278 F. 597 | 6th Cir. | 1922
At. the time of bankruptcy the Nashville Terminals owed the bankrupt a sum of money as wages earned by the bankrupt as its employee. The bankrupt had assigned specific portions of this indebtedness to each of three companies, styling themselves, respectively, as a “finance company,” a “brokerage company,” and a “trading company.” The indebtedness from the Terminals Company was scheduled among the bankrupt’s assets. The three companies named were scheduled as unsecured creditors. The trustee obtained from the Terminals Company the wages in question, with notice of the assignments, and three days after the adjudication filed his petition, stating in general terms the situation referred to, and that the three companies claimed title under written instruments purporting on their face to be unconditional sales or assignments of wages or salary, but that all were “mere devices to evade the usury statutes,” and the so-called sales “mere shams and frauds, intended only to cover up the loan of moneys at usurious rates of interest” — both principal and interest being thus forfeited to the borrower under the laws of Tennessee. Such forfeiture, in case of interest charged in excess of 6 per cent, per annum, is created by section 3522a21 of Shannon’s Tennessee Code of 1917,
The Tennessee Finance Company answered, denying that its transaction was a loan, or device to evade the usury statutes, and asserting it a good-faith purchase of such wages to the extent of $22, for a cash consideration of $20, paid the bankrupt therefor.
One wishing to obtain money made application in writing on a printed form, which purported to be an application to sell his wages to such company; the applicant, on another printed form, consented to assign to such company a stipulated amount of his earned wages, and instructed his employer to pay to such company the amount set out in the assignment. It was specifically stated, throughout the papers in question, that the “transaction was not a loan, but a conditional sale of the bankrupt’s wages, to the extent set out in said assignment or transaction.” The companies charged $1 for the use of $10, and .$2 where the wages amounted to $20, and a similar ratio .for sums above that amount. The Terminals Company paid off twice a month. The
The District Judge held the controlling question to be one of fact, viz. whether the assignments of wages were in fact absolute sales as purported on their face, or whether they were loans, and the assignment a device to cover up loans at usurious interest rates. The court held the referee’s conclusion to accord with the greater weight of the evidence, and so affirmed the referee’s order.
If the finding of facts below is to be accepted, the order made was correct. McWhite v. State, supra, is directly in point. We find nothing conflicting with this proposition in either of the Tennessee decisions cited in which a contrary conclusion was readied on the facts,
The question whether appellant gave the Terminals Company the statutory notice to perfect its claimed title is not of great importance. Not only is it not clear that such notice was given in this case previous to bankruptcy, but the giving or failure to give notice is significant only as it affects the question of the real nature of the transaction; and it appears that such notice was never given by appellant until after the decision in the McWhite Case, supra, which was less than a
The order of the District Court is affirmed.
As the other two companies have not appealed, their pleadings are omitted from the record.
This ease was a criminal prosecution for the violation of the criminal statute relating to usury (being section 0732 of Shannon’s Tennessee Code of ]!)17), upon a state of facts generally similar to that found by the referee in the instant ease. It was held that “the jury were fully justified in concluding that the real transaction was a loan, and that the assignment was a device to cover np the loan.”
In Nashville Terminals v. Tennessee Finance Co., supra, in which the transaction was sustained as a sale, the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals is based on the proposition that the findings of fact by the Circuit Judge are sustained where there is any material evidence to sustain them, as in the case of verdict by jury, and that of the Supreme Court of Tennessee on the ground that that court is, by the concurrent judgment of the Circuit Judge and the Court of Civil Appeals, barrod from further considering the facts.
The- McWhite decision seems to have been rendered January 15, 1921, instead of January 29th, as the referee evidently had in mind in stating the date when appellant began filing notice of assignment.