Douglas v. Klopper

288 P. 36, 107 Cal. App. 765, 1 Cal. Sup. 22, 107 Cal. App. Supp. 765, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 10
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 16, 1930
DocketDocket No. 48.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 288 P. 36 (Douglas v. Klopper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglas v. Klopper, 288 P. 36, 107 Cal. App. 765, 1 Cal. Sup. 22, 107 Cal. App. Supp. 765, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 10 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

*767 SHAW, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment on the pleadings entered against him upon the plaintiff’s motion.

It appears from the complaint that the defendant loaned to the plaintiff the sum of $5,000, for which plaintiff agreed to pay usurious interest; that in pursuance of this agreement the plaintiff paid defendant the sum of $684.42 as interest; and that plaintiff seeks to recover the amount so paid, beginning his action more than one year, and less than two years, after the interest was paid.

Defendant in his answer admitted that the loan was ■ usurious; alleged that plaintiff’s action was barred by section 3 of the Usury Act, by subdivision 1 of section 339, and by subdivision 1 of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure; and further alleged that the payment of interest was voluntary, and hence could not be recovered.

We do not think plaintiff’s claim is barred by any of the statutes of limitation set up in the answer. Section 3 of the Usury Act provides that anyone who has paid usurious interest may recover treble the amount so paid, provided his action is brought within one year after payment. Plaintiff did not sue for treble the amount of the interest paid and has therefore not brought his suit under this statute. Hence, the fact that he did not bring his action within one year does not bar him. For the same reason subdivision 1 of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which bars in one year actions on a statute for a penalty or forfeiture, does not apply to the case. Doubtless plaintiff’s action is within the purview of subdivision 1 of section 339 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and would be barred within two years, but his cause of action did not arise until the interest was paid, which was less than two years before the action was brought.

This brings us to the principal questions argued, whichX are: Whether one who has paid usurious interest may maintain a common-law action independent of the remedy under the statute to recover the amount so paid, and whether the fact that he has paid such interest voluntarily will prevent a recovery in such an action. On these questions the authorities in other states are conflicting. Our present usury law, as stated by the Supreme Court in Wallace v. Zinman, 200 Cal. 585, 590 [62 A. L. R. 1341, 254 Pac. 946], *768 and In re Washer, 200 Cal. 598, 602 [254 Pac. 951], was borrowed to a large extent from the Wisconsin law, and while the copying may not be sufficiently exact to show a legislative intent to import also the construction judicially put upon the Wisconsin law, yet decisions from that state are quite persuasive as to the rule which should be adopted here, and it is there held that a plaintiff may recover under the circumstances shown by the pleadings in this case.

In Wood v. Lake, 13 Wis. 84, 97, a similar question arose. There the defendant had paid interest in excess of the highest rate allowed by law, and pleaded this payment as a counterclaim in an action brought upon his note. The action having been brought after the expiration of time for pursuing the statutory remedy, the court held this counterclaim good, saying:

“A remarkable unanimity of opinion upon this question seems to have prevailed among the courts of Great Britain and those of the several states of the Union where laws against usury, properly so called, have existed. It has been universally held, where statutes forbid the taking of excessive interest, and punish a violation of their provisions by the infliction of fines, penalties or forfeitures upon the person who takes it, that the person who pays the same may, independently of the remedies afforded by the statutes, maintain an action for money had and received,' at the common law, to recover back the money so paid. In such cases, both parties are not understood to be in pari delicto, so as to preclude a recovery by either. Upon this subject, Mr. Comyn, in his Law of Usury, page 211, says: ‘And with regard to parties becoming participes criminis, the following distinction is laid down, viz.: between the prohibition of statutes made to protect the weak or necessitous from being overreached or oppressed, and the prohibitions of statutes enacted upon general reasons of policy and public expediency ; in the latter case, all parties are equally criminal; in the former, the oppressor is alone within the pale of the law.’ The penalties of the law are all aimed at the lender and none at the borrower; and it appears to be clearly within the intent and meaning of the legislature, if not their words, that he shall ■ not be permitted to retain or profit by money or property thus unlawfully acquired. The provision of the law of this state (sec. 3, chap. 172, *769 Laws of 1851), by which every person paying a greater sum for the loan or forbearance of money than that allowed by law, might if his action was brought within one year after such payment, recover back treble the sum so paid, confirms this view. It shows that the legislature did not intend the receiver should retain the money thus obtained, and that they did not consider both parties equally at fault. Otherwise they would not have permitted the borrower to recover back three times the amount and thus speculate out of the attempted extortions of the lender. But if the borrower chooses, by not bringing his action within one year, to waive his right to a treble recovery, he may do so and still retain the right to maintain an action for money had and received, to recover back the excess actually paid, at any time within the period prescribed by the statutes of limitations. For the remedy given by the statute is cumulative and not exclusive, as has frequently been decided in other states where similar statutory remedies have been given. ’ ’ /

In Fay v. Lovejoy, 20 Wis. 403, this ruling was repeated and both "of these cases were approved in Schriber v. Le Clair, 66 Wis. 591 [29 N. W. 570, 889].

In 3 Parsons on Contracts, 128, the rule is thus stated, citing Browning v. Morris, (1778) 2 Cowp. 790, 98 Eng. Reprint, 1364:

“The distinction has been taken between statutes enacted on general grounds of policy and public expediency in which each party violating the law is in pari delicto and entitled to no assistance from a court of justice, and those laws enacted to protect weak or necessitous men from being overreached, defrauded or oppressed, in which event the injured party may have relief extended to him, and the whole purport and reason, both of the law of usury and of the great mass of decisions under it, indicate that the lender on usury is regarded as the oppressor and the criminal, and the borrower as the oppressed and injured.”

In Wheaton v. Hibbard, 20 Johns. (N. Y.) 290 [11 Am Dec. 284], the same rule was adopted as in the Wisconsin cases, supra, and the court said:

“The law considers the borrower rather as a victim than an aggressor.

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Bluebook (online)
288 P. 36, 107 Cal. App. 765, 1 Cal. Sup. 22, 107 Cal. App. Supp. 765, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-v-klopper-calctapp-1930.