Young v. First National Bank

22 Ga. App. 58 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1918

Harwell, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) It is in- ’ sisted, in the first place, that the bank, being' a national bank, had no right -to recover attorney’s fees; that such recovery would be usurious and beyond its charter powers as conferred by the national banking act. There is nothing in the national banking act that prevents the recovery of attorney’s fees by a national bank, unless they are held to be usury. In Georgia, by statute, such recovery is permitted, provided the required notice is given; and there no exception is made in the case of national hanks. Civil Code (1910), § 4252. In National Bank of Athens v. Danforth, 80 Ga. 55 (8), 70 (7 S. E. 546), it was said: . “A contract to pay attorney’s fees for collecting, in addition to principal and interest, is not on its face usurious; nor does it become usurious by reducing the debt to judgment and including in the judgment ten per cent, for attorney’s fees.” See also Merck v. American Freehold &c. Co., 79 Ga. 213 (7 S. E. 265). In Fowler v. Equitable Trust Co., 141 U. S. 411 (12 Sup. Ct. 8, 35 L. ed. 794), it was said: “In Illinois a provision in a trust deed providing for the payment by the borrower, in addition to ordinary costs, of a reasonable solicitor’s fee, not exceeding five per cent., in the event of a suit *63to foreclose, does not of itself make the contract usurious; nor is such contract void as against public policy.” Mr. Justice Harlan, in discussing this question of attorney’s fees, said: “The loan was not therefore infected with usury, unless the provision in the trust deed providing for the payment by the borrower, in addition to ordinary costs, of a reasonable solicitor’s fee, not exceeding five per cent., for collection, in the event of a suit, to foreclose. But it it is the law of Illinois that a provision of that' character does not,. of itself, make the contract usurious.” The recovery of attorney’s fees was upheld by the Supreme Court of the United States in that case. The court did not err in holding in the instant case that a national bank may recover attorney’s fees when suing on a note which, provides for such recovery.

The headnotes state the principles of law which should govern this case. The difficulty lies in the application of those principles to the facts of the case. The general rule is that the defense of usury against a bona fide holder for value, without notice of the usury, of a negotiable promissory note, who acquires the note before maturity, is not good unless the contract reserving usury is made void by the taint of usury. Neither the statute of Georgia nor the national banking act makes a contract tainted with usury void. 39 Cyc. 1078. See the discussion of this, question by Mr. Justice Lamar in Weed v. Gainesville &c. Railroad Co., 119 Ga. 576-593 (46 S. E. 885). But the Supreme Court of Georgia holds that the defense of usury is good even against a bona fide holder of a negotiable promissory note who acquired the note before its maturity. Atlanta Savings Bank v. Spencer, 107 Ga. 629 (7), 636 (33 S. E. 878). However, in the instant case this question of law is really not pertinent, because the bank had notice of the' usury charged or received. It is not disputed that the original loan was $800, and that the bank charged the defendants a usurious rate of interest on the old notes. Moreover, this transaction in January, 1917, which resulted in the substitution of C. B. Rogers for the bank and the giving of this note to him, was brought about with full .knowledge on the part of the officers of the bank, to wit, its president and cashier. The cashier, P. J. Rogers (Phonzo Rogers), is the son of C. R. Rogers, and it is not disputed that the bank, through its officers, had full knowledge of the fact that this note sued on was given in’ renewal of the old note due the bank *64reserving usury. The note on which suit is brought was acquired by the bank with knowledge of the fact that the consideration of the note was a usurious debt due the bank.

With reference to the application of payments as stated in headnote 5: Under the law of this gitate, payments on a usurious debt, when not otherwise directed, will be applied according to § 3433 of the Civil Code (1910) of Georgia,—that is, first to the payment of lawful interest, and then to the principal. Haskins v. Bank of State of Georgia, 100 Ga. 216 (27 S. E. 985); Atlanta Savings Bank v. Spencer, supra. This has been held because in this State, prior to the act approved August 18, 1916 (Ga. L. 48), the taint of usury did not cause a forfeiture of the entire interest, but only the excess of interest above eight per cent.; hence any payment on a note, when not otherwise directed, was, as the law then stood, properly applied to lawful interest first, and then to the principal. Under the’ national banking act, however, and under the law of Georgia since the act of 1916, supra, the entire interest is forfeited by the taint of* usury in the contract; hence there will be no application of any payment to interest, but any payment which is made, unless it is especially directed by agreement of the parties to the payment of interest, must be applied to the principal. The writer mentions this to show that there is no real conflict in the law of this State and the law in reference to national banks as announced in the 5th headnote. Of course, if by understanding or agreement between the parties a payment is applied to the reductipn of interest on a note held by a national bank, the debtor can not plead such in reduction of the principal when sued thereon by the bank, but his remedy would be to bring a separate action for the penalty in two years after the payment of ’the interest is made.

It is insisted by the bank that when this note was taken, in January, 1913, payable to C. E. Eogers, the debt due the bank was actually paid by -these defendants, and that they can not, because of the provisions of the national banking act as stated in the 4th headnote, pléad, as against the note sued on, the forfeiture of interest because of the reservation of usury in the original notes payable to the bank. The question arises: Was the debt that was due the bank in 1915 actually paid by the giving of the note to Eogers and the substitution of the new creditor, C. E. Eogers, a, *65director of the bank, or was this transaction in fact only a renewal by the bank of the debt due to it, and was the substitution of Eogers as creditor an effort on the part of the bank, through its officers, to evade the charge or reservation of usury denounced by the national banking act? The statute contemplates an actual payment of the usury. First National Bank of Blakely v. Davis, 135 Ga. 687 (3) (70 S. E. 246, 36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 134). Promissory notes are not payment until themselves paid. Civil Code (1910), § 4314. If this transaction was an actual payment of the bank’s debt, then the defendants can not plead, against the notes sued on, the forfeiture of all interest included therein, because . of the usurious rate of interest charged or reserved in the old notes. The defendants insist, however, that this was simply a device or contrivance on the part of the bank, through its officers, to substitute an ostensible creditor in order to evade the usury laws; that there was no actual payment to the bank in January, 1915. They claim that C. E. Eogers was never known in the transaction; that they applied to the president of the bank to renew the debt; that he agreed to renew it, and that they did renew it with the bank by giving this note; that they had no communication with C. E. Eogers. They insist that the real truth of.the transaction is that C. E. Eogers did not lend them any money, but that the cashier simply made the note payable to C. E. Eogers, and it was immediately turned over to the bank, and that it was a renewal of the debt to the bank, and that this made a question for the jury to determine, and that the court erred in directing a verdict.

In this State “No contrivance or arrangement between the parties to any such unlawful transaction or their privies shall have the effect to discharge such forfeiture, except it be an actual and full payment of the amount feo forfeited.” Civil Code (1910), § 3440. This section has reference' to preceding sections touching the forfeiture of excess interest charged or taken or contracted to be reserved, charged, or taken under the laws of Georgia. “If from á consideration of the whole transaction it becomes apparent that there exists a corrupt intent to violate the usury laws, the courts will permit no scheme or device however ingenious, to hide the face of the usury.” 39 Cyc. 918 (4), and citations. “Any contrivance to evade the statutes against usury and to enable the lender to receive more than the legal interest, will render the *66transaction usurious though legal on its face, since the courts will always look to the actual nature of the transaction and not to the form which the parties have given to it.” 29 Am. Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), 461-2. “Where in a given case the undisputed evidence discloses a scheme or device adopted by a lender of money, from which it is palpably apparent that no other purpose was in view than an attempt to obtain more than the lawful interest on the money loaned, it is not error for the judge to refuse to submit to the jury the question as to whether there is usury in the transaction. If, however, there be doubt as to whether the transaction is a cover for usury or one bona fide entered into in the ordinary course of business, it should be left to a jury to determine from all the facts and circumstances of the case whether it was a legitimate transaction or a mere device to evade the laws against usury.” Atlanta Savings Bank v. Spencer, supra; MacKenzie v. Garnett, 78 Ga. 251; Pope v. Marshall, 78 Ga. 635 (4 S. E. 116). See also Gadsden v. Thrush, 56 Neb. 565 (4) (76 N. W. 1060, 45 L. R. A. 654).

In the national banking act it is distinctly stated that the taking, receiving, or charging of a rate' greater than is allowed by the act-shall be .deemed a forfeiture of the entire interest which the noté, bill, or other evidence of -.debt carries with it, or which has been agreed to be paid thereon. The act further provides that a penalty of double the amount of interest paid may be recovered, if suit is commenced within- a period of two years from the time the interest is paid. The inhibition, therefore, against the charging of usury .by national banks is clear and plain. Certainly the courts, in the face of this law, will not countenance a transaction which is consummated for the purpose of evading the forfeiture, though the transaction be connived at by the debtor. The debtor can not make such a transaction legal by agreeing to pay the usury. If, therefore, the arrangement made in this ease, that is, the substitution of a new creditor, to wit, a director of the bank, by the giving of a note to him and thereafter transferring this note to the bank,'was for the purpose of evading the usury law, then it will be held that the giving of this note to Eogers was simply a renewal of the debt by the bank itself, and the debtor would have the right to plead, against the note sued on, the forfeiture of the entire interest included therein, as *67provided by the national banking act, and also to set off against the original debt such- payments on the notes as had not by agreement of the parties been applied to the payment of interest.

It is doubtless true that a national bank might evade the usury laws by the payment of its debt by another creditor and the substitution in its place, in good faith, of another creditor. In that event the remedy of the debtor would be to bring an action against the bank for the recovery of double the interest so paid. If, therefore, in the instant ease the truth is that the debtors in good faith borrowed money from C. E. Eogers and actually paid off the note to the bank, and thereafter the note given to Eogers for the bona ñde loan made by him to the debtors was transferred to the bank by Eogers, the defendants can not plead a forfeiture by the bank of the interest included in the note, because of the provision of the national banking act that a separate action must be brought to recover interest actually paid. The bank in that event would be entitled to recover the full amount due on the note. We think, however, that this issue should have been submitted to a jury, under proper instructions from the court. This, like any other matter, can be established by circumstantial evidence, and there was sufficient evidence in this case to authorize the submission of this question to a jury.. Furr v. Keesler, 3 Ga. App. 188 (2) (59 S. E. 596).

Young 'testified: “In 1915 I asked him [the president of the bank] to renew it, and he said he would. I went there to his office and he was pretty busy, and next time I came.by he said he would take the note, that Mr. Eogers would take the note. I don’t know which Mr. Eogers it was. I had the transaction with Mr. Eogers, the cashier of the bank, Mr. Phonzo Eogers. Mr. C. E. Eogers was not there. Mr. Phonzo Eogers was the cashier of the First National Bank at that.time. I know his father, 0. E. Eogers when I see him, but he was not there. He did not have anything to do with this transaction. I never asked him anything about it at all; I never had any talk with him.” Weldon testified: “As to what relation C. E. Eogers had with this last note—none whatever that I knew anything about at the timé. P. J. Eogers (Phonzo Eogers) the assistant cashier of the bank was present.” According to the testimony' of P. J. Eogers, the cashier, it appears that he represented his father in the transaction, that his father had *68nothing to do with the note except through him, and made the loan through him and paid the bank’s claim, and that this note was discounted by the bank after being given to his father.

For an excellent note collating decisions construing the usury laws pertaining to national banks, see 56 L. R. A. 673, 682. It is there also stated that on a usurious contract a national bank is entitled to interest on the principal sum recovered.from the date of its judgment only.

We think, under the principles stated in the headnotes and in this opinion, that the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff for the full amount sued for, and 'the judgment overruling the motion for new trial is

Reversed,

Broyles, P. J., and Bloodworth, J., concur.