Madison Personal Loan, Inc. v. Parker

124 F.2d 143, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2446
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 1941
Docket109
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 124 F.2d 143 (Madison Personal Loan, Inc. v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madison Personal Loan, Inc. v. Parker, 124 F.2d 143, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2446 (2d Cir. 1941).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by permission from an order of the District Court construing the Small Loan Act of New York, Banking Law, § 340 et seq. Appellant, Madison Personal Loan, Inc., petitioned for an order requiring the bankrupt to turn over an automobile which was covered by a chattel mortgage in favor of appellant. The bankrupt’s trustee opposed the petition on the ground that the loan which the mortgage secured was void under the Small Loan Act. The referee granted the petition, but on petition to review, the District Judge reversed and upheld the trustee. In re Radner, D.C., 36 F.Supp. 964. 1

The facts are stipulated. .On June 23, 1939, the bankrupt executed a promissory note in the amount of $287, bearing interest at the maximum rate allowed under the Small Loan Act and secured by the chattel mortgage in question on the bankrupt’s automobile. Of this $287, $159.29 was paid to appellant in satisfaction of a prior loan, representing $158.19 principal and $1.10 interest, and the remaining $127.71 was paid over to the bankrupt. There has been some dispute whether it is proper to infer from these facts that the $2.87 loan was a “renewal” or a “new” loan. _ In our view of the case the particular term to be applied to the transaction is immaterial. Default on the note and mortgage occurred on July 23, 1940.

The trustee relies on § 352 of the New York Banking Law in asserting that the loan by appellant is void. The section reads in part:

“No interest, consideration or charge for the use of money shall be deducted or received in advance or compounded, and all interest, consideration and charges for the use of money shall be computed on unpaid principal balances. * 4 *
“If any interest, consideration or charges in excess of those permitted by this act are charged, contracted for, or received the contract of loan shall be void and the licensee shall have no right to collect or receive any principal, interest, or charges whatsoever.”

These provisions of this particular section, first enacted in its. .present form in 1932, have not been construed by any New York court. 2 In other states, however, substantially similar provisions, all based on the uniform act drafted through the offices of the Russell Sage Foundation, have been construed as the District Court did the New York act. Frazier v. City Investment Co., 42 Ga.App. 585; 157 S.E. 102; Lanier v. Consolidated Loan & Finance Co., 47 Ga. App. 148, 170 S.E. 99, followed with approval in Nash Loan Co. v. Dixon, 181 Ga. 297, 182 S.E. 23; Commonwealth v. State Loan Corp., 116 Pa.Super. 365, 176 A. 516; Vaughn v. Graham, 234 Mo.App. 781, 121 S.W.2d 222. The only case to the contrary, Rouse v. Jennings, 263 Mich. 609, 249 N.W. 10, will be discussed more fully below.

*145 Appellant presses upon us the New York cases on compounding interest decided prior to the Small Loan Act. These cases clearly hold that an agreement to pay interest on accrued interest is legal if the agreement is made after accrual and with consideration, but illegal if made in advance of accrual. Newburger-Morris Co. v. Talcott, 219 N.Y. 505, 114 N.E. 846, 3 A.L.R. 287; Young v. Hill, 67 N.Y. 162, 23 Am. Rep. 99; Stewart v. Petree, 55 N.Y. 621, 14 Am.Rep. 352. This distinction, appellant says, is written into the Small Loan Act through the word “compounded” in the excerpt from § 352 quoted above. This hardly seems the case. In the first place, both the Talcott and Young cases, supra, set out not to define compound interest, but to determine when compounding interest is legal. For example,'in the Talcott case, supra, 219 N.Y. at page 510, 114 N.E. at page 847, 3 A.L.R. 287, the court said: “There are times, however, when a promise to pay compound interest will be enforced, if made after simple interest has accrued.” And in the Young case, supra, 67 N.Y. at page 167, 23 Am.Rep. 99, the court was even more specific: “The exacting or reserving of compound interest has not met with favor in the courts, but the right to retain it when voluntarily paid is not disputed, and a recovery of it upon express contract, made after the interest has accrued and upon a sufficient consideration, is allowed.”

The problem of construing § 352 is thus changed from the question whether the legislature enacted “compounded” as defined by the New York courts to the question whether' the legislature intended by “compounded,” “illegally compounded.” Stated this way, it seems highly questionable that appellant’s argument is at all sound. Since the act itself denounces compounding as illegal, it seems gratuitous to assume that the legislature meant to make illegal only illegal compounding of interest. True, the illegality of compounding in New York was not usurious, but only contrary to public policy, Stewart v. Petree, supra; and thus the penalty was refusal to allow recovery of the additional interest, Young v. Hill, supra, not avoidance of the entire obligation under the general usury statute. New York General Business Law, § 373; Sabine v. Paine, 223 N.Y. 401, 119 N.E. 849, 5 A.L.R. 1444. But to rely on this is to make all the more finely spun the distinction thus attributed to the legislature.

Furthermore, the legislature enacted the law in its present form in 1932 approximately as the fifth draft of the Uniform Small Loan Law. Hubaehek, Annotations on Small Loan Laws, 1938, 222. If the legislature had any specific intent with reference to “compounded,” it probably meant to use the word in a manner more or less common to all states, for it was enacting a uniform law. Certainly the drafters of the Uniform Small Loan Law could hardly have meant any more than that “compounding” simply means interest on interest. See 33 C.J. 179; 30 Am.Jur. 6. Otherwise, they invited confusion. “There is a wilderness of authority on this subject. Decisions may be found taking almost any view of the question.” Palm v. Fancher, 93 Miss. 785, 790, 48 So. 818, 33 L.R.A., N.S., 295. If any sense is to be given to “compounded” in the Uniform Small Loan Law, it must be to take it as a commonly accepted term, not with a complicated gloss for each state’s peculiar rules of legal and illegal compounding of interest.

Support to this view is lent by the further provision of § 352 of the New York Banking Law that interest “shall be computed on unpaid principal balances.” If we construe “compounded” to mean illegally compounded under the Young and Talcott cases, supra, we run counter to this requirement that interest shall be computed only on principal. Even if the word “compounded” were omitted from the statute, the addition of interest to principal in forming new principal would be denounced by the remaining part of the section. This is made stronger by noting that the first and fourth drafts said that interest should be computed only on “unpaid balances,” whereas the fifth draft, the source of the New York act, and the current sixth draft say “unpaid principal balances.” The changes in the section on interest, we are told, were designed to make “more clear the prohibition of additional charges beyond the authorized interest.” Gallert, Hilborn and May, Small Loan Legislation, 1932, 97. 3 Considering the source of the New York statute, it is *146

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Bluebook (online)
124 F.2d 143, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-personal-loan-inc-v-parker-ca2-1941.