Gordon v. Dooley

10 F. Cas. 783, 3 Hughes 182

This text of 10 F. Cas. 783 (Gordon v. Dooley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Dooley, 10 F. Cas. 783, 3 Hughes 182 (circtedva 1879).

Opinion

HUGHES, District Judge.

I think the foregoing statement embraces all the evidence in the case that can at all affect the decision of the question at issue, which is whether the two deeds, by which a rent-charge was nominally secured by Gordon upon the foundry property’ of Snyder, were really designed to cover, and did cover, a loan of $12,500 from Gordon to Snyder at the usurious interest of $1000, or eight per cent, per annum. If the intention of the parties to the transaction was in fact to cover up a usurious loan, or if the deeds are such as, carried by any practical means into operation according to their legal effect, do virtually provide for a loan, then the transaction is usurious and void .under the law of Virginia as it stood at the date of the deeds. We have nothing to do here with the technical term “usury”; we have to do only with the term's of a specific law. Section 5, c. 141, of the Code of 1860, In force in 1866, provided that “all assurances made directly or indirectly for the loan of money at a greater rate than six per cent.” shall be void. This is the law which rules the transaction between Gordon and Snyder. The deeds which then were executed are assurances. They do not provide directly for a loan of money. They in terms provide for the sale by Snyder to .Gordon of a rent-charge of $1000 per annum, to be paid to Gordon in considera^ tion of the sum of $12,500 paid down by Gordon to Snyder. If this transaction was in good faith the sale of a rent-charge, it is not usurious, though, in effect the deeds provide for an annuity of $1000 to be collected on the original payment of $12,500 by Gordon to Snyder. “If the parties intended to make a usurious loan in the form of a sale, then, of course, the transaction will be illegal and void; but if it appear that a sale was really intended, then it is equally clear that the transaction is legal and valid. The difference between the two cases is, that the law allows the one and condemns the other; and though you cannot .do what the law condemns, yet you may do what the law allows, even though the effect be precisely the same. Brockenbrough v. Spindle, 17 Grab 36. A man may purchase bonds or negotiable paper in the market at any discount, whether they were manufactured for sale or not, and not be guilty of usury: Hansbrough v. Baylor, 2 Munf. 36; Taylor v. Bruce, Gilmer, 42; Whitworth v. Adams, 5 Rand. 333; and the same is held in many other cases. Nay, more, he may sell property greatly above Its market value, knowing that the purchaser intends selling it again at its market value for the purpose of raising money, and the sale will not be usurious if it is a sale. Selby v. Morgan, 3 Leigh, 577; and Brockenbrough v. Spindle, 17 Grat. 21. But if such sale is accompanied by a loan of money as part of the transaction, the whole is usurious. Bank v. Stribling, 7 Leigh, 26.” If the deeds between Gordon and Snyder, though not in form and legal effect providing for a loan, were aecom-[786]*786panied by a contract or Tinderstanding in any form, oral or written, agreed to by both parties, that the amount of $12,500 paid for the rent-charge was to be treated as a loan at an annual interest of $1000, such side-contract would vitiate the main transaction, though it should not appear on the face of the deeds; or, though no such outside contract or understanding should be proved, yet, if the deeds themselves contain any clause or provision, or if they make an omission by virtue of which, under the laws of the country, a return of the principal money originally paid could be secured, then a loan would be thereby indirectly and substantially provided for, and the contract would be usurious.

It is clear from the evidence, that whatever idea Snyder may have had to the effect that he was negotiating a loan from Gordon, yet neither Gordon nor Lancaster entertained it It is clear that the minds of Snyder and Gordon did not meet in mutual agreement on a contract for a loan in fact, through the sale of a rent-charge in form. These two men did not see each other. There was no direct communication between them. The whole business was transacted through Lancaster. Nor did Lancaster and Gordon meet personally in the course of the negotiation. It was carried on wholly by letters between ‘them, and these letters do not show that a loan was either actually or impliedly the subject of their correspondence. In short, the evidence shows to demonstration that •there was no mutual understanding between Snyder and Gordon to the effect that their transaction was to be in form the sale of a ground-rent, but in fact a loan. Such a contract or understanding not having been mutually agreed upon by the parties, by a common intention not expressed in the deeds, the only question left is, whether the deeds themselves by their tenor, provisions, and covenants, directly or Indirectly, expressly or impliedly, by their actual provisions or by the omission of provisions, provide for or admit of a return or recovery of the $12,500 paid by Gordon for the rent-charge, through any means or method or possibility known to the law.

The counsel of Wilson, and of Dooley, the trustee in bankruptcy, contend that these ■deeds show a usurious transaction, and claim that this case is entirely similar to that of Scott v. Lloyd, first reported in 4 Pet. [29 U. S.] 205, and again reported 9 Pet. [34 U. S.] 418. Except in one particular this case is identical in the nature of its facts with that of Scott v. Lloyd, where a rent-charge of $500 per annum, purchased for $5000 paid down, was held usurious. In that case, as it is reported in 9 Peters, Chief Justice Marshall reviewed every case, American and English, which had then been reported, in which contracts not usurious in form, but claimed to have been usurious in fact, had been passed upon by the courts. The whole learning of this important and interesting subject is there given in the lucid and conclusive manner usual with that judge. I refer for a citation and review of all cases m point to that exhaustive opinion, which leaves me nothing to do but to inquire what It decides, and compare that case of Scott v. Lloyd, with the one at bar.

The chief justice summed up the law as to annuities and ground-rents in the following language: “The ingenuity of lenders of money has devised many contrivances by which, under forms sanctioned by law, the statute of usury may be evaded. Among the earliest and most common of them is the purchase of annuities secured upon real estate. tChe statute does not reach them, not only because the principle may .be put at hazard, but because it was not the intention of the legislature to interfere with individuals in their ordinary transactions of buying and selling, or other arrangements made with a view to convenience or profit. The purchase of an annuity or rent-charge, if a bona fide sale, has never been considered as usurious, though more than six per cent, profit be secured. Yet it is apparent, that if giving this form to the contract will afford a cover which conceals it from judicial -investigation, the statute would become a dead letter. Courts, therefore, perceived the necessity of disregarding form, and examining into the real nature of the transaction. If that be in fact a loan, no shift or device will protect it.”

After thus explaining the law affecting the case, the chief justice proceeded to examine into the “real nature” of the transaction before him. As I have before said, the facts- of the transaction in that case were identical in their character with those in this case. But there was one provision of the deed there which is not to be found in the deeds in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 783, 3 Hughes 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-dooley-circtedva-1879.