Home Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Sanitary Fish Co.

286 P. 76, 156 Wash. 80, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 537
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1930
DocketNo. 21957. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 286 P. 76 (Home Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Sanitary Fish Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Sanitary Fish Co., 286 P. 76, 156 Wash. 80, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 537 (Wash. 1930).

Opinions

Beals, J.

This action was commenced by Home Savings & Loan Association, a corporation, which filed its complaint asking for judgment on a note and the foreclosure of a mortgage, naming as defendants Sanitary Fish Co., a corporation, and the Carrolls. Jacob Borish and L. Walter were later made additional parties defendant, and filed their answer and cross-complaint asking for judgment on a note of the defendant Sanitary Fish Co. and the foreclosure of a second mortgage given to secure the same.

No issue is raised here concerning the note and mortgage in favor of Home Savings & Loan Association, the judgment in favor of that corporation being apparently acquiesced in by all parties concerned. The defendants Sanitary Fish Co. and the Carrolls con *82 tended that the Borish-Walter note was tainted with usury, and the trial court in its decree found that such was the case and made certain deductions from that note because of the usury which the court found inhered therein. The note was originally given for $3,-500, but before the trial Messrs. Borish and Walter filed a written disclaimer to any portion thereof in excess of $3,000, they admitting that in so far as they were concerned $3,000 was the limit of the indebtedness evidenced thereby. The trial court eliminated the $500 covered by this disclaimer and made certain further deductions from the remaining $3,000, holding that such deductions were required by the usury statute.

From the .judgment entered in favor of Messrs. Borish and Walter, Sanitary Fish Co. and two of the other defendants have appealed upon the ground that the deductions made by the court because of the finding of usury were less in amount than they should have been, and Messrs. Borish and Walter have cross-appealed upon the ground that no deductions at all should have been made, save as to the amount eliminated by their disclaimer.

As the original plaintiff, Home Savings & Loan Association, is not concerned in this appeal, Messrs. Borish and Walter, defendants and cross-complainants below and cross-appellants here, will hereinafter in this opinion be referred to as plaintiffs, and defendants and appellants Sanitary Fish Co. and John D. Carroll and wife will be referred to as defendants.

Plaintiffs, in their cross-complaint, alleged that defendant Sanitary Fish Co., December 19, 1927, by its president and secretary, executed in favor of plaintiffs Borish and Walter a promissory note in the principal sum of $3,500, bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, payable in six installments, *83 the first five installments being each in the snm of $200, and the last, payable December 1, 1928, in the snm of $2,500; that the note provided that, if any installment thereof should not be paid when due, the whole sum of both principal and interest should become immediately due • and collectible, and that this note was secured by a mortgage executed by Sanitary Fish Co. Plaintiffs prayed for judgment on the note and that the mortgage securing the same be foreclosed. Defendants, in their answer, admitted the execution of the note and mortgage, but denied the validity thereof; and, by way of an affirmative defense, pleaded that the actual loan made by plaintiffs to defendants for which the note in the sum of $3,500 was given, was, in fact, a loan in the sum of $3,000 and no more, out of which $3,000 defendants paid plaintiff’s agent, as a part consideration for the loan, the sum of $175, and that the note as given was usurious and that, in so far as same was tainted with usury, defendants claimed relief against the same.

The trial court found that only $3,000 had actually been advanced and loaned by plaintiffs to defendants, but that the other items, aggregating $175, were not usury. The trial court deducted the $500, which it found to have been usuriously exacted from defendants (being the same $500 to which plaintiffs had disclaimed all interest prior to the trial) from the $3,500, the nominal principal of the note sued upon, computed interest on the note at eight per cent per annum, and deducted that amount from the $3,000, entering judgment on the note against defendants for the sum of $2,760.

Defendants contend that the court should have deducted the $500, which the court found had been usuriously exacted, from the actual loan of $3,000, and also that the court erred in refusing to deduct $75 of the *84 $175 paid by defendants, wbicb $75 the defendants contend constituted a further usurious exaction.

Plaintiffs could . not, of course, escape the consequences of a usurious contract by filing a disclaimer to the five hundred dollar bonus just prior to the trial. If the contract as and when made was in fact usurious, plaintiffs, upon that fact appearing under proper pleadings and by the preponderance of competent and sufficient evidence, are, upon the record in this case, liable to the penalties provided by statute.

The loan from plaintiffs to Sanitary Fish Co. (which will hereinafter be referred to as the company) was negotiated by one Samuel Freeman, who testified at the trial on plaintiff’s behalf. His testimony was to the effect that one of defendant company’s brokers, during the month of December, 1927, approached the witness on behalf of the company, stating that it desired a loan in the sum of $3,000, to be secured by a second mortgage, and that the company, being in great need of the money, was willing to pay $500 as a bonus to any one who would procure such a loan; it being the theory of plaintiffs that Mr. Freeman, in arranging the loan which was actually made, had included this $500 in the note executed by the company in favor of the plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs contend that no usury existed; that they are not responsible for what Mr. Freeman did and that in any event the company is estopped from urging the defense of usury. The trial court, by its judgment, found against plaintiffs upon all of these questions, and a careful reading of the record convinces us that its action as to these matters was correct.

Defendants contend that the evidence shows that Mr. Freeman was in fact one of the principals in the transaction, and that the note ran to plaintiff Jacob Borish as trustee for Mr. Freeman. Whether such was the *85 fact or whether Mr. Freeman was in law the agent of plaintiffs, we do not find it necessary to determine. In either case, under the circumstances disclosed by this record, plaintiffs. are responsible, under Rem. Comp. Stat., § 7304, infra, for Mr. Freeman’s acts. Ridgway v. Davenport, 37 Wash. 134, 79 Pac. 606; Peter v. Boling, 140 Wash. 466, 249 Pac. 776.

Plaintiffs cite the opinion of this court in the case of Miesen v. Motter, 115 Wash. 49, 196 Pac. 659, in which this court held that, under the facts disclosed by the record, an oral promise to pay $500 as a bonus did not render usurious a contract between the parties whereby Mr. Miesen loaned certain money to Mr. Motter. The finding of the trial court on this point, as quoted by this court in its opinion, is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
286 P. 76, 156 Wash. 80, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-savings-loan-assn-v-sanitary-fish-co-wash-1930.