169 Mo. 38 | Mo. | 1902
— This is a bill of interpleader. The case made is this: Oliver & O’Bryan were wholesale liquor dealers in Kansas City. Mrs. S. J. Smith is a resident of Connecticut, and for years has been lending money in Kansas Oity, through her brother, B. Hoyt, who had full power to act for her, and in many eases, as in this instance, made loans for her without her knowledge. On June 6, 1893, Oliver & O’Bryan borrowed $1,600 from Mrs. Smith, through Hoyt, and on June 8, 1893, they borrowed $2,200 more. The $1,600' loan was for ninety days, with interest from maturity. The $2,200 was for four months, with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, payable semiannually, and if not so paid to be compounded. The $1,600 note was secured by the-pledge of a warehouse receipt issued by the Western Storage- and Warehouse Company for forty barrels of whiskey stored with said company by Oliver & O’Bryan and owned by them. The $2,200 note was secured by a similar receipt for fifty-five-barrels of whiskey.
At the time these notes were given, Hoyt agreed that, although they purported to be payable in ninety days and four
Thereafter, on March 13, 1894, Oliver & O’Bryan gave .a chattel mortgage on all of said ninety-five barrels of whiskey (with other security named) to Robert S. Patterson and the M. N. Monarch Company, to secure certain indebtedness due by Oliver & O’Bryan to them. ’ This mortgage recited that as to the whiskey aforesaid, the mortgage was “subject to ■claims, charges and outstanding liens against said whiskey.”
On the same day, March 13, 1894, Oliver & O’Bryan .gave a second chattel mortgage on the-same whiskey (and other property) to the plaintiffs' in error, Glasner et al., to secure what they owed them. This mortgage also, after describing this whiskey, contained a provision that the mortgage was '“subject to claims, charges and outstanding liens against said whiskey,” and also that it was subject to the first chattel mortgage to Patterson and the Monarch Company. Afterwards, Patterson and the Monarch Company, for value, assigned their •claim to the whiskey to one of the plaintiffs in error (acting for them all) who was also one of the beneficiaries under the ■second mortgage, subject, however, to the second mortgage.
■ Oliver & O’Bryan were unable to meet their obligations, so on May 18' 1894, the holders of the second mortgage began ■ a replevin suit, without bond, against the storage company to recover possession of the whiskey. Thereafter, on June 7,
When the first replevin suit came on for trial, and when it appeared to the court that there were two replevin suits pending against the storage company, for the same whiskey,, the court stopped the trial of the replevin suit, and ordered the storage company to file a bill for an interpleader against Mrs. Smith and the holders of the second mortgage, the plaintiffs in error herein.
This was done, and this is the case now at bar. Mrs. Smith claims title by virtue of the pledge to her of the warehouse receipts for the whiskey. The holders of the second mortgage, Giasner' et al., claim title under their mortgage,, and claim that Mrs. Smith’s loan was tainted with usury, which renders her pledge void under .the statute. To parry this, Mrs. Smith claims, first, that the two per cent paid to her brother was only a reasonable compensation to her brother for his services, with which she had nothing to do, and, hence, there is no usury and her pledge is not void; and, further, that the holders of the second mortgage can not be heard to-plead usury because they expressly took their mortgage “subject to claims, charges and outstanding liens against said whiskey.”
The trial court entered judgment for Mrs. Smith, discharged the storage company with an allowance for its attorneys and for storage, and Giasner and others appealed.
I.
Usury.
The plaintiffs in error claim that the loan by Mrs. Smith to Oliver & O’Bryan was tainted with usury, and, hence, the pledge of the warehouse receipts to her was void, and, therefore, they have a complete title to the whiskey by virtue of
This claim is based upon two grounds: first, that the borrowers paid Mrs. Smith interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum upon the whole loan, and they also paid Hoyt two per cent additional, which made the interest ten per cent, an .amount in excess of the legal rate (sec. 3706, R. S. 1899), and made the pledge securing the loan invalid and illegal, under •section 3706, Revised Statutes 1899; and, second, that the $2,200 note provided for compounding the interest every six months, contrary to section 3711, Revised Statutes 1899, which prohibits the compounding of interest oftener than •once a year, and, therefore, the loan is usurious and the pledge void.
The compounding of interest oftener than once a year is prohibited by the statute. But a violation of this provision does not make the mortgage, or lien, or pledge, void — it simply makes that provision of the contract void. Section 3711, Revised Statutes 1899, prohibiting the compounding of inter•est oftener than once a year has been on the statute books of this State ever since 1845. [Sec. 5977, R. S. 1889; sec. 2728, R. S. 1879; sec. 6, ch. 89, R. S. 1865; sec. 6, ch. 85, R. S. 1855; sec. 6, ch. 88, R. S. 1845.] But it was never •construed that this statute had any effect upon the validity of the contract, in other respects, nor upon the mortgage, lien or pledge given to secure the loan.
Prior'to the Act of 1891 (Laws-1891, p. 170), the defendant might plead usury, and upon the fact of usury being ascertained, a judgment was entered for the real amount loaned, with legal interest added, but the interest went to the school fund and not to the lender.
The Act of 1891, made a radical change in the law. That ■act (now secs. 3709 and 3710, R. S. 1899) is as follows:
“Sec. 1. Usury may be pleaded as a defense in civil actions in the courts of this State, and upon proof that usur
“Sec. 2. In" actions for tbe enforcement of liens upon personal property pledged or mortgaged to secure indebtedness, or to maintain or secure possession of property so pledged or mortgaged, or in any other case when tbe validity of such a lien is drawn in question, proof upon tbe trial that tbe party bolding or claiming to hold any such lien bas received or exacted usurious interest for such indebtedness shall render any mortgage or pledge of personal property, or any lien whatsoever thereon given to secure such indebtedness, invalid and illegal.”
It will thus be observed that under tbe law, all payments, whether made in the shape of interest, or commissions or brokerage or as principal, may be deducted from the sum actually loaned with legal interest added, and if the sum so paid in any of the said shapes or forms, or by whatever name it might be called, equals the loan and legal interest, the debt is considered paid and discharged. And in addition to this, if any mortgage or pledge is given to secure a loan that'is tainted with usury, as aforesaid, the statute destroys the mortgage, lien or pledge absolutely by declaring it invalid and illegal.
By applying these principles to the facts of the case at bar, it folloAvs that the transaction between Mrs. Smith and Oliver & O’Bryan was usurious, because more than eight per ■cent per annum was paid by the borrowers for the use of the money, to-wit, two per cent additional commissions or broker
The contention that Mrs. Smith got no part of this excess, and did not even know of it, is no defense. She did not know either of the fact that such a loan had been made to Oliver & O’Bryan for her. But this will not avail her. Eor her brother had full power to act for her and to lend her money without consulting her. He was therefore an alter ego, and his acts and his knowledge are her acts and her knowledge— and his exaction or receipts, in any form or by any name, of a greater amount of interest than the law permits, makes the transaction as usurious as if she had acted for herself. She knew she paid her brother nothing for his services. The statute is leveled against taking usurious interest in any form, and it expressly recognizes and brings within its condemnation the form of collecting such excess as commissions or brokerage, whether the same be for the benefit of the lender or of any agent, broker or other person employed by the lender.
The pledge to Mrs. Smith was therefore void, and her mortgage is of no force in this case, unless it be true, as she claims, that the plaintiffs in error are estopped to plead such usury.
n.
Estoppel.
The plaintiffs in error are creditors of Oliver & O’Bryan, and, hence, are privies in representation with them, and can plead usury in the Smith loan that avoids the pledge. [Coleman v. Cole, 158 Mo. l. c. 260.] Under our statute, the mortgagor can plead usury, and thus make the mortgage or pledge void.. [Adler Clothing Co. v. Corl, 155 Mo. 149.] This
Counsel for Mrs. Smith contend, however, that because the plaintiffs in error took a mortgage that expresses to be subject to all outstanding claims, charges and liens, they are es-topped to deny the validity of the prior pledge to Mrs. Smith, and cases from other jurisdictions are cited in support of this contention. But those cases have no application here, because, even the pledgor or mortgagor under our statute can avoid the pledge or mortgage, and what the pledgor or mortgagor can do in this regard; his creditors, being his privies in representation, can do as fully as he can do. The recital in the mortgage given to the plaintiffs in error could not make the pledge to Mrs. Smith valid, under our statute, any more than the recital in the pledge could. The recital in the mortgage binds the mortgagees so far as the outstanding pledges or liens or charges are legal, but not as to such as have no validity in law. The plaintiffs in error are not, therefore, estopped by reason of the recitals aforesaid in their mortgage.
ni.
After Mrs. Smith got possession of the whiskey by her writ of replevin suit, she sold it. This she had no right to do pending that suit. [Mohr v. Langan, 162 Mo. 474.]
It is insisted, however, that the plaintiffs in error participated in that sale, and can not now be heard to question it or to claim that the whiskey did not bring its full value. It cropped out during the trial that Barzen, one of the plaintiffs in error, attended that sale and arranged with one Rieger that he should buy in the whiskey at $45 a barrel and that Barzen would take one-half of it off of Rieger’s hands at that price and that this was done. No such issue was tendered by the pleadings and upon timely objection, the court would doubtless have
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to ascertain the value of the whiskey at. the time it was taken by Mrs. Smith, under the writ of replevin, and to enter judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in error for the value of the whiskey so found and against Mrs. Smith, and in favor of the Western Storage and Warehouse Co. against Mrs. Smith for its reasonable storage charges and attorney’s fee for filing this suit, and a judgment for costs against Mrs. Smith. All concur.
MODIFICATION.
The foregoing opinion and the judgment herein are hereby modified so as to direct the circuit court to allow the plaintiffs in error interest on the ascertained value of the whiskey at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date it was taken by Mrs. Smith and B. Hoyt from the storage company until the day of judgment hereunder, and opinion and judg
May 21, 1902.