Innes v. Goldwater

157 P. 18, 30 Cal. App. 101, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 74
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1763.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 157 P. 18 (Innes v. Goldwater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Innes v. Goldwater, 157 P. 18, 30 Cal. App. 101, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 74 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is in form an action brought to recover certain personal property pledged to the defendant as security for several loans made to plaintiff by the defendant, doing- business under the name of California Loan Office. The answer of the defendant consisted in denials of the plaintiff’s ownership and right to the possession of the said property.

Upon the trial the following practically undisputed facts appeared in evidence: The defendant was a pawnbroker regularly licensed and qualified under the statute, engaged in that business. The plaintiff came to him from time to time to borrow money, pledging different articles of the property in question as security for these several loans, until, they aggregated the sum of $396.50. The plaintiff made several payments on account of these loans in small sums, which aggregated in all $34.50. He finally failed or refused to make further payments, and the defendant undertook to sell out said property for the balance remaining due upon the debt, whereupon this action was brought. It further appeared in evidence that on the occasion of these several loans defendant made an entry in his register, which he required the plaintiff to sign, and which was in the following form:

“No. 36,193. Date Feb. 28, 1914.

“Copy of Register from California Loan Office, Oakland, Cal.

“Description of property pledged and estimated value of property sold. Jewelry. Amt. loaned $250.00, interest at the rate of 2 per cent per month. This is to certify that I have received this copy of register and returned same to California Loan Office, to be its custodian till called for by me within the date of its duration, which is seven months from date.

“Name J. E. M. Innes,

“Residence, 474 Jean st., Oakland.”

*103 It does not appear that the defendant ever actually delivered to the plaintiff a copy of this register entry as the law (Pen. Code, sec. 339) requires, but that he did deliver to the plaintiff a pawn ticket in which the rate of interest to be charged was not specified.

The plaintiff at the trial undertook to show by his oral testimony that at the time of these several loans the interest actually agreed upon and charged was more than two per cent per month, that the agreement was that he was to pay four per cent per month, and that he actually made payments at said rate of interest for several months. To this evidence the defendant objected upon the ground that the above register entry, which the plaintiff signed, constituted an agreement in writing as to the rate of interest to be charged, which the plaintiff could not be permitted to vary by paroi.

We cannot agree with this contention. The matters contained in the foregoing register entry which the defendant was required to make under the above section of the Penal Code, while a memorandum of the loan made by the defendant, could not be binding upon the plaintiff in the first instance, even though a copy of the register had actually been delivered to him as the statute requires. The added portion of such entry beyond the requirement of the code was an attempted evasion of its terms, and amounted only to an acknowledgment on the part of the plaintiff that he had received from and redelivered to the defendant a copy of the register entry. In signing this admission of what was not the fact, the plaintiff could in no just sense be held to have estopped himself by his signature from proving that the rate of interest was other than that specified in the register entry. The court, therefore, properly overruled the defendant’s objection to the plaintiff’s oral proof that he was charged a rate of interest upon these several loans in excess of two per cent.

Having made this proof the plaintiff contended, and the court found, that the several contracts between the plaintiff and the defendant for these loans, and for the pledge of the property in question as security therefor, were wholly void because in contravention of section 340 of the Penal Code, which reads as follows: “Every pawnbroker who charges or receives interest at the rate of more than two per cent per month, or who by charging commissions, discount, storage, or other charge, or by compounding increases, or attempts to *104 increase, such interest, is guilty of a misdemeanor. ’ ’ The court therefore held that said contracts being wholly void, the plaintiff was entitled to recover the pledged property without paying or offering to pay his loans, and rendered its judgment accordingly in plaintiff’s favor.

The question which is thus presented is as to whether the violation by the defendant as a pawnbroker of the terms of section 340 of the Penal Code renders the transactions, whereby the defendant charged and received a rate of interest in excess of two per cent per month in violation of the said section, so wholly void as to entitle the pledgor to recover his property without paying or offering to pay the amount of his several loans.

In the early case of Jackson v. Shawl, 29 Cal. 267, the supreme court, in construing the statute of 1861, which regulated the rate of interest to be charged by pawnbrokers, and made it a misdemeanor to make interest agreements and charges in excess of such rate, held that the contract between the parties for the loan and pledge being legal as to the principal sum loaned, and only illegal as to the rate of interest to be charged, the entire contract was not void, but that the illegal portion thereof was so separable that the borrower could only recover the pledged property by tendering the pawnbroker the amount of the original loan with such interest thereon as was lawfully permitted to be charged. With this construction of said statute its terms were practically embodied in section 340 of the Penal Code, the only substantial difference between the statute and the code being that the chargeable rate of interest was reduced in the code section from four to two per cent. The respondent herein contends, however, that the rule laid down in Jackson v. Shawl, supra, has been changed and that case practically overruled by the supreme court in Levinson v. Boas, 150 Cal. 185, [11 Ann. Cas. 661, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 575, 88 Pac. 825], wherein the court held that the contract between the pledgor and a pawnbroker, when such pawnbroker was acting in violation of law in doing business as such, and in making such contract without having taken out a license as required by section 338 of the Penal Code, was wholly void; and that the receiver in bankruptcy of the borrower was entitled to recover the property pledged for such loan without tendering or offering to pay the amount of the loan. It is to be noted, however, that the court in *105 the last above-cited case, far. from overruling the case of Jackson v. Shawl, made this comment upon it: “It is to be noticed that the illegality of the contract in Jackson v. Shmol went only to the excess of interest charged, and this court applied the general and liberal principle fully recognized by law that when any matter, void even by statute, be joined with good matter which is entirely independent of it, the good part shall stand and the rest be held void.

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Bluebook (online)
157 P. 18, 30 Cal. App. 101, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/innes-v-goldwater-calctapp-1916.