Bank v. Walter

104 Tenn. 11
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 104 Tenn. 11 (Bank v. Walter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank v. Walter, 104 Tenn. 11 (Tenn. 1900).

Opinion

Beaed, J".

Tbe suit is upou -two notes for $988.33 each, dated March 21, 1896, due at sixty-days, made by defendant and one Vaughn Hartman, now deceased, payable to the complainant bank.

The defendant was surety, and his defense is that the bank and the principal debtor entered into an agreement, upon valuable consideration, for an extension of time upon the notes, without his consent,' which operated to release him.

The Chancellor decreed in favor of the bank, and the defendant appealed. The Court of -Chancery Appeals affirmed the Chancellor’s decree, and the defendant has appealed to this Court.

The Court of Chancery Appeals has found all the facts in accordance with the defendant’s contention, and these facts are stated in substance, and briefly:

1. The defendant, Walter, was only surety upon the notes, and the bank knew this fact.

2. The defendant had refused to renew the notes with the principal, and the bank also knew this fact.

3. With this knowledge, the bank, on June 8, 1896, in order, as the cashier testified, -“to keep the notes from lying in the bank past due, charged Vaughn Hartman’s deposit or account in the bank [13]*13with the necessary amount of interest, and extended the time for the payment of the notes sixty days/’ indorsing the extension on the bach of the notes, as follows: “May 20, 23, 1896. Int. pd., and time extended to July 25, 1896. Bell, Teller.” This arrangement was made known to and approved by Hartman, the principal debtor, on, or a few days after, June 10, 1896, and all this was done without the knowledge or consent of defendant, the surety.

4. The rate of interest thus paid in advance by Hartman to the bank was 8 per cent, per an-num for the agreed period of extension of sixty days.

Hpon these facts it is now insisted by the defendant that the decree pronounced by that Court cannot be sustained. That the payment of lawful interest in advance is a sufficient consideration for an extension of time, or agreement for delay, is well settled, if not by the entire, at least by the great weight of authority. Mr. Daniel, in his work on Neg. Inst., Sec. 1317, says that “the actual payment of interest in advance for the extended period is a sufficient consideration upon which to base an agreement of extension.” . . . In Words very similar, the same proposition is stated in Randolph on Commercial Paper, Vol. 2, Sec. 965. These authors cite many cases which support their text.

It is clear that an agreement for forbearance, [14]*14resting on snob payment, binding as it does tbe bolder, of commercial paper, if made by bim witb tbe principal or party whose primary duty it is to take care of it, without tbe knowledge or consent of tbe surety, will discharge tbe latter.- Tbe same authorities referred to as supporting tbe first also sustain this proposition.

Not only will this be tbe result of an express agreement, but one will often be implied from tbe transactions between tbe creditor and tbe principal debtor so as to relieve tbe surety who has no knowledge of these transactions. “It is not necessary,” said this Court, in Union Bank v. McClung, 9 Hum., 98, “that there should be. a positive agreement to accept of tbe proposed terms of a contract; an implied one will do, and this implication is fairly inferable where tbe parties proceed and act upon tbe proposed terms (as in this case) in the manner they would have done provided there bad been an express agreement to that effect. Tbe reason why tbe bolder of a note or bill shall not contract for delay witb tbe maker without discharging tbe -indorser is because such contract is to tbe detriment of tbe indorser. To bold that be may give such delay upon an implied agreement, and receive in advance bis áccru-ing interest for such delay, without releasing tbe indorsers, would be to deprive them of a principle of security guaranteed to them by law, and this upon a mere quibble.”

[15]*15In Gardner v. Gardner, 23 S. C., 588, the Court said: “Interest for money is defined to be ‘the compensation which is paid by the borrower to the lender, or by the debtor to the creditor, for its use.’ ” Bon. Law Diet., 652. Hence, when a creditor' receives interest on his debt up to a certain period he receives from his creditor compensation for the use of the money by the debtor up to that period, and until that period arrives he cannot demand payment of the money, for, by receiving compensation for its use by the debtor for the specified time, he has, by necessary imr plication, agreed that the debtor shall have the use of the money, for which he has paid for the specified time. . . . There can be no question of intention, for parties are presumed to intend the necessary legal effect of their acts.”

It being, beyond doubt, that an advance payment of lawful interest for a fixed period will bind the creditor to his agreement for delay, and so release the nonassenting surety, the question arises, does the fact that the advance payment .is at a rate in excess of the lawful rate vitiate it altogether, and make of no effect, as a supporting consideration, that portion which is within the lawful rate ?

This is the question presented in this record, the answer to which, by the Court of Chancery Appeals, is how made the subject of complaint. That Court held that the payment of eight per [16]*16cent, as a consideration, ■ was usurious, and that the agreement for delay resting on this consideration was not an enforceable or valid contract, and therefore did not serve to release the surety.

Was the eight per cent, paid usury, or did it simply embrace usury! We think both our statutes and decisions very clearly answer this question. Interest and usury are defined by Shannon’s Code, as follows:

“Sec. 3492. Interest is the compensation which may be demanded by the lender from the borrower, or the creditor from the debtor, for the use of money.

“Sec. 3493. The amount of said compensation shall be at the rate of six dollars for the use of one hundred dollars for one year, and every excess over that rate is usury.”

In other words, 'the compensation up to 6 per cent, per annum is interest; any excess is usury, and the two things are entirely distinct.

This distinction is fully recognized by the decisions of this Court. It has been enforced by every case which has sanctioned a recovery of principal and ■ interest (6 per cent.) upon a contract or obligation affected with usury not appearing upon its face. Of course, where the usury appears upon the face of the contract or obligation, no suit can be maintained upon it for any purpose, upon the familiar rule that no action can [17]*17be grounded upon an obligation that shows upon its face that it was made in violation of law.

The following are among the numerous cases in this State wbicb recognize and enforce the distinctness and essential separateness of interest and usury —always allowing the former where the latter does not appear by the contract, and never allowing the latter in whatever way it is properly made to appear: Tillford v. Summers, 2 Yer., 255; Reed v. Moore, Meigs, 80; Boyers v. Boddie, 3 Hum., 666; Isler v. Branson, 6 Hum., 277; Bowers v. Douglass, 2 Head; Causey v. Yates, 8 Hum., 605; McFerrin v. White, 6 Cold., 499; Ward

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Bluebook (online)
104 Tenn. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-v-walter-tenn-1900.