Dyke v. Commonwealth

17 S.E.2d 366, 178 Va. 418, 1941 Va. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 24, 1941
DocketRecord No. 2431
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 17 S.E.2d 366 (Dyke v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyke v. Commonwealth, 17 S.E.2d 366, 178 Va. 418, 1941 Va. LEXIS 177 (Va. 1941).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant in this case, now plaintiff in error, is appealing from a judgment of the Court of Hustings for the City of Portsmouth. That judgment confirms a jury’s verdict and fixes his punishment at a fine of $500.00. He was charged with violating Chapter 166 C Uniform Small Loan Act of the Code of Virginia.

J. M. Floyd borrowed $10.00 from the Southern Credit Company and executed to it this contract:

[420]*420“No. 7526E
CONDITIONAL OBLIGATION
“$11.00' Portsmouth., Va., Apr. 29, 1940.
“1. On'5/15/401, 19'.., for value received, the undersigned maker promises to pay to Southern Credit Company, or its assignee, at its office in this city, the sum of $11.00 Dollars without interest until maturity, and thereafter interest at six per cent per annum until paid, provided, -however, that if the undersigned maker shall, within the period from date hereof to date of maturity, involuntarily suffer BY ANY CAUSE either death, permanent and total physical disability, irrecoverable loss of the sight of an eye, loss of a hand (at or above the wrist) or a foot (at or above the ankle), continuous-' sickness for sixty days, involuntary loss of employment' for sixty days for any cause, permanent transfer from this city to another city, or damage exceeding fifty per cent of total value thereof to household furniture now owned by undersigned maker while at home address given below, or destruction by fire to the principal place of business in which the undersigned is actively and regularly employed, whereby the undersigned is deprived of his or her regular employment for at least sixty consecutive days thereafter,—then the whole or any part of this obligation remaining unpaid at that time shall not be payable at any time, and this obligation and any security taken to secure its payment shall be unenforcible.
“2. The undersigned maker hereby irrevocably:
“(a) represents and warrants, for the purpose of obtaining money on this obligation, that his total indebtedness, exclusive of this obligation, does not exceed ......
‘ ‘ (b) agrees that if this obligation is not paid at maturity (and none of the events enumerated in paragraph 1 hereof shall have happened prior to date of maturity), to pay all costs and expenses incurred or expended in [421]*421efforts to collect this obligation, including a reasonable attorney’s fee;
“(c) stipulates that this is an original transaction, and is not a renewal or extension of any other transaction prior to date hereof;
“(d) stipulates that the charges included in the amount repayable on this obligation are compensation for the risk assumed by the Company in connection with this transaction and that such charges shall not at any time be considered as ‘interest’ for the ‘loan or forbearance of money’, within the meaning of the Virginia statutes.
“Undersigned Maker,
“(Signed) J. M. FLOYD, (Seal)
“Home address with street and city.”

Defendant contends that this is a contract of hazard and therefore not usurious; that these contingencies which may defeat recovery are real and not remote, and reminds us that “man that is born of woman is of few days, and full of trouble.”

But, as was said in City of Lynchburg v. Norvell, 20 Gratt. (61 Va.) 601, we look to probabilities and not to possibilities.

This stipulation was entered into:

“It is hereby stipulated between the Commonwealth’s Attorney of the City of Portsmouth, Lawrence W. I’An-son, Esquire, on behalf of the Commonwealth, and James Gr. Martin, Esquire, attorneys for the defendant, that the said W. L. Van Dyke, while acting as manager for C. E. Jarvis, Jr., trading as Southern Credit Company, and not licensed to do business under the Uniform Small Loan Law of this State, but licensed as a loan company under the ordinances of the'City of Portsmouth, on April 29th, 1940, in the City of Portsmouth, in the State of Virginia, to-wit, at the office of the said Southern Credit Company, 216 Hew Kirn Building, took in an instrument in writing, called and known as a ‘Con[422]*422ditional Obligation ’, a copy of which is hereto attached signed by J. M. Floyd, marked as Exhibit ‘A’ and intended to be read as a part hereof, which will fall due, mature and become payable on May 15, 1940, for the sum of ($11.00) eleven & no/100 Dollars, of which ($10.00) ten & no/100 Dollars represents the return of the amount advanced to the said obligor, and ($1.00) one & no/100 Dollars, represents the fee charged under the said contract by the said defendant therefor, and that the defendant is in the business of handling such transactions.
“May 18, 1940.
JAS. G. MABTIN,
“Attorney for W. L. Van D«ke. L. W. I’ANSON,
“Attorney for Commonwealth.”

The maximum charges which may be made by those duly licensed under the Uniform Small Loan Law of this State is fixed by statute, Code, section 4168(51):

“Every person, copartnership or corporation licensed hereunder may lend any sum of money not exceeding in amount the sum of three hundred dollars and may charge, contract for, and receive thereon interest at a rate not to exceed three and one-half per centum per month. ’ ’

In the instant case the interest rate was 240 per cent. For the defendant Boulware v. Newton, 18 Gratt. (59 Va.) 708, is cited and relied upon.

In that case Newton executed this bond:

“$5,000. On demand, three months after notice to pay, I promise to pay to William Boulware the sum of five thousand dollars, without interest, in current funds; but it is understood and agreed, that the money is to be punctually paid at the expiration of three months after demand, and if not so paid, is to carry interest from the day of demand; and the said Boulware shall not be re[423]*423quired to receive the money except at his pleasure. Witness my hand and seal this 29th day of January, 1863.
‘ ‘ WILLOUGHBY NEWTON,. (Seal) ’ ’

Demand was-made on June 25, 1865.

In a preliminary observation the court said:

“Contracts are usually referable, for their .construction, to the laws of the country where made. Parties must be taken to contract in reference to them; and hence, the lex loci contractus is a prevailing canon of interpretation. • In order, however, to test the applicability of this doctrine'to our present enquiry, we must look to the situation- of the parties, as affected by the remarkable political events that were then transpiring, and which might - be naturally expected to enter into their consideration, and influence in some degree their agreement.”

And that-:

“It was impossible not to foresee the probability of change in the currency; whether it should be by the substitution of another by the Confederate Government when established or.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E.2d 366, 178 Va. 418, 1941 Va. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyke-v-commonwealth-va-1941.