Marley v. Consolidated Mortgage Company

229 A.2d 608, 102 R.I. 200, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 671
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 15, 1967
DocketAppeal Nos. 80, 81
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 229 A.2d 608 (Marley v. Consolidated Mortgage Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marley v. Consolidated Mortgage Company, 229 A.2d 608, 102 R.I. 200, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 671 (R.I. 1967).

Opinion

*201 Powers, J.

These are two actions of the case brought on the authority of G. L. 1956, §6-26-4, seeking to recover payment of principal and interest, made by the plaintiff in discharge of a loan alleged to ¡be usurious within the meaning of §6-26-2. They are before us on the plaintiff's appeals from judgments entered in the superior court denying her motion for summary judgment and granting the defendant’s motion for such judgment in each case.

The record establishes that on March 4, 1964, Consolidated Mortgage Company, a Rhode Island corporation, hereinafter called “Consolidated," loaned plaintiff $3,450 in consideration of which she on that day executed a negotiable promissory note in the sum of $6,321. This sum included the amount of the loan, $450 for expenses incidental to the making thereof, and $2,421 interest. Thereafter, “Consolidated" assigned the note to Security Acceptance Corporation of Rhode Island, hereinafter referred to as “assignee."

By the terms of the note plaintiff was obligated to make 84 installment payments of $75.25 each month commencing on April 4, 1964, and payable on the fourth day of each *202 month thereafter. In addition, the note provided that the maker shall have no right of prepayment unless specifically agreed upon by the holder in .writing.

However, on the same day and for all practical purposes simultaneously with plaintiff’s execution of the note, “Consolidated” executed a separate agreement in writing granting to plaintiff the right to “" * * prepay her loan after a twelve (12) month period and * * * [it] * * * will be rebated by what is commonly known in the banking business as the Rule of ‘78’s method’.” 1

The record further establishes that plaintiff made regular monthly payments from April 1964 through May of 1965 and on June 4, 1965, exercised her option to prepay by making a payment of $3,431.50.

On August 23, 1965, plaintiff commenced an action of the case against “Consolidated” and a separate action against the “assignee.” She predicated each action on the authority of §6-26-4, which in pertinent part provides:

“Every contract hereafter made in violation of any of the provisions of §6-26-2, and every mortgage, pledge, deposit, or assignment made- or given as security for the performance of such contract, shall be usurious and void; * * * if the borrower shall, either before or after suit, make any payment on such contract, either of principal or interest, or of any part of either, and whether to the lender, or to any assignee, indorsee or transferee of such contract, the said borrower shall be entitled to recover from the lender the amount so paid, in an action of the case. * * *”

The actions having been commenced in 1965, the original pleadings of plaintiff and defendants conformed to the prac *203 tice which then prevailed; but after January 10, 1966, the effective date of the new rules of civil procedure, the parties adhered to the new practice. Pursuant to rule 56 of said rules of civil procedure, plaintiff on June 15, 1966, filed a motion for summary judgment together with a supporting affidavit in each case. On June 18 and 20, 1966, “Consolidated” and “assignee” respectively also filed motions for summary judgment based on the allegations contained in ■plaintiff’s affidavit in the case in which each was defendant. Thereafter, June 23, 1966, on motion of defendant “Consolidated,” the two cases were consolidated for trial in accordance with the provisions of rule 42 of the rules of civil procedure.

On July 1, 1966, all motions were heard by a superior court justice ¡who, on the state of the pleadings in each case; denied plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and granted that of 'defendant in each case. Thereafter, July 5, 1966, a judgment -was entered for “assignee” pursuant to the decision of July 1. On July 8, 1966, another justice of the superior court ordered judgment entered for defendant “Consolidated.” By order of this court the cases were consolidated for hearing before us.

In support of her position that the superior court justice erred, plaintiff makes several related contentions. They are: first, that although consisting of separate instruments, the note and the prepayment option are in substance a single transaction; secondly, that Iby fixing the earliest moment for prepayment on the 78’s formula, plaintiff, electing to repay at that time, would be required to pay interest and expenses incidental to the making of the loan in excess of the 30 per cent per annum authorized by the statute; and lastly, that the transaction thus viewed was rendered null and void by reason of the unusual language of §6-26-2, supra. It provides:

“No person, partnership or corporation, hereafter loaning money to or negotiating the loan of money for *204 another, except duly licensed pawnbrokers and persons licensed under the provisions of chapter 25 of title 19, shall, directly or indirectly, reserve, charge or take interest on such loan, whether before or after maturity, at such a rate, or reserve, charge or take compensation for services or expenses incidental to- the making, negotiation or collection of such loan, in such an amount, that the total of one year’s interest, reckoned at the rate so reserved, charged or taken, and of all such compensation for services and expenses, shall exceed thirty per cent (30%) of the'amount actually received by the 'borrower, on all amounts exceeding fifty dollars ($50.00), whether in one or more loans, and on all amounts not exceeding fifty dollars ($50.00), five per cent (5%) per month, for the first six (6) months, and thereafter two and one-half per cent (2%%) per month of the amount actually received by the borrower.”

Both defendants concede that the amount of interest and compensation for services and expenses computed by the 78’s method would at the end of one year be in excess of 30 per cent of the amount loaned. They deny in effect, however, that plaintiff could elect to make usurious an obligation otherwise valid :by exercising a prerogative which she alone possessed. They argue that the legal principle involved was decided adversely to plaintiff’s position by this court in Reichwein v. Kirshenbaum, 98 R. I. 340 at 343, 201 A.2d 918 at 920, where we stated, “ * * * a debtor by his voluntary act cannot render usurious that which but for such act would ibe free from usury.” Indeed, defendants stress that a contrary decision cannot be found in the reported cases of our sister states.

The plaintiff, however, and with considerable justification, argues that our holding in Reichwein is not controlling in the instant cases for the reason that in the Reichwein case no prepayment option existed; whereas in the cases now before us an agreement permitting prepayment was made simultaneously with the making of the loan and it is this distinguishing fact, she contends, that makes the pre *205

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 A.2d 608, 102 R.I. 200, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marley-v-consolidated-mortgage-company-ri-1967.