Cleveland Collateral Loan Co. v. Bell

17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 385
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedApril 15, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 385 (Cleveland Collateral Loan Co. v. Bell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Collateral Loan Co. v. Bell, 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 385 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Gott, J.

This case comes into this court by way of error proceedings from the municipal court of the city of Cleveland. Plaintiff is a corporation and has taken out its license under favor of Section 6346-1-7 of the General Code of Ohio, generally known as the Haas Bill, for the purpose of making chattel loans.

Suit was brought in the court below by plaintiff upon the 'following note:

“$117.96 No.......Cleveland, Ohio, November 28,' 1911.
“Twelve months after date I promise to pay to the order of The Cleveland Collateral Loan Company, One Hundred' and Seventeen 96/100, at 480 Prospect Avenue, payable in' twelve [386]*386monthly installments of $9.83 each, beginning January 5, 1912. Balance payable............19.. with interest at eight per cent., per annum, payable annually after maturity. Upon failure to pay any installments or interest as they become due, the whole sum then unpaid on this note shall become due and payable, at the option of the legal holder hereof. In case this note be not paid when due and payable, and action is brought in any court to collect, a reasonable attorney fee of not less than ten per cent, shall be included in any judgment entered by the court.
“John C. Bell.
“Artie W. Bell.”

For a second cause of action the plaintiff set up a chattel mortgage upon certain furniture owned by the defendants and prayed for a foreclosure of the same. The court below found that the note ivas usurious, and construing Sections 6346-5 and 6346-7 of the General Code, held that the note, being usurious, was entirely void and that plaintiff could not recover upon it, and the court thereupon ordered a cancellation of both the note and the mortgage, and its action in so doing is now here for review.

There are two questions to be considered; first, was the note usurious? And, second, if it was usurious, can the plaintiff recover on the note and can it have a foreclosure of its chattel mortgage ?

First, was the note usurious? Sub-section 5 of the act is as follows:

“No such person, firm or corporation shall make a loan upon chattels or personal property of any bind whatsoever, or purchase a salary or wage earning of another !at a rate of interest ■ or charge in excess of eight per cent, per annum upon the principal sum.11 In additional to such eight per cent, per a.nrmrn a reasonable charge may be made for investigation, examination, collection and all other charges of whatsoever kind or description, not to exceed ten per cent. (10%) upon the principal sum, .and any contract conveyance or assignment for the purpose or assignment of any salary or wage earnings and any loan upon chattels or personal property whatsoever shall be void and of no binding effect which provides for or contemplates the payment of any amount or sum in excess of the rates of charges herein provided for or where any provision of Section 3 (G. c. Sec. [387]*3876346-3) herein has been disregarded or violated. In case any loan or contract of any kind provided for in the preceding sections is not paid when dne, and interest of eight per cent, per annum may be charged on such balance due, but no extra charges shall be made for said renewal or extension of said loan or contract, within one year from the date of the loan or any renewal or extension thereof.”

AVhat is the meaning of the language “at a rate of interest or charge in excess of eight percent, per annum upon the principal sum?” It might be observed in the first place that’ the matter of the rate of interest is entirely within the legislative control, and the Legislature may classify the money loaning business and fix a rate for each classification. Cramer v. Trust Company, 72 O. S., 395; Brooklyn B. & L. A. v. Desnoyes, 4 C.C.(N.S.), 337.

The law has defined what is meant by interest and in 12 O. D., 405, it is defined as follows:

“Interest is the compensation which the law allows for the delay in the payment of an obligation after the maturity thereof.”

One of the common definitions of interest, and undoubtedly a correct one is found in the old arithmetics. The court recalls the one in Ray’s Third Part, Arithmetic:

“Interest is money paid for the use of money.” The length of time it is to be used varies, but no matter what the time may be, we have an expression which is used as a basis for the rate in all cases, and that phrase is the Latin phrase per annum, meaning by the year.

Let us get at the underlying, principle from a simple note:

“ One year after date, I promise to pay to the order of John Doe, one hundred dollars with interest at 8 per cent, per annum, for value received.
“Richard Roe.”

Here Richard Roe is entitled to the use of one hundred dollars for one whole year, and for that he must pay John Doe eight dollars interest, usually at the end of the term,- though banks get their interest in advance and it is called bank-discount/ [388]*388and other individuals may demand that the interest be paid either in advance, or semi-annually or annually without rendering .the transaction usurious.

Section 5 says that the rate of interest Avas not to be in excess of "eight per cent, per annum” on the "principal sum.” We have found that per annum means by the year. Now what does the statute contemplate by the words "principal sum”? I conclude that it means nothing more than the amount loaned by the yearnot any charge to be added for investigation, examination, or collection as provided by the statute; not any interest to be added in advance, just the actual money loaned, and the rate per annum to be figured upon this actual loan.

i The installment note is not of ancient origin. The laAv of negotiable instruments was made when the installment note Avas unknoAvn. It does not fit in Avith the-theory that eight per cent, per annum meant that the borrower was to have the use of the one hundred dollars for a whole year for the sum of eight dollars. What the installment note does is a,s follows: A borrower gets the use of one hundred dollars for the first month only, for at the end of the first month he makes a payment Avhich lessens the principal, Avhich the borroAver is entitled to keep for the whole year, and so on from month to month as payments are made, the principal growing less and less, though the borrower, according to the statute and usage, is entitled to the use of the principal sum for the whole year.

The mere fact that, under an installment note, it is harder to compute the interest is no reason ato should construe the statute in favor of the theory that the principal sum loaned per annum is the original sum loaned, though such original sum is used by the borrower for only a period of one month. The principal sum loaned on the note in question is as follows: $100 for one month, $90.17 for one month, $80.34 for one month, $70.51 for one month, and so on until the last payment is made. The problem in mathematics is more difficult, but with our present idea of interest, such must haAm been the legislative intent by the use of the terms "eight per cent, per annum upon the principal sum”; otherwise, "per annum” would be superfluous in the statute, would be without any meaning whatsoever.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Murray
11 Or. 413 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1884)
Sheridan v. McMullen
6 P. 497 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-collateral-loan-co-v-bell-ohctcomplcuyaho-1915.