Mindlin v. Davis
This text of 74 So. 2d 789 (Mindlin v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Sam MINDLIN, Philip Yasser, and Peoples Mortgage Corporation, a corporation of Florida, Appellants,
v.
Randolph DAVIS and Blossom Davis, his wife, Appellees.
Supreme Court of Florida. Special Division B.
*790 Harold Tannen, Miami, for appellants.
Henry G. Simmonite, Miami, for appellees.
PATTERSON, Associate Justice.
This is an appeal by the mortgagees, defendants below, from a decree of the Circuit Court of Dade County declaring the mortgagees' note and mortgage usurious and imposing the forfeitures provided in Sec. 687.04, Florida Statutes, F.S.A.
The facts from which this litigation arose are set out in extensive findings by the master which are sufficiently supported by the evidence. The Peoples Mortgage Corporation, mortgage brokers, persuaded the mortgagors, plaintiffs below, to apply through them for a ten per cent mortgage loan in the principal amount of $3,300 for the purpose of consolidating their various obligations including an existing five per cent first mortgage on their home in favor of Chase Federal Savings and Loan Association, *791 which is referred to as the Chase mortgage. Before the loan applied for was closed, Peoples Mortgage Corporation had sold the mortgage to appellants and informed appellees that the loan would be closed directly with appellants as mortgagees. Appellees' loan application to Peoples Mortgage Corporation provided that the applied for mortgage should be a first mortgage, for the placing of which appellees agreed to pay Peoples Mortgage Corporation a commission of $263.40, such commission expressly to include "all costs incidental to the closing of the transaction." Implicit in the terms of the application and the negotiations for the new mortgage was the agreement that the Chase mortgage should be discharged out of the proceeds of the new mortgage.
The mortgage application was signed December 3rd. The note and mortgage were dated December 9th but for reasons not entirely clear in the evidence, closing of the loan was not accomplished until December 15th. Closing statement indicated that the proceeds of the loan were applied $263.40 to expenses of the loan, $1,488.02 to pay in full the Chase mortgage, and $1,548.58 in cash to appellees. To close the loan appellants furnished their attorney sufficient funds to pay the expense item and to make the cash disbursement to appellees, but retained the amount of $1,488.02 to be applied in payment and discharge of the Chase mortgage. At the closing, appellant's attorney made the cash disbursement to appellees and paid out the $263.40 as expenses of the loan, including $185 to Peoples Mortgage Corporation as brokerage, and $50 to himself as attorney fee for attending closing and examining abstract. The payment of the Chase mortgage was not handled by appellants' attorney in closing the loan, but instead appellants merely continued the monthly installments on that mortgage in the name of the appellees until, after having made eight such payments, the remaining balance was paid and mortgage satisfied on August 6, 1953, after the commencement of this suit. It is not disputed that the appellants intended, contrary to the implicit requirement of the mortgage contract, and without the knowledge of the appellees, to pay off the Chase mortgage by installments rather than immediate payment in full, standing ready, so it is claimed, to make full payment at any time if demanded by either party to that mortgage.
The new mortgage required payments of principal and interest of $60 per month for five years, with final payment of $843.37 on December 9, 1957. The borrowers had made seven such monthly payments of $60 at the time this suit was commenced. No interest credit was allowed for the six days' delay between the date of the mortgage note and the date of closing.
Upon the facts here set out, the Master concluded that the transaction was rendered usurious in three particulars: first, the failure to credit appellees with interest in the amount of $5.60 accruing between December 9 and December 15; second, the charge of $50 as fee for appellants' attorney; and third, the failure of appellants to pay off the Chase mortgage with the proceeds retained for that purpose. Upon a detailed calculation of the actual interest involved in the transaction, the Master recommended the forfeiture of the total interest contracted and the additional amount of $546.18, being twice the amount of interest actually exacted and received, according to his calculation. The Master's conclusions were approved in the final decree and the mortgage was reformed by reducing the monthly payments to an amount sufficient to pay out the principal, less forfeitures, by the end of the term of the mortgage. The findings of usury, as well as the manner of imposing the forfeiture, are challenged on this appeal.
Manifestly, if the transaction presented here, in any of the particulars charged, constitutes a device or contrivance for the exaction of additional interest over that provided in the mortgage note itself, then the whole transaction is rendered usurious inasmuch as ten per cent interest contracted in the note is the maximum allowable under the law. The controlling statutes, Sec. 687.03 and 687.04, Florida Statutes, F.S.A., provide:
*792 "687.03 It shall be usury and unlawful for any person, or for any agent, officer or other representative of any person, to reserve, charge or take for any loan, or for any advance of money, or for forbearance to enforce the collection of any sum of money, a rate of interest greater than ten per cent per annum, either directly or indirectly, by way of commission for advances, discounts, exchange, or by any contract, contrivance or device whatever, whereby the debtor is required or obligated to pay a sum of money greater than the actual principal sum received, together with interest at the rate of ten per cent, as aforesaid. * * *"
"687.04 Any person, or any agent, officer or other representative of any person, willfully violating the provisions of § 687.03 shall forfeit the entire interest so charged, or contracted to be charged or reserved, and only the actual principal sum of such usurious contract can be enforced in any court in this state, either at law or in equity; and when said usurious interest is taken or reserved, or has been paid, then and in that event the person, who has taken or reserved, or has been paid, either directly or indirectly, such usurious interest, shall forfeit to the party from whom such usurious interest has been reserved, taken or exacted in any way, double the amount of interest so reserved, taken or exacted; * * *."
We cannot agree that either the failure to credit interest for the delay in closing or the charge of the fee for appellants' attorney is a violation of the statute under the facts before us. With respect to the interest credit, there is no suggestion in the evidence that the note was predated or that the delay in closing was contrived with any intent to circumvent the statute. Nor do we think such usurious intent may reasonably be imputed to the appellants from the other aspects of the transaction. In the absence of any reasonable basis for imputing such an intent, it is our view that the failure to abate interest until the actual closing was an error in closing and should be adjusted as such rather than an usurious exaction. Maule v. Eckis, 156 Fla. 790, 24 So.2d 576; Chandler et ux. v. Kendrick, Fla., 108 Fla. 450, 146 So. 551.
The attorney's fee charged the borrowers in this case was included as part of the expenses of the loan as agreed in the loan application.
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