Haley v. Greenhaw

360 S.W.2d 753, 235 Ark. 481
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 8, 1962
Docket5-2711
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 360 S.W.2d 753 (Haley v. Greenhaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haley v. Greenhaw, 360 S.W.2d 753, 235 Ark. 481 (Ark. 1962).

Opinion

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

The sole question on this appeal is whether a certain transaction was usurious. The facts leading to the litigation are as follows:

Mrs. Mildred Haley, appellant herein, was granted a divorce from Dr. K. J. Haley on May 23,1959. Prior thereto, the parties had entered into a property settlement which included, inter alia, the provision that the doctor would pay Mrs. Haley $500 in cash and execute a promissory note in her favor in the principal sum of $4,200, payable in monthly installments of $150 per month. The payments were to commence on June 1, 1959, and continue until the entire balance was paid. The property settlement further provided that Dr. Haley would pay a real estate mortgage in the amount of $7,500, which existed on the home belonging to his wife; further, that he would transfer title to a certain automobile to Mrs. Haley, and would pay any balance due which might constitute a lien on the car. According to appellant, Dr. Haley did not pay the mortgage, did not satisfy the lien on the Cadillac, made only the first two payments on the note, and thereafter left the state of Arkansas, being in Cotton Valley, Louisiana, at the time of the institution of this suit.

Sometime subsequent to the divorce, Dr. Haley married one Christine Knox, and on April 13,1960, Haley and wife conveyed to Ben R. Scott, approximately 480 acres of land in Greene County, Arkansas, for the consideration of $87,500. Scott and wife, on April 19, 1960, executed to Haley a mortgage on the lands for the amount of $17,500, subject to a lien of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company for $105,000. The Scotts executed six notes to Haley for the $17,500,- payable over a period from December, 1962, to December, 1967, with interest at rate of six per cent per annum. These notes were subsequently assigned by Haley to appellee, George N. Greenhaw, for the sum of $13,500. The notes provided that the makers and endorsers waived presentment for payment, notice of non-payment and protest, and they were endorsed in blank and without qualification. Mildred Haley instituted suit against Haley, Greenhaw and Scott (as garnishees), asking that Green-haw be declared a trustee of Haley for the notes.

Appellant asserted that “R. J. Haley is liable to the said Greenhaw under his endorsements on said notes and that this transaction amounted to a loan from Greenhaw to Haley of $13,500.00 for which the said Greenhaw was to receive $17,500.00 plus 6 percent interest. Plaintiff says that said transaction was usurious in that it amounted to a taking or an attempting to take interest in excess of 10 percent per annum by Greenhaw from Haley. Plaintiff says that under the constitution and statutes of Arkansas the attempted transfer of said notes from Haley to Green-haw is null and void because of usury. By reason of the fact that said transaction is void on the count of usury, the plaintiff has and the court should declare that plaintiff has an equitable garnishment lien upon said notes for the payment of the amount due plaintiff as set out in the original complaint. ’ ’

Her prayer for relief was as follows:

‘ ‘ That the court enter an order temporarily restraining and enjoining the said Greenhaw from selling, assigning, hypothecating, collecting the proceeds of, or otherwise disposing of the six notes totaling $17,500.00 wherein Ben it. Scott and Maude Scott are makers, R. J. Haley is payee and R. J. Haley is endorser until the further order of this court and that upon final hearing, the court order the said Greenhaw to deposit said notes in the registry of this court in order that they may be subjected to the claim of plaintiff for collection of the amount due her from the defendant Robert J. Haley. Plaintiff further prays that the court decree that plaintiff has an equitable garnishment lien on the notes in question for the amount due her from the defendant Robert J. Haley. Plaintiff further prays that the court find that the purported transfer of said notes from R. J. Haley to George N. Greenhaw was usurious and void and that R. J. Haley be decreed to be the owner of said notes subject to the claims of plaintiff herein. * * *”

The case proceeded to trial, and after the taking of testimony, the court found:

“That the six notes totaling $17,500 dated April 19, 1960, made by Ben R. Scott and Maude Scott, his wife, to R. J. Haley, which said notes were sold, assigned and delivered to defendant, George N. Greenhaw by the said R. J. Haley for the sum of $13,500.00 paid by defendant George N. Greenhaw, to defendant Robert J. Haley, should be found and declared to be the property of defendant George N. Greenhaw, and that the plaintiff, Mildred Haley, has no right, title, interest or claim or equitable garnishment lien upon or against said notes or the proceeds thereof or the security therefor; that said sale, assignment and delivery of said notes by E. J. Haley to George N. Greenhaw was a real and bona fide sale and purchase and was not made as the occasion, subterfuge or pretext for a loan from George N. Greenhaw to E. J. Haley; and that said transaction was not usurious. * * #”

The complaint was accordingly dismissed, and from the decree embracing such findings, appellant brings this appeal. 1

For reversal, appellant relies upon three points, but we consider point No. 2 decisive in determining the litigation, and accordingly, there is no occasion to discuss the other points. Appellant’s point No. .2 asserts that the transfer of the notes from. Haley to Greenhaw constitutes usury, and the transaction is consequently void. Appellee contends, as found by the Court, that the transaction was a bona fide sale and purchase, and accordingly, was not usurious.

One thing is certain; there can be no usury unless there is a loan, either directly or indirectly. As stated in 55 American Jurisprudence, Usury, § 18, p. 336:

“It is essential to constitute usury that there must be a loan of money or a forbearance of an existing indebtedness ; unless it appears that the transaction in question was in substance a loan or the forbearance of a debt, there is nothing upon which to predicate a charge of usury. ’ ’

In Mitchell v. Duncan, 190 Ark. 598, 79 S. W. 2d 997, we said:

“. . . to constitute, usury, there must be an agreement requiring the borrower to pay and entitling the lender to receive a higher rate of interest than that allowed by statute for the loan or forbearance of money.”

Appellant’s contention of usury is based on the fact that the notes assigned to Greenhaw by Haley were endorsed in blank, and without qualification. The notes contain the following language on their face: ‘ ‘ The makers and endorsers of this note hereby severally waive presentment for payment, notice of non-payment, and protest, and consent to extension of time of payment without notice.” Since, under this endorsement, Haley became equally liable with the maker of the note, Scott, appellant contends that the transaction between Haley and Green-haw became usurious.

The contention is summarized in her brief as follows:

“We now see that when Dr. R. J.

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360 S.W.2d 753, 235 Ark. 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haley-v-greenhaw-ark-1962.