Perry v. Shelby

118 S.W.2d 849, 196 Ark. 541, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 219
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 11, 1938
Docket4-5156
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 849 (Perry v. Shelby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Shelby, 118 S.W.2d 849, 196 Ark. 541, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 219 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Donham, J.

The appellee, Gertrude Shelby, is a negro woman of less than average intelligence, with little or no knowledge of legal matters, and regarding the transactions revealed by the evidence in this case, relied implicitly on appellant, M. R. Perry, a negro lawyer who has practiced law in Pine Bluff for several years. At the time, as shown by the evidence, he lived in Pine Bluff and was engaged in business as an undertaker, which appears to have been a sort of side-line to his law praetice. The appellee formerly lived in Pine Bluff, but since 1926 has resided in St. Louis, Missouri.

On December 19,1932, M. R. Perry went to St. Louis for the purpose of buying some eauipment for his sideline, however, he was completely without funds with which to make the purchase. He knew appellee well, she having lived near him from his boyhood until she moved to St. Louis. He called on her in St. Louis, induced her to lend him $450 at 8 per cent, interest, and agreed to execute a mortgage on a house and lot in Pine Bluff as security, but did not advise her that there was already a first mortgage lien against the property.

He told appellee that 8 per cent, was the highest rate of interest, and after considerable figuring, told her that the principal and interest when paid would amount to approximately $540. Appellant, M. R. Perry, contended that due to the fact his wife was in Pine Bluff he would return home, execute the mortgage and notes and mail same to appellee in St. Louis. His brother, H. T. Perry, was also in Pine Bluff and it was necessary to have him sign the mortgage and notes in order to consummate the deal. The mortgage was executed in Pine Bluff December 30, 1932, recorded December 31st, and the mortgage and notes were then mailed to Amos Davis in St. Louis to be delivered to appellee.

When appellee received the mortgage and notes, she discovered that the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company had the first lien. The notes she received with the mortgage were in the sum of $180 each, making a total of $540, which sum appeared in the body of the mortgage, but in a subsequent clause in the mortgage describing the indebtedness secured thereby, the debt was described to be three notes in the sum of $140 each, and interest at 8 per cent, from date, and payable 6,12 and 18 months after date, respectively.

Between the execution of the mortgage and notes in December, 1932, and March, 1935, appellants had paid a small sum on the indebtedness. Sometime about the 23rd of March, 1935, appellee came to Pine Bluff to effect collection, if possible, of the indebtedness.

Appellant, M. R. Perry, was out of the city, and she, therefore, discussed the matter with appellant, H. T. Perry, who entered into an agreement with her for an extension of the indebtedness, and new notes were executed evidencing the extension. This new arrangement gave appellants a longer time within which to pay the indebtedness and provided for monthly payments of $15 each. Some two or three payments were made thereafter, making a total sum paid on the whole indebtedness of $78, according to appellee, but appellants’ record showed payment of $70 only.

Appellee thereafter sent the mortgage and new notes to her counsel for the purpose of bringing suit to foreclose the lien, and suit was thereafter filed. The first lien holder intervened, set up its mortgage and prayed that its lien be declared superior to plaintiff’s lien. Appellants answered and pleaded as to appellee’s mortgage:

1. Accord and satisfaction, alleging that the notes executed in pursuance of the agreement to extend swept away the mortgage lien and fully paid the appellee the money appellants had borrowed.

2. The contract was void on the ground of usury.

The case proceeded to trial and resulted in a decree for appellee for her debt in the sum of $450, with interest at 8 per cent, from December 30, 1932, less amount paid, but declared same a second lien upon the property, from which decree comes this appeal.

It is contended that the decree should be reversed for the following reasons:

1. That the contract is void and unenforceable on account of usury.

2. That the notes executed by H. T. Perry March 25, 1935, fully paid the debt and released the lien of the mortgage.

As to 'whether it was the intention of appellee to charge or receive for the use of the money Avhich she loaned appellants, a greater rate of interest than 10 per cent., she testified:

“If it was an illegal agreement I don’t know anything about it and he didn’t mention it to me and he has never promised to pay me any more than 8 per cent., and he did all the figuring himself. I don’t know what he put in those papers, because I left it to his honesty to be fair with me and told him at the time that I didn’t know anything about court and that I was leaving it up to him. He told me that he would be fair with me. He said they used to charge 10 per cent, interest, but that you couldn’t do that now. I never made a loan before when I received a note. I have just made a loan on general friendly principles.”

It is evident from the evidence of appellee that she did not intend to demand or to receive for the use of the money which she loaned an amount which could be considered usury under the law. It is further evident that appellee knew nothing about legal matters and that she trusted appellant, M. E. Perry, to draw the note and mortgage so as to secure her for the $450, with interest at the rate of 8 per cent.- per annum, and that she expected nothing more. M. E. Perry was a lawyer. He must have known when he drew the note and mortgage that he was drawing them in such manner as would enable him to plead usury and defeat collection of the principal and interest.; but appellee had no such knowledge and, if she is to be believed, never had an intention to receive a greater rate of interest than 8 per cent, on the $450 which she had loaned. Prom the record, it is difficult to believe that M. E. Perry did not intend to defraud appellee. The manner in which he drew the note and mortgage must be ascribed to ignorance or an intent to defraud. Being a lawyer, he must, have known how to draw a simple note and mortgage.

In the case of Scruggs v. Scottish Mortgage Co., 54 Ark. 566, 569, 16 S. W. 563, this court said: “To constitute usury, there must be an agreement to pay for the use of money more than 10 per cent, interest.”

In the case of Citizens Bank v. Murphy, 83 Ark. 31, 36, 102 S. W. 697, this court said: “To constitute usury, there must be an agreement on the part of the lender to receive, and on the part of the borrower to give, for the use of money, a greater rate of interest than 10 per cent.”

Both of the above cases were cited in the case of Jones v. Phillippe, 135 Ark. 578, 206 S. W. 40, and it was there held that the law as announced in Garvin v. Linton, 62 Ark. 370, 379, 35 S. W. 430, 37 S. W. 569, to the effect tliat it is not necessary that both parties be cognizant of the fact or facts constituting usury is the correct theory; that the lender alone is the violator of the law, and against him alone are its penalties enacted.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 849, 196 Ark. 541, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-shelby-ark-1938.