MacRackan v. Bank of Columbus

164 N.C. 24
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 26, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 164 N.C. 24 (MacRackan v. Bank of Columbus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacRackan v. Bank of Columbus, 164 N.C. 24 (N.C. 1913).

Opinions

Walker, J.,

after stating tbe case: Tbe defendant loaned to tbe plaintiff tbe sum of $3,000, and charged, reserved, and received from bim, as interest thereon, a suro in excess of tbe legal rate. Tbe character of tbe transaction is not involved in any doubt. Interest is tbe premium allowed by law for tbe use of money, while usury is tbe taking of more for its use than tbe law allows. It is an illegal profit. 4 Blk. Com., 156; Yarborough v. Hughes, 139 N. C., 200. If tbe lender knowingly takes, receives, reserves, or charges a greater rate than 6 per cent per annum, be forfeits the interest, and if tbe unlawful interest has been paid to bim, be is liable to a penalty of twice tbe amount of interest so received. Revisal, sec. 1951.

Tbe second prayer for instruction is directed to tbe intent with which tbe interest was paid. Where there is negotiation for a loan of money, and tbe borrower agrees to return the amount advanced at all events, it is a contract of lending, and however tbe transaction may be shaped or disguised, if a profit or return beyond tbe legal rate of interest is intended to be made out of tbe necessities or improvidence of tbe borrower, or otherwise, the contract is usurious. The corrupt intent mentioned in tbe books consists in the-charging or receiving tbe excessive interest with tbe knowledge that it is prohibited by law, and tbe purpose to violate it. Our statute makes it usury if tbe interest is knowingly charged or received at tbe unlawful rate. When tbe illegal purpose stands clearly revealed on tbe face of tbe instrument, as in this ease, no further inquiry into tbe intent is required. Miller v. Insurance Co., 118 N. C., 612. Tbe contract itself establishes tbe corrupt intent, as it is susceptible of no other meaning. These principles were settled in tbe. recent case of Riley v. Sears, 154 N. C., 509.

This transaction cannot be explained upon any other theory than that the defendant knew tbe interest it exacted to be urn lawful, and this makes it usury. Doster v. English, 152 N. C., [27]*27339. Tbe court charged tbe jury that knowledge of the illegal character of the interest received by the defendant was essential to its liability, when it gave this instruction: “If you find by the greater weight of the evidence that between 9 February, 1912, and 30 May, 1912, the plaintiff paid to the defendant bank a greater rate of interest than 6 per cent, and at the time the bank knowingly charged and received a greater rate than 6 per cent, then it is your duty to answer the first issue ‘Yes.’ If you do not so find by the greater weight of the evidence, you would answer it ‘No.’ ”

The second question is, Did the fact that plaintiff was a member of the board of directors, and the managing and loan committee, purge the transaction of its usurious táint? The language of our statute (Eevisal, sec. 1951) is positive and peremptory, and it was said (by Justice Hoke) in Riley v. Sears, supra, that the courts have enforced it strictly, and with insistence and alertness. It may be added by us now, that it is the declared' policy of the State, which for many years has stood with the approval of the popular will, that usury shall not be exacted of the borrower, and “whenever, directly or indirectly, unlawful interest has been taken or charged, the provisions of the statute must be applied.” Riley v. Sears, supra, and numerous cases therein cited. The only test is the taking of the excessive interest knowingly, and it can make no difference who is the borrower.

There is no exception in the statute of any person or class of persons. A bank is not privileged by the law to exact a larger rate of interest from its stockholders or officers than from those who are not.

This Court has uniformly held that a stockholder who has paid usurious interest to the corporation, of which he is a member, can recover the penalty, “notwithstanding that he is in pari delicto in the transaction. The statute (Code, sec. 3836; Revisal, 1951) expressly provides that a party who has so paid usurious interest (and is in pari delicto) may recover double the amount he has paid.” Hollowell v. B. and L. Assn., 120 N. C., 286. The same was held in Rowland v. B. and L. Assn., [28]*28115 N. C., 825, where Justice Burwell says: “Thus, it appears that what it takes from one of its stockholders, under the pretense that it is lending at 6 per cent, it gives to another with a lavish hand. It is both a taker and a giver of usury.”

The doctrine is familiar that where each is equally in fault (in pari delicto) the law favors him who is defending, or, as otherwise expressed, when the fault is mutual and of equal degree, the law will leave the case as it finds it. But the principle does not apply here. It is not, in law, a case of equal fault. Lord Ellenborough once said that where there is oppression on the one side and submission on the other, it never can be predicated as par delictum, for one holds the rod and the other bows to it. Broom’s Legal Maxims (6 Am. Ed.), 695; Smith v. Cuff, 6 M. and S., 160. And in Atkinson v. Denby, 7 H. and N. (Exch.), 933, approving Smith v. Cuff, supra, and Smith v. Bromley, infra, Chief Justice, Coclcburn said that where one of the parties is in a position to dictate and the other has no other alternative but to submit, it is virtually a state of coercion, and while the parties may be in delicto, it is not par delictum — they are not equally in fault, one being in a position of dependence on the other and having to submit to his terms or suffer if he does not, and that .it would be’ mischievous if it were held that he could not recover the money paid under such circumstances.

'Lord Mansfield, in the Court of Kong’s Bench,'while deciding the case of Lowry v. Bourdieu (2 Douglas, 469), reported in 99 Eng. Reports (Full Reprint, at pp. 209, 301), said, “he desired it might not be understood that the Court held that, in all cases where money has been |>aid on an illegal consideration, it cannot be recovered back. That in cases of oppression, when paid, for instance, to a creditor to induce him to sign a bankrupt’s certificate, or upon a usurious contract, it may be recovered, for in such cases the parties are not in pari delicto

The commentator on Jones v. Barclay, infra (99 Eng. Reports) Full Reprint, at p. 443, note F 7), says: “The inference to be drawn from the various decisions that have taken place on this subject, stated here and in the notes to Lowry v. Bourdieu, supra, 468, appear to be that, the general principle re[29]*29maining, tbat in pari delicto potior est conditio possidentis, the two following exceptions to its application are also established: (1) That where the' illegality exists in the contract itself, and that contract is not executed, there is a locvs peniténtice, the de-lictum, is incomplete, and the contract may be rescinded by either party. (2) Where the law that creates the illegality in the transaction was designed for the coercion of one party and the .protection of the other, or where the one party is the principal offender, and the other only criminal from a constrained acquiescence in s.uch illegal conduct, in these cases there is no parity of delictum,

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Bluebook (online)
164 N.C. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macrackan-v-bank-of-columbus-nc-1913.