73 S.E. 130 | N.C. | 1911
Criminal action for taking unlawful interest, tried on appeal from the municipal court.
There was evidence on the part of the State tending to show that, on or about 24 October, 1910, John Wolf, desiring to borrow $10, applied to one A. R. Bridgers, who was lending money for defendant; that the said Bridgers, with the knowledge, assent, and direction of defendant, advanced to said Wolf $8.25, taking his note to himself as attorney for defendant, in the sum of $16.75, payable in thirty days, and to secure same took a chatter mortgage on the household and kitchen furniture of said Wolf. That the property included in the mortgage had originally cost about $75 and was worth at the time the mortgage was executed about $25. That Wolf paid on the debt $3.50, and default having been made, the property was seized under claim and delivery and sold at public auction for $10.45. "The auctioneer cost $1; costs, claim and delivery, $3 or $4; credit on mortgage, about $4, and after applying proceeds as indicated, there was balance claimed by defendant of about $2.50."
There was evidence on part of defendant tending to show that there were claims included in the mortgage other than the money loaned and that the usurious features of the transaction were without the knowledge or approval of the defendant. On a charge, correctly stating the law as declared in the statute, there was verdict, "Guilty." Judgment, and defendant excepted and appealed. (659) After stating the case: The statute law of the State more directly relevant to the question presented, Revisal, sec. 3712 (a), among other things, makes provision as follows:
"If any person, firm, or corporation who shall or may loan money in any manner whatsoever by note, chattel mortgage, conditional sale, or otherwise, upon any articles of household or kitchen furniture, shall take, receive, reserve, or charge a greater rate of interest than 6 per cent, either before or after such interest shall accrue," etc., "shall be guilty of a misdemeanor," etc.
Under a charge which correctly states the provisions of the statute, the jury have found that usurious interest has been charged by defendant; that the obligation was secured by a mortgage on the household and kitchen furniture of the debtor. There is ample evidence to justify the verdict, and the conviction must be upheld if the statute itself is a *515 valid law. It is insisted for the defendant that the statute is in contravention of the fourteenth amendment to the Federal Constitution in that it "unlawfully divides money-lenders into two classes, those lending on household and kitchen furniture and on other kinds of property, and unlawfully discriminates against borrowers, putting borrowers, having only one class of property, to wit, household and kitchen furniture, into a class different from the borrower having other kinds of property to offer"; but the position cannot, in our opinion, be maintained.
The power of the Legislature to make the taking of usury, under certain conditions, a criminal offense is well recognized (Ex parte Edward Berger,
In Insurance Co. v. Daggs, 172 U.S. at page 362, the Supreme Court of the United States, the Court having, with us, the final word on this subject, referred to this right of classification as follows: "It is not necessary to state the reasoning upon which classification by legislation is based or justified. This Court has had many occasions to do so, and only lately reviewed the subject in Magoun v. Illinois Trust and SavingsBank,
If these various classifications have been sustained by our highest Court, assuredly a law designed and intended to protect and maintain the home of the citizen should be upheld. If the schools of thought which tend to corrupt and undermine, if the forces which make for disorder and anarchy should ever be able to combine and so far increase as to threaten our social fabric, it is the home, the influences that hallow and emanate from it, which will arise and be potent to save.
Referring to this subject as a proper basis for classification, our Attorney-General, in his argument before us, has well said: "Prior to the adoption of the present Constitution, household and kitchen furniture to the value of $200 was exempt from execution. The lawmaking power of this State has always realized that the loss of those articles necessary for comfortable and decent living entails great suffering upon women and children, frequently resulting in the breaking up of a home and in the creation of conditions which are a menace to the public health and to the public prosperity.
"The statute under consideration is a logical and lawful extension of the protection which it has always been the policy of the law to afford this peculiar class of property. The General Assembly knew that the *517 man who mortgages his household goods does so because he has nothing else to mortgage. He is the poor man, the illiterate man, and his poverty and his ignorance make him the easy prey of the (653) usurer.
"The General Assembly also knew that in some of the cities of the State there were springing up a class of men who were selling money, like furniture, on the installment plan. It was to save the things necessary to the existence of a home from the grasp of such men that the act of 1907 was passed.
"We submit that the statute tends to preserve the domestic peace, to promote the family health and prosperity, and is a valid exercise of the police power of the State.
"It is not class legislation; it operates alike on all who take mortgages on household and kitchen furniture. It regulates a business and does not create a class."
It was further contended that inasmuch as the property on its sale had not repaid the actual amount of the loan, no usury had been received and therefore no violation of the statute had been established, citing Rushingv. Bevins,
The evidence of the State tends to establish that "for a loan of $10 a note of $16.75 was taken, secured by a mortgage on household and kitchen furniture worth at least $25," which would constitute an usurious transaction within the meaning of the statute. 5 A. and E., p. 886, citingBank v. Wareham Co.,
No error.
Cited: S. v. Davis,
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