Midland Loan Finance Co. v. Lorentz

296 N.W. 911, 209 Minn. 278, 1941 Minn. LEXIS 848
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 24, 1941
DocketNos. 32,552, 32,553.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 296 N.W. 911 (Midland Loan Finance Co. v. Lorentz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Midland Loan Finance Co. v. Lorentz, 296 N.W. 911, 209 Minn. 278, 1941 Minn. LEXIS 848 (Mich. 1941).

Opinions

1 Reported in 296 N.W. 911. Two actions, one to foreclose a conditional sale contract covering an automobile and the other in replevin to recover possession thereof as an incident of the foreclosure. The cases were tried together and resulted in findings adverse to plaintiff in the replevin case. The court dismissed the foreclosure case since "the outcome of the replevin action" determined that plaintiff "has nothing to foreclose." Motions for amended findings or a new trial were denied (except for certain amendments of the findings in the replevin action not material here), whereupon judgments were entered, from which plaintiff appeals.

The decisive question, as plaintiff sees it, is whether the transaction was "a conventional sale of an automobile by a dealer to defendant under a conditional sale contract, and abona fide sale of the contract by the dealer to plaintiff, or whether, * * * plaintiff made a usurious loan to defendant to enable him to pay * * * the balance due on the car."

The court found the transaction to be a usurious loan. That finding is challenged because, so it is claimed, defendant has failed to meet "the burden of proving usury." *Page 281

On August 5, 1937, defendant purchased from a dealer an automobile the cash price of which was $2,645. His Packard car was taken in trade as a "down payment" for $1,445, leaving an unpaid balance of $1,200. Defendant was without sufficient funds to finance the deal, and the question of how he could do so became the subject of some discussion between the dealer and defendant. Plaintiff's name was suggested as the medium through which the cash could be had. Defendant testified:

"Well, the balance due of $1,200 — I was to buy my license extra — and that was to be financed with the Midland Finance Company. In other words, it was $100 a month that I was to pay, or $101 — I think it was $100, and then there was a little balance over the 12th month that was supposed to be paid at that time to make it equal."

He signed a form of contract "in blank. * * * It was not filled in." On the same day the instrument, a conditional sale contract, was completed, apparently by the dealer. As written, it provided for the payment of $1,412, payable in 12 installments, $301 due September 15, 1937, and 11 installments of $101 each due on the 15th of each month thereafter, with interest after the maturity of each installment at eight per cent per annum. By its terms the dealer "purported to be vendor," defendant the vendee. It was made "concurrently with the loan transaction." In plaintiff's brief it is said: "Defendant's testimony is to the effect that he never agreed to pay more than $1,200," he "didn't buy anything for $2,857," that being the time payment sale price contained in the instrument as written.

In its memorandum the court said that it had "not the slightest hesitation in finding that the transaction as engineered by the plaintiff was usurious, and was so intended to be"; that it was "compiled, made and printed" by the plaintiff, who "placed" these printed contract forms "in the hands of its agents, the car salesmen, for use when the willing victim appeared. The testimony shows that before the contract between" the dealer "and the defendant *Page 282 was completed" the dealer "was in communication by telephone" with plaintiff in regard to the terms of the contract, which was assigned on that very day to plaintiff; that all the dealer "had coming" upon acceptance of defendant's trade-in car was $1,200, which is the amount plaintiff actually paid to the dealer by its check in that sum. In addition, plaintiff on the same day also issued to the dealer "a deferred certificate" in the amount of $39, stating that there had been "deposited with this company" (plaintiff) that sum, "payable to the depositor [dealer] on or before after 1st payment upon return of this certificate, properly endorsed, with interest at 6 per cent per annum. Payable on condition that when [?] all notes given by * * * purchaser [describing the car involved] are paid in full, together with all interest thereon."

Defendant's exhibit 2 is typed upon an "invoice" bearing the dealer's name and address. This was deemed by the court to be of evidentiary value since it shows what the dealer "had coming after it took in exchange the defendant's" Packard car. It reads:

"Salesman M.B. Cutter Jr. Date August 5th, 1937. Sold to H.W. Lorentz 709 Mtk. Mills Rd., Hopkins, Minnesota

Description Unit Price -------------------------------------------------------------- Cord Beverly sedan 812 model 1937 Serial No. 2263S Motor No. FB2189 2645.00 Packard 120 Club sedan 1445.00 Midland Fin. check 1200.00 -------- 2645.00 -------- Paymts. to be made to the Midland Finance Co. as foll: 1 @ 301.00 due Sept. 15th, 1937, and 11 @ 101.00 ea."

That part of our statute applicable to this controversy reads (2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 7038): *Page 283

"All bonds, bills, notes, mortgages, and all other contracts and securities whatsoever, * * * whereby there shall bereserved, secured, or taken any greater sum or value for theloan or forbearance of any money, goods, or things in actionthan hereinbefore prescribed, shall be void except as to bona fide purchasers of negotiable paper, in good faith, for a valuable consideration and before maturity, as hereinafter provided." (Italics supplied.)

The exception quoted is not material here since a conditional sale contract is clearly not "negotiable paper."

1. The statutory language is plain and unambiguous. And our cases, while not in complete harmony as to results reached, do establish that the question of usury is, generally speaking, one of fact. As such, each case depends upon its own particular facts and circumstances. Stein v. Swensen, 46 Minn. 360,49 N.W. 55, 24 A.S.R. 234; Chase v. New York Mtg. L. Co. 49 Minn. 111,51 N.W. 816; Grieser v. Hall, 56 Minn. 155, 57 N.W. 462; Stevens v. Staples, 64 Minn. 3, 65 N.W. 959; Banning v. Hall,70 Minn. 89, 72 N.W. 817; Barry v. Paranto, 97 Minn. 265,106 N.W. 911, 7 Ann. Cas. 984; Pomplun v. Hudson, 177 Minn. 321,324, 225 N.W. 115.

2. The test to determine whether there is usury in a given case is whether the contract, if performed, will result in producing to the lender interest at a greater rate than that permitted by law, and whether that result was intended by the lender. Smith v. Parsons, 55 Minn. 520, 526, 57 N.W. 311 (which has been followed or cited with approval in many of our subsequent cases); Wetsel v. Guaranteed Mtg. Co. 195 Minn. 509,513, 263 N.W. 605; In re Mansfield Steel Corp. (D.C.)

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Midland Loan Finance Co. v. Lorentz
296 N.W. 911 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
296 N.W. 911, 209 Minn. 278, 1941 Minn. LEXIS 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midland-loan-finance-co-v-lorentz-minn-1941.