Carper v. Kanawha Banking & Trust Co.

207 S.E.2d 897, 157 W. Va. 477, 1974 W. Va. LEXIS 253
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1974
DocketNo. 13074
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 207 S.E.2d 897 (Carper v. Kanawha Banking & Trust Co.) 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
Carper v. Kanawha Banking & Trust Co., 207 S.E.2d 897, 157 W. Va. 477, 1974 W. Va. LEXIS 253 (W. Va. 1974).

Opinions

Haden, Justice:

This is an appeal by Fairmont Mobile Homes, Inc., a corporation, and Kanawha Banking & Trust Company, a corporation, from a jury verdict and an adverse judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of Raleigh County, in the amount of $2,500.00 against Fairmont, and $2,500.00 against Bank. After the jury had been discharged the trial court also amended the judgment order and avoided all interest or finance charges said to be due the Bank and Fairmont under the terms of a conditional sales contract. This instrument provides a documentary foundation for most of the evidentiary and legal matters involved in this appeal.

The judgment favoring Carper resulted from the jury trial of a civil action brought by Carper in which he alleged violation of the usury laws by Fairmont and the Bank in a commercial transaction through which Carper had purchased a mobile home from Fairmont and then financed it with Fairmont and the Bank, an assignee of the subject conditional sales contract.

Factually, this transaction began in the summer of 1968. Roy Gene Carper, in anticipation of marriage and establishing a separate home for himself and his affianced, shopped several places for a mobile home. On July 22, 1968, Roy Gene Carper, accompanied by his finance, apparently settled on a mobile home offered for sale by the defendant, Fairmont. This mobile home was described as a Frontier Model, with certain special modifications which were to be manufactured to Carper’s order through Fairmont to the basic manufacturer. It appears by a receipt issued to Carper by Fairmont’s agent Ball, that, on this date, Carper paid Fairmont a $1,000.00 down payment and ordered a mobile home which he understood was to cost him $6,000.00 plus $180.00 consumer sales tax. Thereafter, Fairmont, upon the execution of a “bill of sale” and upon the receipt of the $1,000.00, as well as upon the partial execution of the conditional sales contract form evidencing the sale and the credit transaction, [483]*483ordered the mobile home from the basic manufacturer with a delivery date six weeks to two months hence. From this point in time forward, the method and terms of payment as well as the ultimate purchase price of the mobile home were matters in dispute and all were submitted to the jury by the court below.

It appears from uncontradicted testimony that the Bank first became involved in the transaction on August 2 or 3, 1968 and, on August 14, 1968, it agreed conditionally to finance the credit transaction. The contract, payable in installments at the “Kanawha Banking and Trust Co.”, was completed and fully executed on September 28, 1968, and then assigned to the Bank under date of October 9, 1968.

According to Fairmont and the Bank, Carper, not having other sources of credit available to him, was offered the mobile home at a cash price of $6,180.00, including tax, or at a credit price of $9,144.00, payable in equal monthly installments of $95.25 for eight years. Fairmont alleges these figures were communicated to Carper upon the partial completion of the papers on July 22, 1968. The appellants say that Carper accepted the terms of the credit sale and agreed that Fairmont should arrange the financing with Kanawha Banking & Trust Company, a lending organization which liked to help young people. The evidence showed that the Bank was one of several institutions with whom Fairmont had previously conducted similar business. According to Fairmont’s agent Ball, all the papers signed by Carper were completed on July 22, 1968, with the notable exception that the effective date of the conditional sales contract was not added until September 28, 1968, three days before the delivery of the subject mobile home. This was done, according to Ball, so that Carper would not be liable for payments on the loan until he had accepted delivery of the mobile home which he had ordered. Further, as demonstrated by other instruments, Fairmont used the time period to secure a credit report on [484]*484Carper and to obtain the Bank’s agreement to finance the transaction.

According to Carper’s version, he made a bargain to buy the mobile home for $6,180.00, including tax, on the basis of paying $1,000.00 cash at the time the bargain was made, and with a further agreement with Fairmont to finance the balance due of $5,180.00 on a contract, the terms of which would result in ninety-six equal payments of $95.25 per month for a period of eight years. Upon inquiry as to the interest rate, Carper was told by Ball who filled out the papers that the interest rate would be six and one-half percent, and that it would be computed upon the balance due of $5,180.00, plus a figure of $835.60 for property and credit life insurance premiums which aggregated a total of $6,015.60 to be paid by Carper. The conditional sales contract explicitly carries on its face a total amount due of $9,144.00, a figure which Carper and his wife Barbara deny was communicated to them. Carper’s factual contention was that he had not agreed to pay more than six and one-half percent interest on the amount to be financed.

The conditional sales contract reflects that the difference between the remaining cash balance due of $6,015.60 and the $9,144.00, characterized as “the total time balance due,” was a figure of $3,128.40, characterized by the contract as “finance charge.” From the testimony of Fairmont and the Bank, the finance charge was computed by applying six and one-half percent “add-on interest” to the balance of $6,015.60. In terms comprehended by this Court, “add-on interest” means that the figure six and one-half percent is multiplied by eight years, the life of the contract, thereby equalling a percentage rate of fifty-two percent to be applied to the total to be financed, $6,015.60. This figure, according to actual computation, amounts to $3,128.11. According to Fairmont’s computation, the figure was rounded off to $3,128.40, or a difference of twenty-nine cents (.29). The interest rate of fifty-two percent, of course, does not [485]*485represent an annual rate. According to the testimony of the parties, the rate of fifty-two percent over the eight-year life of the contract is equivalent to a simple annual interest rate of approximately thirteen percent. Actual computation reveals an effective simple interest rate of eleven and twenty-three hundredths percent (11.23%).

For purposes of illustration, this Court has prepared a statement which reflects the cost of the mobile home to Carper under the financing arrangement as set forth in the conditional sales contract. This instrument also reflects how the costs were computed. It appears as follows:

BUYER’S MOBILE HOME COSTS:
Selling price ..-.. $ 6,000.00
3% West Virginia sales tax_ +180.00
Total _ 6,180.00
Less down payment _ —1,000.00
Unpaid balance _____ 5,180.00
Insurance premiums _ +835.60
Total to be financed_ 6,015.60
Finance charge
(*computed at 6-1/2% add-on interest rate) +3,128.40
Total time balance due_ $ 9,144.00
Number of payments 96 at $95.25
Total required to satisfy sale and
“Financing” for eight years _ $10,144.00

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 S.E.2d 897, 157 W. Va. 477, 1974 W. Va. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carper-v-kanawha-banking-trust-co-wva-1974.