Burrows & Prettyman v. Cook & Sargent

17 Iowa 436
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 7, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 17 Iowa 436 (Burrows & Prettyman v. Cook & Sargent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burrows & Prettyman v. Cook & Sargent, 17 Iowa 436 (iowa 1864).

Opinion

Lowe, J.

The several deeds of trust, described in the petition, are found to belong to different parties, of distinct relationships, and, therefore, their joinder in one'suit is not understood; but the objection to the proceeding on this account was subsequently waived, and we proceed to con[439]*439sider each with the class of questions thereto belonging, separately.

We begin with the $60,000 claim. The plaintiffs allege that when purged of its usury, and credited with the payments made, that the same is satisfied and should be canceled. Their statement in regard to its origin is substantially the following: That they were millers and merchants in Davenport, and, as such, had, prior and since January 20th, 1853, a deposit account with Cook & Sargent, bankers in the same city. By agreement they were, to pay Cook & Sargent eighteen to twenty per cent interest upon the balance of the banking account, when against them, and to receive 6 per cent interest when in their favor. From time to time plaintiffs sold to their bankers notes and bills of exchange at usurious rates of interest from the date last aforesaid’ up to a late period. On the 17th of July, 1856, it was found that they were nominally indebted to their bankers in the sum of $68,507.44; but that all of this sum except $29,313.36 was for unlawful interest, nevertheless that Burrows and wife made a deed of trust upon certain property therein described, to secure $60,000 of the above specified sum, payable in three years, together with certain usurious coupon interest notes; that the residue of said sum, namely, $8,507.44 was within three or four days thereafter increased by some charges of insurances, usurious interest, &e., to $10,291.55, and was liquidated on the 21st of July, 1856, with exchange on New York at four months, which plaintiffs claim to have paid. Exclusive of this last sum, and exclusive of the unlawful interest, the plaintiffs claim that there was in fact only due to Cook & Sargent on the 17th day of July, 1856, the sum of $20,873.38, and that they have since then paid on said deed of trust $24,750; that six per cent interest upon this amount from time of payment to the 1st of February, 1860, would make the sum $27,882.53. The [440]*440same interest on Cook &• Sargent’s real account or claim, namely, $20,873.38, up to February 1st, 1860, would make the same $25,305.81. Leaving the whole debt paid, and a balance in favor of the plaintiffs of $2,576.72. These statements, with the exceptions of the execution and delivery of the deed of trust under consideration, are met by a general denial on the part of the defendants, Lee, Hig-ginson & Co., who claim to be the legal holders of said deed of trust, before due and without notice of the usury;

Cook & Sargent admit that plaintiffs, during the time specified, kept their deposit account with them, and agreed to pay eighteen to twenty per cent interest, when the same was against them, and to receive six per cent when in their favor. They admit that on the 17th of July, 1856, the plaintiffs were indebted to them in the sum of $68,507.44, but deny that any part thereof was usurious. They deny that the purchase of notes and bills of exchange by them of the plaintiffs were at usurious rates, or that the plaintiffs ever paid the note dated July 21st, 1856, calling for $10,291.55, &c.

l. Interest: Code q£ 1851. As bearing upon the complaint of usury, there are one or two preliminary questions which we may first dispose of. One is, that the deposit account between the . . , . , . „ \ . . . parties (which is alleged- to be continuous m its character) commenced under the Code of 1851, which contained no usury clause, in the provisions regulating the interest upon contracts, but simply fixed the rate of interest at six per cent, unless a greater amount was contracted for in writing. Under this law no greater interest than six per cent could be lawfully charged, unless there was an agreement.in writing to pay more.

2. - Promisory note. The position of the defense is, that notwithstanding the contract in its original concoction, was in this regard illegal, being verbal, yet that the objection on this account was unavailable to the plaintiffs, first, [441]*441because tbey subsequently legalized the same by 'reducing it to writing, tliat.is to say, by giving their notes, secured by the deed of trust now in controversy, which included the unlawful interest But, secondly, if such a consequence did not follow, nevertheless illegality of consideration, unlike usury, could 'not be urged as an objection against the recovery of the.notes in the hands of innocent holders who had taken an assignment of the same before due, without notice of the alleged infirmity. The soundness of this position we are not prepared to gainsay — we believe it to be good law. But while the unlawful interest charged between the 20th of January and the 8th of March, 1853, inclusive, is not now available to the plaintiffs as against Lee, Higginson & Co., innocent assignees, the same being simply illegal and not usurious; still the contract to pay the same being in parol, had not the effect (although the transaction between the parties was a continuous one) to prevent the usury law of the 8th of March, 1853, from taking effect upon the dealings and transactions of the parties after that date, so that whatever usury was charged against the plaintiffs since then, is available to them against any and all persons, who may attempt to enforce the collection of the same.

4. Usury: change of firm. The other preliminary question to be noticed, is founded upon the statement, that on the 1st of April, 1856, J. C. Davie was admitted as a new member of the firm of Cook & Sargent, and thereupon a new set of books were opened at that date, and plaintiff’s account, then found on settlement to be $32,168.76, more or less, was transferred to the same, and, at their request, paid by the new to old firm. This change in the membership of the firm is claimed to have the effect to foreclose all questions of usury in the dealings of the parties anterior thereto. Such is not our opinion. We have heretofore held, that if the consideration of a claim is infected with [442]*442usury, the taint thereof follows it in all the mutations through which it may pass from or through the usurer, either in the description of the paper that may be given to evidence the same, or the individuals who- may be made new parties thereto. If the consequences of usury may be avoided by the introduction of a new member into a banking or other firm, it could be made a most easy, not to say simple, device for evading the most stupendous infractions of the usury laws.

5. — bill of exchange, The next question is one of very great importance, constituting, indeed, the chief point of difference between the parties in regard to the $60,000 trust deed. It is, whether the various drafts, bills of exchange and acceptances drawn by plaintiffs against shipments of produce were cashed by defendants, Co.ok & Sargent, at usurious rates? That they were purchased at a discount greater than legal interest, is not seriously controverted. But, conceding this to be so, the question is, whether in legal contemplation it comes within the meaning and intent of the usury law, and makes it a violation of the same. If they had been time drafts drawn on the same place where discounted, then we suppose a greater interest could not be reserved than that specified in the usury law.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Iowa 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burrows-prettyman-v-cook-sargent-iowa-1864.