Moore's v. Vance

33 Ky. 361, 3 Dana 361, 1835 Ky. LEXIS 105
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 14, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 33 Ky. 361 (Moore's v. Vance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore's v. Vance, 33 Ky. 361, 3 Dana 361, 1835 Ky. LEXIS 105 (Ky. Ct. App. 1835).

Opinion

¡Judge Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court

— Judge Ewing did not sit in this case.

Johnson, as executor of Moore, obtained a judgment against Covington, for eight hundred and ninety seven dollars and five cents, with interest from the 12th day of November, 1821, upon an obligation of that date, executed by Vance, with Covington as his security. To enjoin a large portion of this judgment, on the ground of usury and want of consideration, Vance and 'Covington filed their bill in Equity, on the finál hearing of which, the injunction was perpetuated; and a writ of error is prosecuted by Johnson, to reverse this decree.

It seems, that a judgment having been rendered in favor of McFadden and others, against Vance, and Johnson as his security, and an execution thereon being "in the hands of the sheriff, repleviable for two years— Johnson about the 12th of November, 1821, in pursuance of an agreement between ’himself and Vance, joined in the replevy bond for the payment of three hundred and forty dollars, thirty six and a half cents, In two years, with interest, and assigned to Vance, by way of loan, two demands which he held as executor of Moore, and which were in the progress of collection, •under endorsements that bank notes, then greatly depreciated, would be received in payment; in consideration of which, Vance, on his part, with Covington as his surety, executed a note, bearing date the 12th of November, 1821, payable to Johnson, as executor of Moore, for the sum of eight hundred and ninety seventy dollars, [362]*362five cents, to be paid on or before the first of February, 1823, with interest from the date. Of this sum, four hundred and seventy three dollars, thirty seven and a half cents, were included in the note on account of the seourityship of Johnson in the replevy bond; and Johnson executed and delivered to Yance, a writing, of the same date, the effect of which was, that if Vance should pay the replevy bond, and save Johnson harmless therefrom, the note should have a credit for four hundred and seventy three dollars, thirty seven and a half cents, with the interest on that sum. The residue of the note was on account of, and about equal to, the nominal amount of the two demands assigned by Johnson as executor of Moore. Vance failed to pay the replevy bond; and about a year after it became due, it was discharged, without execution, by Johnson — the principal and interest then amounting to four hundred and one dollars, fifty cents. Some years afterwards, Johnson obtained against Covington, the judgment first mentioned; of which so much as exceeds the amount of the replevy bond, together with the specie value of the demands assigned to Vance (considered as paper debts,) was perpetually enjoined by the decree now complained of.

•Aju8gmeiit'isTe'covered against a principal and surety. Upon an agreement, between them, the ■surety signs the replevin bond, and the principal gives him anote, -which includes 'the full amount ■of the replevin bond, with a'bout SO pr cent, added to it; and the surety agrees in writing, to credit the note with the same amount, provided the principal pays the replevin bond himself. — • They agree, in the pleadings, that the arrangement was intended — not merely to have the effect ofapenalbond— but as an indemnity to the surety in case the payment of the replevin bond should devolve on him. Held„ that this contract is but an agreement for a loan of money in a certain contingency, at a future day, upon an agreem ’t that, more than sixpr cent, should he paid for the loan,, and is usurious. The surety may enforce a judg* ment he has on the note, to the amount actually paid by him in. discharge of thereplevin bond,, with legal interest from the time, when he paid it. For the balance,, the principal is-relieved in.equirty-

[362]*362The principal question presented for consideration, is, whether this transaction is usurious, in either -or both of its branches. And we shall first consider, with a view to this question, that part of the contract which relates to the securityship of Johnson in the replevy bond. If the writings relating to this portion of the contract had been separately executed, without embracing the sum to be given for the assigned debts, they would have had very much the appearance of a penal bond, with a defeasance or condition, and would have presented a familiar case for equitable relief. As the writings stand, we might be disposed to view them in this light, but that neither of the parties places them upon that ground. It is clear from the statements of both, that the sum of four hundred and seventy three dollars, thirty seven and a half cents1 — exceeding by more than thirty per cent, the amount of the replevy bond — was not inserted in the obligation of Vance and [363]*363Covington to. Johnson, as a. penalty either to ensure the payment of the replevy bond by Vance, or to- secure to Johnson the real damages which he might sustain, if by reason of Vance’s failure, he should have to discharge it. It was the sum agreed to be paid by Vance to Johnson, if the latter should be compelled to pay the replevy bond; and it was only on condition of being secured in the payment of this sum, in the event supposed, that Johnson agreed to join in the bond.

The complainant, it is true, alleges that Johnson assumed to pay the debt to McFadden, and that the note for four hundred and seventy three dollars, thirty seven and a half cents, was required and given in consideration of that assumpsit, and of the time allowed by Johnson for payment, and that the defeasance was executed to give color to the usurious contract. But Johnson denies these allegations, and places the transaction on the footing which has been stated. He insists on the right to coerce the entire sum, with .interest, as being the indemnity agreed on in case he should have to pay the replevy bond, into which he would not have entered on any other terms. But if this stipulated indemnity was usurious, the fact that it was agreed upon by the parties, and that it formed the sole inducement upon which Johnson united in replevying a debt for which he was already bound as surety, cannot sanction it. Laying out of view the fact that Johnson was already bound for the debt, as a defendant to the judgment, there is no single circumstance which can distinguish this from any other case in which an individual about, to become the surety of a debtor, of whose ability to pay he entertains great doubts, requires, as the condition of his becoming bound, that the debtor shall secure to him the payment of a much larger sum than the principal and. interest for which he is to become responsible, in the event of his having to pay the debt as surety. We proceed, therefore, to enquire whether the statute against usury applies to such a transaction, in which the surety having paid the debt, demands from his principal the stipulated indemnity, without showing any other criterion by which the indemnity was fixed in the contracts, [364]*364or by which its justness can be now measured, but the payment and forbearance of the debt.

^ there be in the case the substance of a loan, it is subject to the restrictions of the statute (Dunham vs. Day, 13 Johns. Rep. 44;) and if, on that loan, more is to be repaid than at the rate of six per cent, per annum, it is usurious. It is often, difficult to determine whether a transaction amounts to a loan or not.

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Related

Croan v. Phelps' Adm'r
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1 Ga. 140 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1846)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Ky. 361, 3 Dana 361, 1835 Ky. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moores-v-vance-kyctapp-1835.