Seaboard Finance Co. v. Wahlen

260 P.2d 556, 123 Utah 529, 1953 Utah LEXIS 201
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1953
Docket7890
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 260 P.2d 556 (Seaboard Finance Co. v. Wahlen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seaboard Finance Co. v. Wahlen, 260 P.2d 556, 123 Utah 529, 1953 Utah LEXIS 201 (Utah 1953).

Opinions

CROCKETT, Justice.

At pre-trial the lower court rendered summary judgment of dismissal against the plaintiff on the ground that the loan upon which this action was brought was usurious. Plaintiff appeals.

The facts shown were: Plaintiff, a foreign corporation, duly qualified to make loans under our Industrial Loan Act,1 on July 2, 1951 received an application from defendants for a loan “in an amount sufficient so they would get $1,000.00 in cash.” They were given the $1,000. To this sum the plaintiff added $20 for insurance, $27.57 for an investigation fee, plus $330.81 for interest, making a total of $1378.38, for which defendants executed a note payable in 24 equal monthly installments of $57.44, and also signed a chattel mortgage as security therefor.

Defendants paid only $58 as the August payment and nothing further. On October 2, 1951 plaintiff brought this action on the note, to foreclose the chattel mortgage, and also asked for attorneys’ fees.

The general usury statute limits the maximum interest on loans over $100 to 10% per annum, “except as otherwise provided by law.”2 The rate allowed industrial loan companies is such an exception.

The Industrial Loan Act grants to industrial loan corporations power:

“(1) To loan money * * * and to deduct interest thereon in advance at the rate of one per cent * * * of the face of such loan per month, and, in addition, to require payment in uniform weekly, semimonthly [532]*532or monthly installments, with or without an allowance of interest on such installments, and to charge * * * a maximum fee of two per cent * * * for expense in * * * investigating * * * the borrower- * * * i»

Defendants contend that the basis for figuring the interest and charges allowed by the above statutes must; be the amount they received, i. e. $1,000 cash, plus $20-in value for insurance coverage, which would make the? computation as follows:

Principal .$1,000.00

Insurance. 20.00

24 (months) x 1% x $1,000. 240.00

2% investigation fee . 20.00

$1,280.00

Counter to this plaintiff maintains that because the» statute permits the lender to:

“* * * deduct interest * * * in advance at the rate of one per cent * * * of the face of such loan per month * * *” (italics, added)

it was authorized to make the face of the note sufficient: to pay all of the interest and charges in advance, and. figure the interest plus investigating fee, totaling 26%,. upon the gross amount, computed thus:

24 (months) x 1% x $1,378.88. 330.81

(total of loan)

2% inv. fee x $1,378.38. 27.57

Total.$1,378.38

The question is posed, whether the basis for applying-the interest and charges allowed by the above statute is; [533]*533the amount of money and value actually received by the borrower ($1020) or that amount plus all of the interest and charges ($1378.38).

We first survey the arguments favoring defendants’ position.

The ordinarily accepted meaning of interest is that it is compensation which one pays for the use of money he has borrowed for his own use.3 Obviously, one cannot use another’s money after he has repaid it and it is no longer in his possession. As this statute is here applied by the plaintiff, it is plain that interest is charged for money that is not in the possession or use of the borrower.

Ignoring mathematical niceties, the principal is demonstrated thus: A borrower takes $100 to be repaid in ten $10 monthly installments; there is deducted interest on the total face of the loan at 1% per month for each month of the entire period, total-$10. So he receives $90, but he has this $90 in his possession only during the first month. After he pays his first payment, during the second month of the loan period, he has in his possession only $80 but he has paid interest for the use of the full $100 during that month; after the second payment, he has in his possession during the third month, only $70.00 but he has paid- interest for the use of the full $100; and so on down until in the final month, when he has only l/10th of the money left in his possession for his use, he still has been required to pay interest on the entire sum for that month. And he has paid it a year in advance without any interest in the money he has thus advanced being credited to him. Thus in the tenth month he has paid, not 1% per month, but 10% per month, or at the rate of 120% per year on the money actually in his hands.

[534]*534Using smaller payments over a longer period shows the picture even more cogently. One borrowing $100 to be paid in twenty $5 monthly payments, at the last month would have paid back $95, leaving only $5.00 in his possession for use. In such instance, charging him interest for the final month for the use of the full $100 would make the interest rate on money he is actually using 20% per month, or 240% per year. The longer the period for repayment of the loan, and the smaller the payment, the more exaggerated the interest rate during the terminal months becomes.

The application of the principle becomes even clearer if some chattel or property other than money is used for illustration. Suppose one hired 12 trucks at the rate of $10 per month each for their use; that the lender required the use be paid for a year in advance and that one truck be returned each month. During the second month the borrower would be using only 11 trucks but paying for 12; the third month using only 10 trucks but paying for 12; and so on down until the final month when he would still be paying the full $120 fee for the use of 12 trucks, but only using 1 of them.

It is thus plain that where the interest is deducted or paid in advance on the full amount of the original loan that the borrower only has on the average in his possession for use during the period of the loan about 50% of the money upon which he is required to pay interest. This means that the interest rate is actually approximately double that named as the interest rate of the loan.

Under the arrangement with the plaintiff, defendants here would have had in their possession of the average, during the period of the loan, only about one-half of the amount of money they originally received ($1,000) and considerably less than one-half of the total face of the note ($1,378.38) so the interest rate of 37 plus percent, [535]*535ostensibly for two years, actually amounts to more than 37 plus per cent per year on the amount of money the borrower has in his possession.

An argument which is at least plausible and which would avoid the imposition of the exorbitant interest rate is the approach that instead of interpreting the phrase “the face of the loan” to mean the original total of the loan, it should be interpreted1 to mean the balance due on the loan at any given time, that is, the amount which an examination of the face of the note at any given time would reveal as the amount then outstanding on the loan. This would result in interest being charged only on the money actually in the hands of the borrower. It is suggested that such is the reasonable and fair application of the statute.

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Related

Rossberg v. Holesapple
260 P.2d 563 (Utah Supreme Court, 1953)
Seaboard Finance Co. v. Wahlen
260 P.2d 556 (Utah Supreme Court, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
260 P.2d 556, 123 Utah 529, 1953 Utah LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seaboard-finance-co-v-wahlen-utah-1953.