Greenfield v. Monaghan
This text of 52 N.W. 193 (Greenfield v. Monaghan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Tlie note in suit was made by the defendants on the twenty-second day of September, 1886, for the sum of two hundred dollars, with interest thereon at ten per cent, per annum, and was payable to the plaintiff one year after its date. It bears an endorsement as follows: “Sept. 17, 787, received int., twenty dollars. Time ex. to Sept. 22, .1888.77 The plaintiff demands judgment thereon for two hundred dollars and costs, and asks a writ of attachment against tbp property of the defendants. The defendants admit the making of the note, but allege that Monaghan was principal, and his co-defendant was surety; that it was agreed between the plaintiff, through his agent, H. J. Griswold, and Monaghan, that the rate of interest should be twenty per cent., instead of the rate expressed in the note, of which ten per cent.- was to be deducted in advance; that, in pursuance of that agreement, Monaghan was paid the sum of one hundred and eighty dollars, and no more. They further allege that on or about the twenty-second day .of September, 1887, Monaghan paid to the plaintiff, on the note, the sum of forty dollars, and that in September, 1888, he paid the further sum of fourteen dollars. Credit for these amounts, and judgment for costs, are demanded. At the conclusion of the trial the district court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of one hundred and twenty-six dollars, and in favor of the school fund for the sum of seventy-two 'dollars, and against the plaintiff for the costs.
I. When the note in suit was given, Griswold was engaged in the banking business at Manson. The
The question now presented for our .consideration is this: Does proof that such a charge has been made raise a presumption of usury, or does the burden rest on the borrower to show that the charge was authorized by the principal? It was said in Gokey v. Knapp, supra, that “an authority to loan money at a legal rate of interest does not include, by implication, the authority to loan it at an illegal rate. An authority to violate [214]*214the law will never be presumed.” In Wyllis v. Ault, 46 Iowa, 46, it appeared that the principal had sent to one Reynolds one thousand dollars to be by him loaned. In making the loan, Reynolds retained seventy-five dollars as commission. It was not shown (that he had authority to do so from the principal. There was no proof of his authority, excepting that the money had been placed in his hands to be loaned. This court, although basing its conclusion on another ground, said it was inclined to think that the evidence failed to show that the note given for the loan was usurious. In Brigham v. Myers, supra, it was said: “It would be a most unreasonable and unjust rule to presume that a principal authorized his agent to violate the law and make usurious contracts, in the absence of evidence showing such authority.” In Stillman v. Northrup, 109 N. Y. 474, 17 N. E. Rep. 379, it was held that it was not sufficient for the borrower to show that a charge had been exacted and taken by the agent, which, if authorized by the principal, made the loan usurious, but that it was also incumbent upon the borrower to show that the money was taken with the knowledge and assent of the principal, or that the taking was acquiesced in. That rule was approved in Baldwin v. Doying, 114 N. Y. 457, 21 N. E. Rep. 1007, where it was said, in effect, that it was incumbent on the borrower to prove that the bonus or charge was taken by the agent with the knowledge and assent of the principal. The law presumes that the note was authorized by law, and that it is valid. Proof that the agent for the person lending the money retained a portion of it for his own use, which, if for the benefit of the principal, would make the loan usurious, is not proof of usury, because the transaction maybe entirely legal, and for that reason the law will presume that it was so. Therefore, in order to sustain the plea of usury, it is necessary for the borrower to show, not [215]*215only that the agent has retained from, the sum loaned money sufficient to make the amount the borrower is required to pay, if for the benefit of the principal, greater than that sanctioned by the law, but also that the act of the agent in retaining the money was authorized or ratified by the principal. In this case, the defendants failed to show that Griswold had authority to retain the commission, that the plaintiff knew that it had been retained, or that he derived any benefit from it.
II. The appellant complains of the ruling of the court in admitting evidence which tended to show that
For the reasons indicated in the first division of the opinion, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED.
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52 N.W. 193, 85 Iowa 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenfield-v-monaghan-iowa-1892.