties.”
The question to be determined is, is a principal who insists upon the validity of a contract made for him by an agent bound by the acts of this agent in making the contract? As a general rule the adoption of the agency in part adopts as a whole, because the principal is not per
In the case of Acheson v. Chase, 28 Minn., 211, decided by the supreme court of Minnesota, one Chase, a resident of New York, authorized one Alley, a resident of Minnesota, to loan money for him at twelve per cent interest, upon land security to be taken in Chase’s name, Alley to receive no compensation from Chase for his services, but was authorized by him to charge and collect from the borrower a reasonable compensation for making the loan. Aeheson applied to one Parsons, a resident of Minnesota, for a loan of $500. Parsons promised to secure the money at twelve per cent, he. to retain $65 for his services in effecting the loan. Parsons then applied to Alloy for a loan of the desired amount, and promised him $50. With very much circumlocution in' procuring the money, which has a very suspicious appearance, $500, less $68, was delivered to Aeheson, $50 of this sum being paid to Alley and $18 to Parsons.
The court held that the principal was not affected by the act of the agent in making the loan. The court say (page 735): “Was the taking of the $50 by Alley a taking of defendant of a rate of interest greater than twelve per cent,
In Condit v. Baldwin, 21 N. Y., 219, the plaintiff, a resident of New Jersey, placed in the hands of one Williams, an attorney at law in Wayne county, N. Y., $400 to invest for her at lawful interest. One Baldwin, a resident of Wayne county, applied to one Mills, a resident of that county, to procure a loan for him of $400 for two years on his note. Mills applied to Williams for the loan. Williams stated that he preferred to loan the money on bond and mortgage, as in that event he would be paid for drawing the same and for examining the title. An arrangement was then entered into whereby Mills promised to pay Williams $25 as attorney's fees. Mills then received $400 from Williams and paid it to Baldwin, aiid charged him $40 for his (Mills') services. Of this sum Mills paid $25 to Williams. It was held by a divided, court that this did not constitute usury. It is said (page 224): “It is undeniable that Williams took and received the $25 paid for alleged services rendered by him. If he took and received it as the plaintiff's agent, then he took and received it for her and as her money." The decision is placed upon the ground that the plaintiff had not authorized the taking of usurious interest, and had not received the same nor had any knowledge that it was received. Comstock, Denio, and Wells dissented. In the able dissenting opinion of Judge Comstock it is said (page 229): “ I think it material next to observe that only one contract was made,
In Algur v. Gardener, 54 Id., 360, it was held that
In Gokey v. Knapp, 44 Iowa, 32, it was held that where an agent for the loaning of money lent it at usurious rates, it would not be presumed that he had authority to make the loan at usurious rates so as to affect his principal.
In the case of Payne v. Newcomb, 100 Ill., 611, one Payne being the owner of about four hundred acres of land in Livingston county, applied to one Newcomb, a loan agent in Chicago, for a loan of money. Various sums were loaned by Newcomb to Payne, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $6630, the notes being made payable to Herrick Stevens, and a trust deed to secure the same being made to one Pierce. When each loan was made, Newcomb deducted from the amount five per cent, which he claimed as commission for procuring the loan. There were several extensions of the time for payment, and when they were made he charged two and a half per cent for procuring them. When interest was not promptly paid it was compounded at ’ the rate the notes bore. Payne paid in all $5800 on the indebtedness, but Neweomb claimed there was still due $11967.17. On a bill being filed for an account, and to enjoin a sale under the trust deed, it was insisted that Newcomb was not the agent of Stevens when the several loans were made, but was the agent of the plaintiff in error (Payne), and had a legal right to charge for his services in procuring the loans. The court say: “This evidence of Newcomb’s establishes the fact that he was Stevens’ agent beyond all dispute. He, however, says he was the agent of Payne before the loan, and of Stevens afterward; that an agent has to find the money, know the situation of the property, and ascertain the title, see to collecting tire principal, interest, etc.;
In the case, of Rogers v. Buckingham, 33 Conn., 81, it is said: “This would unquestionably have been an usurious loan if made by David Bulkley. It was, in fact, made by his son as his agent; the question in the case is therefore one of authority. * * * ■ Such authority will not be presumed when the agency is special and limited to a single transaction. It may- be presumed, where the agency is general and embraces the business of making, managing, and collecting the loans of a moneyed man, and the facts found show such an agency in this case.”
In all these cases the rule is recognized that if the commission paid to the agent was authorized or assented to by the principal, the loan will be tainted with usury. The case cited from Minnesota seems to go further and hold that even if an agent receives a bonus in excess of lawful interest it does not render the loan usurious.
The law regulating interest fixes the maximum rate and
The statute applies to all loans of money, whether made personally by a principal or through the intervention of an agent. If the sum exacted for the loan is in excess of the maximum fixed by law the contract is thereby rendered usurious, whether the unlawful interest was contracted for by the principal himself or paid as a commission to his agent for his services in making loans. If this was not so, a father could employ his son to make loans for him, or a business man one of his clerks, and these persons would be authorized to charge the borrower the highest rate of interest allowed by law, and in addition such commission to the agents as the necessities of the debtor would compel him to pay. ' Such ruling would, in effect, repeal the law. It would change the plain, unambiguous language of the statute fixing the highest rate of interest allowed in any case so as to impose no restriction whatever; because, if loans made by an agent are not restricted or controlled by the statute, all that is necessary to evade the law is to employ an agent to make the loan.
It is said, however, that the principal is not bound by the acts of the agent where he exceeds his authority — that is, where he charges more than lawful interest, or retains a portion- of the principal, as in this case, as a bonus. It is a sufficient answer to this objection to say that the agent is selected by the principal for the purpose of loaning its funds. The principal may require such security and im
In this case it is claimed that the agent of the lender was, the agent of the borrower for the purpose of procuring the loan — that is, that Hendrickson made the Corbin Banking-Go. his agent for the purpose of procuring the loan. The loan seems to have been effected through A. W. Ocobock, who appears to have been an agent of the, Corbin Banking Co., and the Banking Co. seem to have been acting as agent of the plaintiff. We are aware that there are strong denials of these facts in the testimony, but the conduct of the parties is conclusive on those points.
In .conclusion, we hold that , where an agent is engaged in the business of loaning money for his principal at the highest rate allowed by law, and contracts for a bonus or commissions from the borrower in excess of lawful interest, the. contract will be tainted with usury. The whole transaction is but one contract, and being within the scope, of the agency the lender is bound by it. Olmsted v. N. E. Mtg. Security Co., 11 Neb., 487. Cheney v. Woodruff, 6 Id., 151. Cheney v. White, 5 Id., 261. Philo v. Butterfield, 3 Id., 259.
The judgment of the district court is clearly right, and is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.