MONTGOMERY FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASS'N v. Baer

308 A.2d 768, 1973 D.C. App. LEXIS 337
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 10, 1973
Docket6796
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 308 A.2d 768 (MONTGOMERY FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASS'N v. Baer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MONTGOMERY FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASS'N v. Baer, 308 A.2d 768, 1973 D.C. App. LEXIS 337 (D.C. 1973).

Opinion

YEAGLEY, Associate Judge:

Appellant as the lender of $10,000 secured by a first trust on property in the District of Columbia, brought suit in Superior Court against the makers of the note (appellees) to recover a deficiency of $3,166 remaining after a foreclosure proceeding. This appeal is from the trial court decision which held that “points” 1 charged by a mortgage lender must be added to the interest charge for the year in which such fee is collected (rather than being prorated over the term of the loan) in order to determine if the rate is excessive ; and if the resultant total interest charge for that year exceeds 8 percent the transaction is usurious. 2 The appellees failed to pursue at trial the other defenses raised in their answer other than the defense of usury and it was stipulated by the parties that the issue would be resolved upon the answers to interrogatories and the cross motions for summary judgment.

The facts found by the trial court and agreed upon by counsel are as follows. On April 28, 1966, a $10,000 conventional, fully-amortized loan was made to appellees by appellant (hereafter Montgomery), a federally chartered savings and loan association doing business in Maryland. 3 The loan was evidenced by appellees’ promissory note, secured by a first deed of trust on certain real property in the District of Columbia. In signing it the appellees agreed to repay the $10,000 loan with interest at the rate of 6J/& percent per annum in equal monthly installments of $75, plus taxes and insurance, until paid. 4 Four “points” ($400) were deducted from the principal amount loaned as a “loan placement fee”, hence the amount of money actually loaned to the appellees when they signed the note was $9,600, less minor sums for such items as appraisal and notary fees. 5 Appellees resold the property 30 days later and the purchasers assumed the mortgage with ap-pellees taking back a second trust.

After the loan was in effect some 5 years, the appellees and their successors (the purchasers) defaulted thereon and Montgomery foreclosed obtaining a judgment for $9,281. The property was sold after foreclosure for $6,600 ($484.52 in foreclosure costs were incurred), leaving a deficiency of $3,166.

When Montgomery brought suit to recover the deficiency the appellees raised the defense 6 that the transaction was usu *770 rious under District of Columbia law in that the “points” charged were interest, and that these “points” raised the interest rate for the first year of the loan to W1/2 percent, in violation of the 8 percent per annum maximum interest rate allowable in the District of Columbia. 7 While Montgomery conceded that the “loan placement fee” was an interest charge, 8 it argued that nevertheless its loan was not usurious even with this extra charge since in computing the rate the “points” charged must be prorated over the full term of the loan 9 making the effective rate of interest for the loan only 6.97 percent per annum.

On cross motions for summary judgment the court ruled in favor of appellees declaring that the loan was usurious and that the interest paid thereon was forfeited. 10 The total of the forfeited interest ($3,600) being greater than the deficiency ($3,166), the court therefore held that the obligation of the appellees “is completely discharged.” For reasons that appear hereinafter, we reverse.

Prerequisite to deciding the foregoing issue, we must determine whether the law of the District of Columbia or Maryland governs. In the instant case the parties expressed no intent in the contract with respect to which jurisdiction’s laws would control. Neither the loan commitment, the note, nor the contract indicate where payments were to be made. We know only that the lender, Montgomery, is a federally chartered savings and loan association doing business in Maryland, whereas the borrowers are residents of the District of Columbia, which is the situs of the property as well, and that settlement took place in the District of Columbia. The record is devoid of other evidence as to 'the place of making or the place of performance of the contract. At trial, counsel for both parties agreed that the law of the District of Columbia should apply and neither party has questioned that stipulation on appeal. While such an agreement as to choice of law is not controlling on this court, we find nothing in the record to indicate a contrary result is called for. Under these circumstances we presume that the parties anticipated that the law of the District of Columbia, the forum, would be applied. 11

This leaves for this court’s determination the issue raised by appellant as to the *771 proper treatment, for purposes of the usury statute, 12 of a fee attributable to interest which is deducted at the inception from the face of a long-term, interest-bearing loan repayable in equal monthly installments.

The interest rate on written contracts is regulated by D.C.Code 1972 Supp., §§ 28-3301 and 3303, which, in pertinent part, read as follows:

§ 28-3301. Rate of Interest expressed in contract.
. the parties to an instrument in writing for the payment of money at a future time may contract therein for the payment of interest on the principal amount thereof at a rate not exceeding 8 percent per annum. (Emphasis added.)
§ 28-3303. Usury defined.
If a person or corporation contracts in the District,
(2) in writing, to pay a greater rate than is permitted under section 28-3301 . . . the creditor shall forfeit the whole of the interest so contracted to be received.

The trial court held that the collection of interest in an amount equal to 10(4 percent 13 of the principal during the first year of a long-term loan violated the above statute and therefore subjected the lender to the penalty of usury of forfeiture of all of the interest paid. Implicit in this holding is the assumption that the statutory phrase “not exceeding 8. percent per an-num” limits the amount of interest which may be properly collected in any one year rather than indicating the maximum rate of interest chargeable for the term of the loan.

We believe that the trial court’s interpretation misconstrues the statutory language and results in an erroneous application of the usury statute. That law does not read that the rate cannot exceed 8 percent annually or 8 percent for any one year, but it states it shall not exceed 8 percent “per annum”.

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Bluebook (online)
308 A.2d 768, 1973 D.C. App. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-federal-savings-and-loan-assn-v-baer-dc-1973.