82 So. 157 | Ala. | 1919
A former appeal in this case was decided at the November term, 1916. Enough of it to serve present purposes may be seen in the Southern Reporter.
By their last amendment complainants, appellants, charged that the agreement under which the insured obtained a loan on his policy was such that "it was possible for a contingency to arise whereby more than the lawful interest allowed under the laws of the state of New York could have been exacted by the company of the insured, and hence the said loan agreement, which incorporated said policy terms in its provisions, was and is void and usurious," thus stating a case different from that shown on the former appeal. Several other considerations have been advanced in support of the decree dismissing complainants' bill, but it seems sufficient now to say that the possibility that a contract may be made a cloak for usury by no means establishes the fact that it is usurious. There must be an intention at the time to contract for and to take usurious interest. Van Beil v. Fordney,
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and GARDNER, JJ., concur.