Richardson v. Brown

68 Tenn. 242
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 68 Tenn. 242 (Richardson v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Brown, 68 Tenn. 242 (Tenn. 1877).

Opinion

Freeman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff sues defendants, as endorsers, on the following bill of exchange:

[243]*243$10,000. Jackson, Miss., April 15, 1873.

Six months after date pay to the order of Messrs. Cubbins & Gunn and Brown & Lyles the sum of ten thousand dollars, value received, with interest at twelve per cent, per annum from maturity until paid.

Memphis Water Company,

By John Cubbins, President.

Addressed to Toof, Phillips & Co., Memphis, Tennessee. Written across the face, “Accepted.”

Took, Phillips & Co.

Defendants plead the general issue, payment, and a special plea, denying that the bill of exchange was made at Jackson, Mississippi, as was alleged in the declaration; on the contrary, aver that it was made, endorsed, accepted, and delivered to defendants at Memphis, in the State of Tennessee, and that it was dated at Jackson, Mississippi, at request of plaintiff, and with the intent and purpose to evade and violate the laws of the State of Tennessee in relation to usury.

Plaintiff replied to this plea that the bill was made at Jackson, Mississippi, and not at Memphis, Tennessee, for the purpose of evading and violating the laws of Tennessee in' relation to usury.

Upon the issues thus made the parties went to trial. It is proper to add that the declaration, averred the instrument to have been made in the State of Mississippi, and that by the laws of that State any rate of interest agreed upon in writing by the contracting parties may be charged and collected. Plaintiff sought judgment for the amount of said bill, with interest, etc.

[244]*244It is conceded that the law of Mississippi is as stated. The case was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, and a judgment rendered for defendants, from which an appeal in error is prosecuted to this court.

The decision of the court was based upon the idea that the bill of exchange sued on was void on its face, and therefore no judgment could be rendered on the same in our courts.

We must assume the fact to be, from the finding of the court, based on the testimony in the record, that the bill was made, endorsed, and delivered in Tennessee. It is true, from the letters passed between the parties, it appears that the proposition to borrow the money was made to plaintiff by letter sent to him at Jackson, Mississippi, but there was no completion of the contract by such letters. They but opened the negotiations; the contract, as well as the bill, was made in the city of Memphis, the precise terms of the contract not being definitely settled by the letters referred to, but evidently agreed on alter Richardson came to Memphis about the business.

On this state of facts the question is, whether the judgment of his honor, the circuit judge, can be sustained ?

It may bq remarked, that the place of the date of the bill, with the averments of the declaration, was made in the State of Mississippi, where the parties could contract for any sum as interest they might agree upon, and gave the plaintiff a prima facie right to recover, under the doctrine of the cases of Thomp[245]*245son v. Collins, Kellogg & Co., 2 Head, 444, and Senter & Co. v. Bowman, 5 Heis., 17.

This being so, it seems clear the bill was not void on its face for illegality in contracting for usurious interest. Had it been so, there was no necessity to raise the question by plea of facts showing the illegality, that is, that it was made in the State of Tennessee. Had this not been done, or the proof had not shown on the trial under the general issue, which probably might have been done, that the bill was a Tennessee contract, we take it, under the decisions cited, plaintiff would have been entitled to a judgment, on production before the court of his bill, with liability of the parties fixed according to law, as was done in the case. It is true Judge Caruthers, in his argument, 2 Head, 444, says: If the note in that case was shown to have been made in Tennessee (if purporting to have been at St. Louis), it would be illegal on its face, and the plaintiff would be repelled from our courts.” But this language is to be understood in connection with the question before him, and not literally. It could not mean that the note was void on its face by reason of its stipulation for interest at ten per cent., because the fact that it was made in Tennessee should be shown in proof, as this proof could not be held to be placed in the face of the note when made. He only meant* that when proof should be made of the fact that it was a Tennessee contract, then the stipulation for the ten per cent, interest in connection with this proof rendered it void, by reason of this stipulation, and so evidently was the holding of the court in that case.

[246]*246The question then is, whether a party can recover who sues on a bill, the illegality of the promise contained therein not appearing on its face, but shown under a plea and proof under the law of this- State as it stood at the time of making this contract, and if so, to what extent?

It is conceded that, since the case of Brunson v. Isler, 6 Hum., 277, decided in 1845, and repeatedly recognized since, the rule has been settled in this State that where a party sues on a- note or contract, on its face usurious, there can be no recovery. We need not stop-here to criticise the soundness of this rule, as we do not have that question now before us. We only remark here, that logically, and on general principles, on the ground of illegality of the contract, the result would equally follow, whether shown on the face of the paper, or by plea and proof aliunde, no other rule being prescribed by statute.

We assume it to have been settled by the case of Thompson v. Kellogg & Co., and Senter & Co. v. Bowman, that under our law as it then stood, where the illegality appeared, or could be made to appear, under plea and proof in cases like the present, then no recovery could be had, because of the fact thus shown. The court so held unquestionably, whether correctly or not we need not discuss. This was under the act of 1835.

In the view we take of this case, it is unnecessay to go into several questions of interest pressed upon our attention in the learned argument of counsel. The question of usury is one regulated by statute in our [247]*247State. By the Constitution of 1870, art. XI., sec. 7,. it is provided: “ The Legislature shall fix the rate of interest, and the rate so established shall be equal and uniform throughout the State; but the Legislature may provide for a conventional rate of interest, not to exceed ten per cent, per annum.”

In pursuance of this provision of the Constitution the Legislature, by the act of 1869-70, ch. 69, T. & S. Code, sec. 1944a, and succeeding sections, regulated this question of a conventional rate of interest. The first section allowed parties to contract for interest not exceeding the rate of ten per cent, per annum, expressing the terms of the contract in the face of the instrument.

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68 Tenn. 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-brown-tenn-1877.