Commonwealth v. Puder

67 Pa. Super. 11, 1917 Pa. Super. LEXIS 330
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 13, 1917
DocketAppeal, No. 328
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 67 Pa. Super. 11 (Commonwealth v. Puder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Puder, 67 Pa. Super. 11, 1917 Pa. Super. LEXIS 330 (Pa. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

Williams, J.,

In this proceeding the constitutionality of the Act of June 17, 1915, P. L. 1012, is attacked because (1) it is special legislation, (2) the title does not clearly give notice of the penal provisions contained in section 6, and (3) it is a delegation of legislative power to the banking commissioner.

We may eliminate the third contention. As the appellant is not appealing from any act of the banking commissioner, it is not necessary to discuss whether his duties are not of such ministerial character as to' be properly authorized by the provisions of the act. .

In Com. v. Young, 248 Pa. 458, the Act of June 5, 1913, P. L. 429, was held unconstitutional because it was special legislation purporting to regulate money lending. Stewart, J., said: “Having so qualified, and paid a license fee, he (the money lender) thereupon is licensed for one year to lend money......and to ‘charge the borrowers thereof, for its use or loan, interest not to exceed the rate of six per cent, per annum, and a brokerage fee of not more than one-tenth of the amount actually loaned,’ and in addition, ‘an examination fee of not more than $1.00 on all loans not exceeding fifty dollars in amount.’......The general scheme of the act is, to create into a class persons absolutely undistinguishable from the entire body of citizenship by anything suggesting differentiation with respect to rights, privileges, immunities, or peculiarities, whether arising out of personal or business relations, and then to invest such class with the privilege denied to all not within the class, namely, the right to collect on money loaned a rate of interest in excess of that to which all others are confined.....Can any reason be suggested why either brokerage or examination fee should be allowed this class of money-lenders and denied to others? If computed as additional interest charge — and it is this and nothing else — the result is an interest charge of thirty-eight per cent, per annum on a loan of $50.00, counting the necessary renewals. [15]*15......In what we have said our purpose has been simply to show that the one certain effect of the act is to create a distinct class out of persons having in common, as between themselves, no peculiarities whether of person or business, or anything else, distinguishing them from any other class, and investing the class thus artificially created with special and exclusive privilege with respect to interest charges on money loaned.”

Following this decision the Act of 1915 was passed by the legislature with the idea of correcting the errors therein pointed out. The issue is now presented. Does this act meet those objections?

A review of the two acts indicates that the substantial differences are as follows: 1. The licensing and supervisory power in the Act of 1913 is given to the Court of Quarter Sessions, in the Act of 1915 to the banking commissioner. 2. The class of loans is confined to those under $300 in the Act of 1915, whereas there was no limit in the Act of 1913. 3. The class of borrowers is clearly defined by the Act of 1915 as “individuals pressed by lack of funds to meet immediate necessities,” whereas there was no attempt in the Act of 1913 to define the class to1 be benefited. 4. The class of lenders is limited in the Act of 1915 to those who make the class of loans above set forth to the individuals in the class described. There is no logical differentiation made by the Act of 1913 between the class of lenders created by it and the vast number of other lenders. 5. The interest charges in both acts are practically the same, though called by different names, and allow a maximum gross return, from the business of handling loans, of about 40 per cent, on the money loaned. The other differences appearing are not material to' the constitutionality of the act and need not be discussed.

In determining whether the classification is proper we must be ruled by the language in Ayars’ App., 122 Pa. 266, where Sterrett, J., said (281): “......the underlying principle of all the cases is that classification, with [16]*16the view of legislating for either class separately, is essentially unconstitutional, unless a necessity therefor exists, — a necessity springing from manifest peculiarities, clearly distinguishing those of one class from each of the other classes, and imperatively demanding legislation for each class, separately, that would be useless and detrimental to the others.”

In the Act of 1915 the legislature has prescribed the limitations of a class so well recognized in the economic and social life of the United States that twenty-three states have passed legislation on the subject, modifying the application of the usury laws and remedying in a great measure the distress of “individuals pressed by lack of funds to meet immediate necessities.” The Act of 1913 failed to prescribe any limitation and created, side by side with other money-lenders, a class of-persons with the right to loan money in any amount, and permitted to charge fees, cloaked in language which but barely disguised the fact that the charging of interest in excess of the legal rate was the real purpose of the act. No person in the natural class of society which had created itself was in need of loans of large sums of money nor was there any necessity for permitting the charging of the excessive fees in the case of large loans.

We think the present act has corrected the evil referred to in Com. v. Young, supra. The loans affected are in sums of $300 or less; they are to persons “pressed by lack of funds to meet immediate necessities”; and the brokerage fees, provided in the Act of 1913, are dispensed with except as to $1, which may be charged as an examination fee in the case of loans between $15 and $50, and $2, in cases of loans between $50 and $300. The interest allowed under the act amounts at its maximum to 36 per cent., plus the $1 examination fee in loans ranging from $15 to $50, and plus the $2 examination fee in sums ranging from $50 to $100; and 24 per cent, plus the $2 examination fee in sums ranging from $100 to $300, on loans of four months or over. /

[17]*17We are thus presented with the question whether the limiting of the class of loans and lenders to the $300 or less standard is in answer to a necessity springing from manifest peculiarities demanding imperatively legislation for this class of loans, its lenders and borrowers. Other states have passed such acts, with the same limitations or similar ones, and they have been held to be a valid classification both within the state and federal constitutions: Eaker v. Bryant, 24 Cal. App. 87; State v. Hurlburt, 82 Conn. 232; Griffith v. Conn., 218 U. S. 563; State v. Wickenhoefer, 6 Pennewill’s Del. Rep. 120; Reagan v. Dist. of Columbia, 42 Wash. L. Rep. 88; Edwards v. State, 62 Fla. 40; King v. State, 136 Ga. 709; Ex parte Berger, 193 Mo. 16; Dunn v. Hoboken, 85 N. J. L. 79; People v. Young, 207 N. Y. 522; State v. Sherman, 18 Wyo. 169. Missouri it will be noted has a constitutional provision like our own.

The imperative necessity for such classification appears when we consider that these money lenders have for years operated without regulation oppressing those compelled by necessity to promise the payment of interest charges running up to two and three hundred per cent, per annum.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 Pa. Super. 11, 1917 Pa. Super. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-puder-pasuperct-1917.