Hare v. General Contract Purchase Corp.

249 S.W.2d 973, 220 Ark. 601
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 7, 1952
Docket4-9723
StatusPublished
Cited by131 cases

This text of 249 S.W.2d 973 (Hare v. General Contract Purchase Corp.) 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
Hare v. General Contract Purchase Corp., 249 S.W.2d 973, 220 Ark. 601 (Ark. 1952).

Opinion

Ed. P. McFaddiN, Justice.

This, case involves the issue of usury in connection with a sale. 1

Appellant, Clyde Hare, purchased a used truck from Earl Meeks, a second-hand automobile dealer in Arkadelphia, for $1,750. After making a cash payment of $100, and trading in a car for a credit of $500, the balance due by Hare to Meeks was $1,150. To handle this balance, Piare executed to Meeks a title retaining contract and note for $1,439.13. The note and contract were on forms supplied Meeks by appellée, General Contract Purchase Corporation; and Meeks and Hare understood that the said $1,150 was increased $289.14 to take care of insurance, interest and service charges on the delayed payments; and that the note for $1,439.13 was payable $68.53 per month for twenty-one months.

A day or two after the completion of the trade between Meeks and Hare, Meeks transferred the title retaining contract and note to the General Contract Purchase Corporation, without recourse, and received $1,150. Hare made sis of the monthly payments to General Contract Purchase Corporation, and then filed suit alleging usury, and claiming the relief stated in § 68-609 et seq. Ark. Stats. The General Contract Purchase Corporation, for its defense, claimed:

I. That General Contract Purchase Corporation was a bona fide purchaser, for value, without notice, and was, therefore, a holder in due course of the Hare note, and that the claim of usury was unavailable against such holder.

II. That the contract price of the truck was increased from $1,750 for a cash sale, to $2,039.13, because it was a credit sale.

III. That the difference between the face of the note ($1,439.13) and the balance of the truck trade ($1,150) represented two items: one being $148.24, which was the amount of insurance premium, and the other being $140.89, which was not only for interest but for service charge; and that such service charge has been approved by this Court.

The Chancery Court refused Hare’s plea of usury, and entered a decree for General Contract Purchase Corporation; and from that decree, Hare has appealed. We discuss the defenses of General Contract Purchase Corporation in the order listed.

I. Bona Fide Holder. This defense is Avithout merit. If the note be in fact usurious, then transferring it to a bona fide purchaser would not improve the situation. Our'Constitution (Art. 19, § 13) provides:

“All contracts for a greater rate of interest than ten per cent per annum shall be void, as to principal and interest, and the General Assembly shall prohibit the sgme by law; . . .”

In the case of German Bank v. DeShon, 41 Ark. 331, this Court held that a note usurious in the hands of the payee is also usurious in the hands of a subsequent purchaser, though he purchased in good faith, before maturity of the note, and without any notice of the usury; and that the reason for such holding is that the Constitution makes a usurious note void, and therefore, it can gain no validity by circulation. The case of German Bank v. DeShon is an outstanding decision in our reports, and has been consistently followed. Under that holding — which we now reaffirm — the defense of bona fide holder, for value, without notice, is without merit against the plea of usury.

II. Increased Selling Brice Because of Credit Sale. Appellee says that the price of the truck was increased because the truck was sold on credit and appellee claims that there are many cases from this Court, 2 and from other jurisdictions, 3 which permit a “credit price”, as distinguished from a cash price. The cases cited by appellee sustain the general theory, but even the credit price may be attacked as a cloak for usury. 4

But the facts in the case at bar disclose that there was never any “credit price” actually stated. We have before us the original Conditional Sales Contract between Hare and Meeks, and it recites:

“Total cash price of automobile and all extra equipment ................................................................................................$1750.00
Cash on or before delivery ..............................$100.00
Allowance on car traded in.............................. 500.00
Total down payment........................................................................... 600.00
Deferred Balance of Cash Price.......................................... 1150.00
Time Price Differential (Including any Insurance), ................................................................................................... 289.13
Balance of Time Price.....................................................................$1439.13
Which said balance of time price is payable in 21 consecutive equal monthly installments of $68.53 each.”

On the reverse side of the original contract, there is the assignment from Meeks to General Contract Purchase Corporation and also an affidavit, duly acknowledged by Hare and Meeks, which, > omitting signatures and acknowledgment, reads:

“The undersigned Purchaser and Seller of the within motor vehicle hereby swear and affirm that the within Conditional Sales Contract is bona fide, given to secure an unpaid just debt of $1150.00 due from Purchaser to Seller . . .”

From the foregoing, and from other evidence in the record, it is clearly established that the truck was priced at $1,750, and that there was no “credit price”, as distinguished from the $1,750. There is no fact in this record which makes applicable the rule of a bona fide credit price. Therefore, we need not discuss credit price as a cloak for usury any further than is discussed in the subsequent topics of this opinion.

III. Interest and Service Charge. Thus, we come to appellee’s final defense, which, as previously stated, is that the $140.89 was not only for interest, but for a service charge in connection Avith the sale of the truck. The balance on the truck was $1,150, and the insurance premium was $148.24, so the debt was $1,298.24. But the note was for $1,439.13. The question is whether such interest and service charge, which when added together exceed 10%, 5 make the transaction usurious. It is clear:

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Bluebook (online)
249 S.W.2d 973, 220 Ark. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hare-v-general-contract-purchase-corp-ark-1952.