Bedford v. Fox

970 S.W.2d 251, 333 Ark. 509, 1998 Ark. LEXIS 381
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 11, 1998
Docket97-1425
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 970 S.W.2d 251 (Bedford v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bedford v. Fox, 970 S.W.2d 251, 333 Ark. 509, 1998 Ark. LEXIS 381 (Ark. 1998).

Opinion

Robert L. Brown, Justice.

This case involves the issues of (1) whether a contract is usurious, and (2) assuming it is, whether the appellees, James Fox and Patricia Fox, are estopped from raising the usury claim. Because we are convinced that the proof clearly supports an estoppel defense, we reverse and remand.

On January 13, 1997, James Fox and Patricia Fox, who are husband and wife, filed an amended complaint for declaratory judgment against appellants Jack Bedford and Jack D. Bedford, Inc. The Foxes alleged that they entered into an agreement with Color Mate Photo, Inc., on March 18, 1992, to purchase the photography business owned by that corporation. Color Mate Photo, Inc., was owned by Jack Bedford. The name of the corporation was subsequently changed to Jack D. Bedford, Inc. According to the Foxes, Bedford knew that the interest rate charged on two installment promissory notes executed on that date exceeded what is permissible under Article 19, § 13 of the Arkansas Constitution, as amended by Constitutional Amendment 60. The Foxes asserted that irrespective of this knowledge, the parties executed the agreement, and the Foxes paid the illegal interest required under the notes. The Foxes asked for a judgment declaring the notes usurious and void as to the unpaid interest plus an award of twice the amount of the interest paid.

At trial, the testimony was in conflict. Bedford testified that in November 1991, he and the Foxes agreed that the photography business would be sold for the sum of $350,000. He testified that his attorney, David Nixon, prepared the March 18, 1992 “Final Agreement for Sale of Business” as well as the two promissory notes dated that same date, one executed in favor of Color Mate Photo, Inc., now Jack D. Bedford, Inc., in the amount of $245,000, and the other in favor of Jack Bedford in the amount of $30,000. The two notes represented part of the purchase price, which Bedford was financing himself. He testified that the sales agreement stated that it was effective as of November 6, 1991. However, he acknowledged that the promissory notes did not refer to any date other than March 18, 1992, which was the date of their execution by the Foxes.

Bedford further explained that prior to March 18, 1992, there had been discussions among the parties about the lawful rate of interest in Arkansas because Bedford recognized that the Federal Reserve Discount Rate had fallen since November 1991.1 Bedford testified that he approached the Foxes about raising the principal and lowering the interest rate for the loans because he knew that the 10% interest rate was no longer legal. He maintained that the parties continued with the agreement under the belief that the 10% interest rate had been “locked in” under the preliminary November 6, 1991 sales agreement. Bedford concluded that the reference to the date of November 6, 1991, as the effective date in the March 18, 1992 sales agreement controlled for purposes of the appropriate interest rate under the two promissory notes. According to Bedford, he first learned that the Foxes were claiming that the 10% interest rate was illegal in January 1997, when he was served with the complaint which initiated this litigation.

David Nixon, Bedford’s attorney, testified that he was employed by Bedford in February 1992 and that he knew the Foxes and Bedford had reached a preliminary agreement on November 6, 1991. He explained that he knew the Federal Reserve Discount Rate on March 18, 1992, would render the 10% interest rate usurious and for that reason he intended to make November 6, 1991, the effective date of the promissory notes. He admitted, however, that the promissory notes themselves did not refer to the date of November 6, 1991, and that they also failed to incorporate by reference the March 18, 1992 sales agreement.

Nixon emphasized, however, that he drafted the March 18, 1992 sales agreement with three references to the November 6, 1991 preliminary agreement, and that the Foxes’ counsel, James McCord, agreed that November 6, 1991, was the effective date of the agreement. McCord, according to Nixon, never broached to him any misgiving that the 10% interest rate would be illegal if executed in that fashion. Nixon also explained that he believed he was merely memorializing an agreement that had been reached in November 1991.

James Fox testified that he and his wife moved from Iowa to Fayetteville in March 1991. Prior to that date, an Iowa attorney, Mark Beckman, was responsible for drafting the preliminary agreements, but after that, the Foxes employed James McCord. Fox testified that he was informed for the first time at closing on March 18, 1992, that Bedford could not legally charge a 10% interest rate under Arkansas’s usury laws as of that date. He stated that Bedford offered to raise the purchase price to $400,000 as a solution and to lower the interest rate. Fox testified that he rejected the offer. He added that he was first told by a third-party banker that the two promissory notes contained an illegal rate of interest in the Fall of 1992, when he attempted to borrow money from Mcllroy Bank and Trust to purchase equipment. He was later told by the same banker that the interest rate was illegal in 1994 and 1995. He also admitted that James McCord informed him that the interest rate was illegal on March 18, 1992. Despite this knowledge, Fox stated that he continued making monthly payments on the notes until 1997.

Fox further admitted that he calculated as of December 31, 1996, that he owed Bedford $226,841.84 in principal but that he could recover $240,575.36, or twice the amount of the interest that had been paid up to that point, which was $120,286.18. This would have yielded the Foxes a net recovery as of that date in the amount of $13,733.52. A year earlier at the end of 1995, he calculated that they had paid $96,935.98 in interest, which multiplied twice would render a recovery of $193,871.96. At that point, the Foxes still would have owed Bedford and his corporation a net amount of $45,081.63. Therefore, because the Foxes made payments on the notes for an additional year, they went from owing Bedford approximately $45,000 at the end of 1995 to a net recovery of approximately $13,000 at the end of 1996, if they asserted a claim of usury. He also testified that he was not aware that the reference in the March 18, 1992 sales agreement to the effective date of November 6, 1991, had legal significance for purposes of the interest rate.

The trial court entered its order and determined that the interest rate on the two promissory notes was usurious as of March 18, 1992, which was the date the court found to be the date of the contract. The court entered judgment for the Foxes in the amount of $231,009.96 against Jack D. Bedford, Inc., which was twice the amount of interest paid on the $245,000 note, and judgment against Bedford in the amount of $28,286.96, which was twice the amount of interest paid on the $30,000 note. The trial court also determined that the defense of estoppel was not applicable against the Foxes because although all parties knew the 10% interest rate was usurious, the Foxes were not responsible for creating the infirmity. Bedford and Jack D. Bedford, Inc., appeal from the trial court’s order.

We need not address Bedford’s first issue relating to whether the March 18, 1992 sales agreement constituted the contract as opposed to the November 6, 1991 preliminary agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
970 S.W.2d 251, 333 Ark. 509, 1998 Ark. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bedford-v-fox-ark-1998.