Conservative Loan Co. v. Whittington

1925 OK 664, 250 P. 485, 120 Okla. 137, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 213
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 15, 1925
Docket15478
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1925 OK 664 (Conservative Loan Co. v. Whittington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conservative Loan Co. v. Whittington, 1925 OK 664, 250 P. 485, 120 Okla. 137, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 213 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

JIONES, C.

This action was instituted in the district court of Love county by the plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, against the defendant in error, as defendants, to recoven.' the sum of $700 als evidenced by three promissory notes for $300 each, together with interest and attorney’s fee. The notes were secured by mortgage on certain land's belonging to the defendants C. H. Whittington and wife, and contained the ordinary provisions maturing all of said notes by reason of the default in the payment of one, and it is alleged at the time of thie¡ institution of this suit that defendants have defaulted in the payment of the first note and also in the payment of the second note, which was due and payable on the 1st day of October, 1922; plaintiff als,O' asks the foreclosure of their mortgage. Plaintiff also sets forth a contract as an exhibit and matees it a part of its petition, wherein the defendants C. H. Whittington and Dovie Whittington, employed the appellant, Conservative Loan Company, and constituted said company their agent, to secure a loan for said defendants for thq sum of $3,600 and the notes in question were given as commission o,r compensation for services of the said company in securing said loan, and the record discloses' that the loan was secured; wherein the defendants agree to pay interest at the rate of seven per cent. The loan wfes for a period of ten years and the commission was based, or was equivalent of, two and one-half per cent, on the said loan for the full period of ten years, and if considered as a part of the interest, would make the rate of interest paid by the defendants Whittingtons, nine and one-half per cent, for the loan of the money for the period of ten years.

The defendants Whittingtons filed their answer, in which they aiver that the notes sued on represent a part of the interest to be paid to the appellant for thiei loan of $3,600, and that this was the third loan secured from said company by the defendants herein. It is averred in the answer and admitted to be a fact that the Whittingtons borrowed $2,200 fifom the appellant in 1917, and executed a first and second mortgage to secure said loan and the commission notes, four in number for $137.50 each, maturing as follows: The first note on December 1, 1917; second note on December 1, 1918; third note on December 1, 1919, and the fourth note on December 1, 1920. In August, 1919, the defendants entered into a second loan contract with the appellant, *138 whereby they secured a loan of $2,800, and this, like the first loan, was for a period of ten years, and each of said loans was for six per cent, interest, and in the second loan, .as in the first, notes were executed due in one, two and three years for the commission. The second loan was made for, the pujrpose of taking up the first loan, paying the past due interest, the commission notes, taxes, and other expenses incurred in securing same. The defendants received no additional money than that received in the first loan of $2,200, and in March, 1921, a third loan contract was made and is the one here sued upon, wherein the defendants secured a loan of $2,600, and executed the three commission notes for $300 each, which is the basis of this cause of action, which, as heretofore stated, together with the interest charged cn the principal loan, made the rate of interest nine and one-half per cent, for a period of ten years. At the time of the making of this third loan, as in the second loan, the second loan was paid off, together with all interest due, commission notes, taxes, and it seems that the entire loan of $3,600 was utilized in taking care of the second lean of $2,S0O, and defendants received no additional sum by reason of said loan. The defendants aver and contend that by reason of these various trans^ actions, whereby they paid to the appellant the commission notes on the first and second loan, the contract becomes tainted with usury, and in their cross-petition ask for judgment for the sum of $7,630, the sum being double the amount of the interest charged for the last loan of $3,601).

The plaintiff replies to defendants’ answer and cross-petition, and specifically denies that any usury was charged; alleges the contracts in their incipiency contained no usury, and that the transaction had does not constitute usury, and further alleges that they are brokers engaged in the brokerage business in procuring loans of money from investors or brokers, and that all efi the loans referred to in plaintiff’s petition were procured in this manner, and that while the notes and mortgages were taken in the name of the plaintiff, it was merely a matter of convenience as provided for in the contract of agency entered into between the plaintiff and the defendants, and that same were sold to other parties, and that the money secured by defendants by reason of said loans was not the money of this plaintiff, and that the notes were in fact commission notes secured by second mortgage, subject to thé mortgage securing the principal loan, and in fact constitutes no part of the interest changed for the loan of the money; that said nctes and mortgages were transferred .by plaintiff to investors, who furnished said loan for money and' never at any time were owned or held, by the plaintiff; that the plaintiff received none of the interest therefog and therein at the time said principal was paid off, or at any other time.

And further avers that the different loans were separatej and distinct transactions, and that the money pa-id to this plaintiff by reason of the commission notes was a past due obligation of defendants as compensation for services rendered by the plaintiff as brokers and that same are entirely free from any usury.

Upon the trial of the ease to the court,, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants O. H. Whittington and Dovie Whit-tington on their cross-petition for the sum-of $6,840, and for the plaintiff, Conservative Loan Company, for the sum of $1,065, which was the principal, interest, and attorney’s fee of the notes sued on, which was deducted from the principal judgment, being the judgment of $5,695 in favor of' the defendants C. H. Whittington and Dovie Whittington. Judgments were also rendered against the other defendants named in the petition, but the only question involved in this appeal is the controversy between the-plaintiff and the defendants C. H. and Dovie Whittington.

Numerous assignments rf error are set forth by appellant, but the principal contention involved is that of whether or not the contract is usurious. The trial court seems to Shaye based its judgment upen the-theory that the appellant had no right to-deduct the item of $392, the amount (hen due on the commission notes given in connection with the second loan made, from the amout of this loan, to wit, $3,600, and states in his judgment that in fact the plaintiff only paid to the defendants the sum of $3,205- upon said loan contract, rather than $3,600, and that the contract shows upon its face that the appellant charged the defendants the sum of $3.420, as interest for the money for a period rf ten years, making-the amount charged as interest excessive -to the amount of $215 over and above ten per cent, interest for the period of ten ye-nTS. With this conclusion of the trial court, we cannot agree. The Supíneme Court of this: state, as we understand the authorities cited, has determined that the usury statute does'not apply to contracts for the loan of money in which no usury is charged in the incipi-ency of the contract.

In the case of Deming Investment Co.

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Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 664, 250 P. 485, 120 Okla. 137, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservative-loan-co-v-whittington-okla-1925.