Brakeley v. Tuttle

3 W. Va. 86
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 3 W. Va. 86 (Brakeley v. Tuttle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brakeley v. Tuttle, 3 W. Va. 86 (W. Va. 1868).

Opinion

Maxwell, J.

The bill was demurred to on three grounds.

1st. Because the contract or contracts set forth in said bill are upon their face contrary to the statutes of Virginia and New York against taking illegal interest, and are usurious and void under the laws of both States.

2d. Because said bill seeks to enforce in effect the specific execution of alleged personal contracts in regard to personalty.

3d. Because it seeks to recover damages in equity for the alleged breach or breaches of such personalty contracts and for the conversion of personal property for which there is a remedy at law.

In answer to the first ground of demurrer, the contract is not upon its face usurious. The agreement for the advance and loan of money is only part of the contract, and it is a question of fact whether usury was intended or not. Smith vs. Marvin, 27 New York Rep., 137.

In answer to the second and third causes of demurrer the bill is not to enforce the specific execution of a contract for [131]*131personalty, nor to recover damages for tbe breach of a contract for the purchase of personalty, or for the conversion of personal property, but it is to restrain the defendants, who are in substance alleged to be insolvent, from fraudulently converting to their own use the property of the complainant, and for an account. TJpon the facts as charged in the bill there is no remedy at law, and the only complete remedy is in chancery in the form of the proceeding in this case. Walker vs. Hunt, 2 W. Va. Rep.; Watson vs. Southerland, 5 Wallace, 74; 1 Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, sections 80, 457, 623; 2 Ibid, sections 845, 846, 905, 906, 907.

For these reasons I think the demurrer was not well taken.

The next question is, was the transaction usurious in fact?

The Brakeleys in their answer charge that the substance and effect of the contracts set forth by the complainant, are but to provide for advances or loans of money to them, and devices or contrivances to reserve and secure to the complainant unlawful and usurious interest and profits, and that the said contract or contracts toere for the payment of interest at a greater rate than is allowed by law.

The Code of Virginia, chap. 141, sec. 6, provides that, “ any defendant may plead' in general terms that the contract or assurance on which the action is brought was for the payment of interest at a greater rate than is allowed by law, to which plea the plaintiff shall reply generally, but may give in evidence upon the issue made up thereon, any matter which could be given in evidence under a special replication. Under the plea aforesaid the defendant may give in evidence any fact showing or tending to show that the contract or assurance, or other writing upon which the action was brought, was for an usurious consideration.” The charge of usui-y in the answer is in the precise language of the law, to which the complainant replied generally, thus raising an issue of fact on the question of usury in precise conformity to the law of this State.

This answer would not be sufficient to raise the question in the courts of New York, according to the authority of [132]*132the case of the New Orleans Gas Light and Banking Co. vs. Dudley and others, 8 Paige, 452.

The contract in the case was made in New York, and as to its nature, construction and validity, is to be governed by the laws of that State, but the form of the remedy and mode of proceeding must be regulated solely and exclusively by the laws of this State, the place where the suit is brought, to enforce the contract. The issue made, then, by the answer and replication, fully raises the question of fact as to whether the contract was founded on a usurious consideration or not. What the laws of New York are on the subject of usury is a fact agreed in this case. According to those laws all bonds, bills, notes, assurances, conve37ances, all other contracts or securities whatsoever, and all deposits of goods or other things whatsoever, whereupon or wherebj7 there shall be reserved or taken or secured or agreed to be reserved or taken, directly or indirectly, any greater sum or greater value for the loan or forbearance of any money, goods or things in action, than at the rate of seven per cen-tum per annum shall be void.

This is substantially the same as the statute of Virginia, on the same subject, which is the law of this State, except that by the Virginia statute interest is at the rate of six per centum per annum, and both the New York statute and the Virginia statute are in substance the same as the English statute of the 12th of Ann, except that by the statute of the 12th of Ann interest was at the rate of five per centum per annum. The statute of the 12th of Ann only differs from the older English statutes in the rate of interest. I have made this comparison of these statutes because decisions of the English courts, of the courts of New York and of Virginia have been cited in the argument of this case to explain the meaning and construction of the New York statute.

In the case of Cotton vs. Dunham, 2 Paige, 272, a New York case, the chancellor uses the following language: “The English as well as the American reports are filled with cases arising out of the various devices and expedients which have been adopted to evade the provisions of the [133]*133statutes to limit the rate of interest to be received in the loan or forbearance of money. But on examination it will be found there is a uniform and settled principle running through all these eases with scarcely any exception. Wherever by the agreement of the parties a premium or profit beyond the legal rate of interest for a loan or advance of money is, either directly or indirectly, secured to the lender, it is a violation of the statute unless the loan or advance is attended with some contingent circumstances by which the principal is put in evident hazard. A contingency merely nominal attended with little or no hazard to the principal of the money loaned or advanced, cannot alter the legal effect of the transaction; and the risk of loss by the death or insolvency of the borrower is not such a contingency or hazard as will take the case out of the operation of the statute. That is the ordinary risk which every man runs who lends money on personal security only, and if the contingency of the borrower’s dyiug insolvent was to be deemed a hazard of the principal or money lent, the statute of usury would be a dead letter. Where there is a negotiation for a loan or advance of money and the borrower agrees to return the amount advanced at all events, it is a contract of lending within the spirit and meaning of the statute, and whatsoever shape or disguise the transaction may assume if a profit beyond the legal rate of interest is to be made out of the necessities or improvidences of the borrower or otherwise, the contract is usurious.”

In the case of Cleveland vs. Loden & Draper, 7 Paige, 557, a New York case, the chancellor uses this language: “Whenever the lender stipulates even for the chance oí an advantage beyond the legal interest the contract is usurious, if he is entitled by the contract to have the money lent at all events.”

In the case of Flayer vs. Edwards,

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Bluebook (online)
3 W. Va. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brakeley-v-tuttle-wva-1868.