121 P.2d 886 | Colo. | 1942
THE sole question presented on this review is whether Denver ordinance No. 49, Series 1941, passed June 2, 1941, is invalid by reason of its alleged conflict with the state law (chapter 157, S.L. 1935; sections 6 to 21 inclusive, chapter 88, '35 C.S.A.), concerning interest rates and charges on loans of $300 or less each. In a declaratory judgment action instituted by plaintiff in error, to whom we shall hereinafter refer as plaintiff, the district court adjudged that no conflict existed and held the ordinance valid. The complaint alleged that the plaintiff, as a licensee under the state law, was engaged in the business of making loans of the type above specified, in Denver; asserted that the statute controlled the rate of interest and charges which might be made lawfully *76 on such loans everywhere in the state, including all municipalities therein, and that by decreasing such permissible total charges in Denver, as concededly was the result thereof, the ordinance forbade that which the legislature had authorized and licensed and so fatally conflicted with the state law.
The city, as we shall hereinafter designate defendants in error collectively, contended, as was the view of the district court, that the statute instead of conferring legal authority upon plaintiff to collect the interest and charges specified therein, merely fixed a maximum therefor which the city, in the proper exercise of its police power, might lower, but could not raise, without creating a conflict with the state law. It is to be observed that the city claims no special or exclusive power in this legislative field by reason of the Twentieth Amendment to the Constitution or otherwise, and does not question that the statute is a general law of the state operative with equal force within its entire confines, but rests its case solely upon the premise that the ordinance is not in conflict with the state law in a legal sense.
[1, 2] Both parties agree, as is a fundamental principle, that an ordinance which is in conflict with a state law of general character and state-wide application is invalid.Glendinning v. Denver,
Hence, as the criterion of destructive conflict, under *78 either the basic rule or the principle invoked by the city, it seems evident that in the final analysis the courts revert to the determination of what might be called the factual question of whether the ordinance forbids the doing of a thing which the statute authorizes. Since the challenged ordinance, as was its purpose, forbade the collection in Denver of the charges specified in the state law, the resolution of the question submitted necessarily hinges upon the ascertainment of whether the state law conferred authority, as a matter of right, on licensees thereunder to collect the charges therein designated, or whether, as the city contends, the statute merely fixed the regulatory ceiling for such rates below which it was free to impose more strict requirements. On the basis of the provisions of the statute and the decisions of this court and others hereinafter to be mentioned, we are convinced that the state law created the situation claimed by plaintiff, as a result of which his contention must be upheld.
The statute in concern is entitled: "An Act relating to the making of loans or advancements of Three Hundred Dollars or less; Regulating the business of making such loans; Providing for administration of this act and for penalties for the violation hereof and repealing all acts or parts of acts in conflict herewith."
Section 1 prohibits the making of loans within such class at a greater rate of interest than ten per cent per annum, "except as authorized by this act and without first obtaining a license from the State Bank Commissioner * * *." Section 2 prescribes the contents of the application for license; specifies that in cities of more than 20,000 population the applicant must furnish proof of "liquid assets of at least $25,000" and $5,000 in cities of less population, and fixes the annual license fee at $50.00. Section 3 provides for the giving of a bond of $1,000 by every licensee. Section 4 relates to the issuance of the license which "shall not be assignable." Sections 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 respectively require a display of *79 the license; a license for each place of business; written notice by licensee of a change of place of business; gives bank commissioner power to investigate loans; and exacts that licensees keep books and records for inspection by the licensing authority. Section 10 provides that every licensee "may loan any sum * * * not exceeding in amount the sum of three hundred dollars ($300) in any single transaction and may charge, contract forand receive" interest and a service fee at the rate and in the percentages therein stated. This section further provides that no service fee shall be charged unless the loan is made, and declares: "interest or charges in excess of those permitted by this act" may not be collected. Section 11 requires the licensee to deliver a statement to the borrower and the cancellation and return of all notes upon payment. Section 12 prohibits a licensee from taking notes or instruments in which blanks are left to be filled after execution. Section 13 stipulates: "No person, co-partnership, or corporation,except as authorized by this Act, shall directly or indirectly, charge, contract for, or receive any interest, charge or consideration greater than ten (10) per centum per annum upon the loan, use, or forbearance of money, goods, or things in action, or upon the loan, or use of money, of the amount or value of three hundred dollars ($300.00) or less * * *. No loan, for which a greater rate of interest or charge than is allowed by the Act has been contracted for or received from and after the passage of this Act, shall be enforced in this State." Section 14 exempts banks, trust companies, building and loan associations, credit unions and licensed pawnbrokers from the operation of the Act. Sections 15, 17, 18, 19 and 20 respectively, are the repealing, penalty, severability, safety and emergency clauses. Section 16 makes the act inapplicable in cases where money loaning is regulated by state or federal legislation.
[3-5] In view of the scope and comprehensive terms of this enactment, it is difficult to conceive that the intention *80
of the state lawmakers with respect to the subject was other than to occupy the whole legislative field concerning it. That such a statute, as its express terms presage, grants a right to do the things provided therein to one authorized by license thereunder is established by our decision in Gronert v. People,
The cases cited by the city on this question are not in point in this controversy, since in none of them did the state law, as does the statute here, license and authorize the doing of the thing which the ordinance attempted to forbid but, on the other hand, merely fixed a statutory maximum of prohibition of certain conduct within those jurisdictions. An example is the case of City of Bellinghamv. Cissna,
The case of Provident Loan Society v. Denver, supra, while cited by the city in support of its contention, in reality emphasizes the distinction we have stressed. There the state law regulating the business of pawnbroking, defined pawnbrokers as those charging as much as three per cent per month as interest on loans on personal property. The Denver ordinance required a city license from all pawnbrokers regardless of the rate of interest charged by them. The Provident Loan Society was a pawnbroker which charged interest on its loans at rates not exceeding two per cent per month. In a prosecution for failure to procure a city license, the society claimed the ordinance conflicted with the statute. We held that since the state had not attempted to regulate the business of pawnbroking where the rate of interest charged was less than three per cent per month, the city legitimately might require a license from pawnbrokers lending money at a less rate of interest than that fixed by the statute. As disclosing the inapplicability of that rule to a case where the statute inclusively conferred licensed authorization, we said: "If the statute had provided that no license should be imposed on pawnbrokers except those charging the maximum of 3% per month interest, then there might have been a conflict between the statute and the ordinance, but no such provision appears in the statute, nor can it be implied from the language thereof."
The ordinance involved in Interstate Business Exchangev. Denver,
[6] Even should we agree with the plea of counsel for the city as to the social justification for the reduced rates of interest on small loans as attempted in Denver by the ordinance, we may not, by judicial construction, repeal a law that has been regularly enacted and which is stated in clear and unambiguous terms by the legislative branch of our state government. "If the law requires to be remedied that is a question for the legislature."Chicago Title and Trust Co. v. Patterson,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in accord with the views herein expressed.
MR. JUSTICE BOCK dissents.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON did not participate.