173 Ky. 433 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing as to appellee, A. H. Hargis, upon original appeal, and affirming as to appellee, Hargis Commercial Bank, upon both the original and cross appeals.
The appellant, S. S. Taulbee, sought to recover, in this action, the sum of $2,705.08 from the appellees, A. H. Hargis and the Hargis Commercial Bank, which he alleged he had paid to them as usury. The court sustained a general demurrer to the petition and petition as amended, as far as any cause of action was attempted to be stated, as against the appellee, A. H. Hargis, and the petition as to him was dismissed. The Hargis Commercial Bank filed an answer and issues were formed between it and appellant, proof was taken and upon final hearing, a judgment was recovered against it, by the appellant, for the sum of $467.97, with interest from April 19th, 1913, until paid, and the petition, in so far as it sought any recovery in excess of .this sum against the Hargis Commercial Bank, was dismissed. The appellant appealed from both the judgment in favor of A. H. Hargis and from the judgment denying a recovery against the bank for any of the sum sued for in excess of $467.97. The Hargis Commercial Bank has taken a cross-appeal from the judgment against it.
When the proposition was made to the Hargis Commercial Bank to purchase the note, the matter was submitted to the committee of directors of the institution, which had control of the purchase and discounting of securities and it was determined to make the purchase of the note. When the note was transferred to the Phoenix & Third National Bank, its officers had no knowledge of the fact, that the note contained any usury or any other infirmity, and when it was purchased by the Hargis Commercial Bank, none of its officers, with the exception of A. H. Hargis, had knowledge, that it contained any usury, nor any reason to believe that there was any infirmity in the note. When the note became due, appellant, on the 12th day of April, 1912, executed a note to the Hargis Commercial Bank for the sum of $12,648.10, due and payable on April 12th, 1913. This note embraced the unpaid portion of the note which had been purchased from the Phoenix & Third National Bank and ten per cent, interest thereon for one year, which was added to the amount of the note, and he executed a mortgage to secure its payment. The note which was executed to Hargis on April 12th, 1911, and by him transferred to the Phoenix & Third National Bank, and by it to the Hargis Commercial Bank, was cancelled and turned over to the appellant. When the note last mentioned became due on April 12th, 1913, appellant renewed the debt by the execution of another note for it, but in five or six days, thereafter, discharged it, by paying the amount of it to the Hargis Commercial Bank. There does not seem to be any controversy, as to the amount of new usury, which was ascertained and included in the first note executed by appellant to the Hargis Commercial Bank, and paid by him, when he discharged the note — the sum being the amount for which the court rendered judgment in appellant’s favor against the bank. There can be no doubt that appellant should have had judgment for that sum, as it was beyond question usurious interest and was paid to the bank. The question for determination is: Is appellant, under the facts, entitled to recover of the Hargis Commercial Bank the entire amount of usury, which he paid
The mere assignment of a usurious obligation does not pay the usury, nor set the statute of limitations to running, because it is the samé usurious obligation, and no transaction has occurred sufficient to make a novation, which could be deemed a payment of the note and a discharge of it. In Parker v. Zweigart, 22 R. 113, it was broadly stated, that a mere assignment carried with it into the hands of the obligee the taint of all the usury that was contained in it. There is, however, a line of cases, as Blades v. Newman, 19 R. 1063; Smith v. Stone, 17 B. M. 171; McBrayer v. Collins, 18 B. M. 664; Wooldridge v. Cates, 2 J. M. 223, in which the principle is recognized, that if an obligor in a usurious note or obligation urges, induces, or procures an innocent third party to purchase the note and take an assignment
If the assignee of a usurious obligation takes it, with the full knowledge of the fact, that it embraces usury, and thereafter the obligor discharges it by executing a new note to the assignee for the old debt, he is not estopped nor precluded from complaining as against the payee in the new note of the usury, when it is attempted to be collected, but if an innocent third party, without knowledge of the fact, that an obligation contains usury, becomes the holder and purchaser of it for a valuable consideration, and thereafter the obligor discharges it, by exectuing a new note payable to the innocent holder for the old note, a now debt is thereby created, and the consideration for the new note will be deemed a valid one, although the usury from the old debt was carried over into the new without the knowledge of the payee, and when the obligor pays the new note, he will not have any cause of action against the payee of the new note for the usury which was brought into it from the old note nor can he resist the payment of the new note, by a plea of usury. This principle holds expressly where the obligor, by the execution of the new note, causes the assignee of the old obligation to thereby discharge from liability the assignor upon it. In such a state of facts, the usury embraced in the debt, when paid, must be reclaimed from the original lender and not from the payee in the new note. The fact that the statute, section 2219, Ky. Statutes, authorizes the recovery of usurious interest from the lender,
“If the renewal of a usurious note be made to a new party, who takes the obligation with the full knowledge of the usury in the original note, the renewal is usurious in his hands.
“When the debtor under a usurious obligation, which has come into the hands of an innocent purchaser for value, executes a new note to such third person, he will be deemed to have waived his right to set up usury and the new note will be deemed to be upon a valid consideration . . . . ”
In Clark v. Rodes, 12 Bush. 13, Rodes, as the assignor of Graham, sued Clark upon a note, which he held as assignee of Graham, and by agreement of parties, judgment was rendered against Clark upon the note. Clark thereafter paid the judgment and instituted a suit against Rodes and Graham to recover usury embraced in the note. It was held, that the agreed judgment by which Rodes released Graham as the assignor of the note was equivalent to the execution of a new note in satisfaction of the debt to Rodes, and hence amounted to a payment of the usury to Graham upon the date of the agreed judgment. Rodes was not held liable for any usury embraced in the note sued on, and the opinion of the court in that case sustains the principle above enunciated. It was, also, declared in Ryan v. Logan County Bank, supra, that if a new note is executed to the assignee for an old obligation containing usury of which the assignee had not- knowledge and the assignor released from liability, that the debtor is estopped to complain of any usury in the new note, as against the assignee;. In Stone v. McConnell, 1 Duvall 54, it was held that the execution of a new note to an assignee for an old debt, which is tainted with usury, the assignee being an innocent holder for value, that the obligor, in the new note, is estopped from complaining of usury in it, as against the payee. It was said in that case, that the new note payable to the assignee released the assignor from liability on the old note, and that the transaction amounted to a payment of the old note, and that no right of action or defense for the usury preyiously paid on the old obligation existed against the
It is, therefore, ordered that the judgment appealed from be reversed as to the appellee, A. H. Hargis, and affirmed as to the appellee, Hargis Commercial Bank, upon both the original and cross appeals, and the cause is 'remanded for other proper proceedings.