Moncrief v. Palmer

114 A. 181, 44 R.I. 37, 17 A.L.R. 119, 1921 R.I. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 6, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 114 A. 181 (Moncrief v. Palmer) 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
Moncrief v. Palmer, 114 A. 181, 44 R.I. 37, 17 A.L.R. 119, 1921 R.I. LEXIS 41 (R.I. 1921).

Opinion

Sweetland, C. J.

This is a bill in equity praying that a certain note made by the complainant to the respondent Palmer for money loaned be declared usurious and void and be surrendered to the complainant; that a certain mortgage deed of personal property given by the complainant to said Palmer as security for the payment of said note be cancelled; and that the respondent Palmer be restrained from alienating said mortgage and note, and from foreclosing said mortgage.

The complainant in his bill makes no offer to pay to the respondent Palmer the money loaned with legal interest. On demurrer a justice of the Superior Court held that under the allegations of the bill the transaction was usurious but dismissed the bill on the ground that payment or a tender of payment constituted a condition precedent to the granting of the equitable relief sought. The cause.is before us upon the complainant’s appeal from the decree of the Superior Court.

*39 (1 ) *38 The provisions of the Rhode Island statute with reference to usury are drastic. Chapter 434, Public Laws, 1909, amended by Chapter 838, Public Laws, 1912. The violation of the act is punishable as a misdemeanor, every contract made in violation of it is void and the borrower may recover in an action at law not only the interest but any portion of the principal paid by him upon such usurious contract. The complainant’s solicitor has presented to us a very comprehensive and able argument in support of his *39 contention that equity should recognize the view of' public policy emphatically expressed in the legislative act and should cancel the usurious and void contract. This argument would have more persuasive force if the question were a new one. The settled and nearly universal practice of courts of equity is opposed to the complainant’s contention. The statutes of different states have various provisions directed towards the prevention of the extortion and oppres\sion of usury. Whatever may be the method adopted by. the legislature however, although the legislative provision may go to the limit of our statute and declare the contract void and unenforceable, nevertheless courts of equity in the absence of statute, specifically constraining them to act differently, have insisted upon the equitable principle that he “who seeks equity must do equity” and have required the borrower, before he can be given the relief of cancellation of the contract to perform the moral obligation resting upon-him and pay or offer to pay the principal of the loan with legal interest.

The opinion of Mr. Justice Shieas in Missouri v. Krumseig, 172 U. S. 351, upon which the complainant places much reliance, is based upon the construction given to a Minnesota usury statute by the Supreme Court of that state. Said statute provides that the courts may enjoin any proceeding upon an instrument given in violation of the statute and order the same cancelled and given up. The Supreme Court of Minnesóta found in other provisions of the statute the legislative intent that such injunction and order should be made although the borrower did not offer to pay the-debt with legal interest. Complainant’s counsel finds somé support for his argument in the opinion of the court in the early Massachusetts case of Hart v. Goldsmith,- 1 Allen, 145, in which a borrower who brought a bill to redeem mortgaged premises was held to be entitled to the benefit of the statutory penalty for usury in reduction of the sum payable upon the mortgage. This has been followed in later Massachusetts cases. The court in that case appears *40 to have been- affected to some extent by the provision of the Massachusetts usury statute, providing that the borrower might recover the penalty for usury by a bill in chancery. We do not think it can be said fairly that in Hart v. Goldsmith, supra, the Massachusetts court intended to create an exception to the ordinary rule. We are of the opinion that we should conform to the generally accepted equitable principle. 1 Story. Eq. Jur. 14th Ed. § 424.

The complainant further contends that if under the allegations of his bill a court of equity can not properly grant him the relief of cancellation of said note and mortgage, nevertheless under said allegations the bill should not have been dismissed, but should have been retained by the court for the purpose of restraining the threatened foreclosure of the mortgage. By “foreclosure” the complainant intends the exercise by the respondent Palmer of the power of sale contained in said mortgage. The complainant bases this contention upon his claim that it appears by the bill that the sum of usurious interest paid by the complainant before the filing of the bill amounts to six per cent on the principal of the loan from the time when said loan was made up to a time about four years after the beginning this suit, or until June, 1923. The position of the complainant in that regard is that equity should restrain the threatened sale under the power because the complainant is not in default.-

*41 (2) *40 The General Assembly has declared that it is against public policy to permit the taking of interest at a rate in excess of that which it has prescribed. Under the statute, on all sums loaned exceeding fifty dollars the borrower is permitted to reserve, charge or take, by contract, interest not exceeding thirty per cent per annum. The taking of interest at a greater rate either directly or indirectly is prohibited, and every contract made in violation of the statute is declared usurious and void. In equity as well as in law the Superior Court will not aid a lender in the enforcement of such an usurious contract, nor should it require *41 a borrower to perform such contract- as the condition of granting him equitable relief. As a court of equity it will enforce the usury law, established by the General Assembly, against the lender, and also for the protection of the borrower, in so far as such enforcement does not lead it to disregard those equitable principles, which as a court of conscience it must enjoin upon all suitors before it. When in equity the borrower, seeking relief from an usurious contract, is the actor before it, the Superior Court should insist upon the recognition by such borrower of his moral obligation to return the money loaned at the time when in good conscience it is due with legal interest. Although in law the mortgage is of no effect as security for the usurious contract, in a suit by the borrower, equity will treat the mortgage as a valid security for the amount that it regards as justly due from the borrower to the lender.

(3) Upon the complainant’s contention, which we are now considering, it is necessary to determine what, in the circumstances of this case, equity ought to regard- as legal interest upon the loan from Palmer to the • complainant.

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Bluebook (online)
114 A. 181, 44 R.I. 37, 17 A.L.R. 119, 1921 R.I. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moncrief-v-palmer-ri-1921.