St. Germain v. Lapp

48 A.2d 181, 72 R.I. 42, 166 A.L.R. 450, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 40
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 9, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 48 A.2d 181 (St. Germain v. Lapp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Germain v. Lapp, 48 A.2d 181, 72 R.I. 42, 166 A.L.R. 450, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 40 (R.I. 1946).

Opinion

*43 Condon, J.

This is a bill in equity for the cancellation of a chattel mortgage, a realty mortgage and two promissory notes. The bill is predicated on the groúnd that a loan of money for which these mortgages and notes were given is void for usury under general laws 1938, chapter 485, §2. After a hearing on bill, answer and proof in the superior *44 court, a decree granting the relief prayed for was entered, but on the conditions that complainants pay respondent the balance of the principal of the loan with legal interest and that they pay $203.86 which the trial justice found was equitably due the respondent as the result of the complainants’ use of his money in discharging a prior loan from another creditor at a discount amounting to such sum.

From that decree respondent appealed on the grounds that the loan was governed by the law of Massachusetts under which it was not usurious, and that, if it was held that the law of Rhode Island governed, the new loan was nevertheless not usurious even under that law. Complainants also appealed from the decree on the ground that the conditions attached thereto were contrary to the principle and policy of our statute against usury.

Respondent’s first ground of appeal is virtually that the loan was a Massachusetts contract or that, from the nature of the contract and the surrounding circumstances, it should be presumed that it was the intention of the parties to the contract that it should be governed by the law of that state. The facts and circumstances are briefly these: Complainants are husband and wife and reside in North Attleboro, Massachusetts, on a farm which they own and operate. Respondent is a resident of Pawtucket, Rhode Island, and has desk room in the office of the M. J. Gallagher Agency in that city. He is, however, not an employee of that agency but conducts a business on his own account in that office. Through the president of the agency with whom complainants were acquainted, they having bought their farm through his office, they solicited the respondent for a loan in order to pay off a chattel mortgage held by the Equitable Credit Corporation of Albany, New York.

On August 31, 1944, in Pawtucket, after some preliminary negotiations which took place in that city, the respondent loaned the complainants a sum sufficient to discharge that mortgage. In consideration for such loan the complainants executed and delivered on that day in the office of the M. J. *45 Gallagher Agency, their promissory note for $6500 payable in ninety days. They also executed and delivered to him a second note for $3000 payable in ninety days. The first note was secured by a chattel mortgage of the livestock and equipment on their farm and the second note by a mortgage' of the farm.

No money was actually received by the complainants in return for those securities but respondent made the following payments on their behalf. To the Equitable Credit Corporation he paid for the discharge of its chattel mortgage $5863.50. The amount due thereon was $6067.36 but the mortgagee had agreed the day before with complainants’ counsel to waive the sum of $203.86 if payment was made on or before September 1, 1944. To complainants’ counsel he paid $36.50 which was accepted by the attorney as a payment by complainants for services rendered to them by him in the negotiations preliminary to and in the closing of the loan transaction. Respondent also gave complainants his receipt for $100 which he credited to them as a payment on their chattel mortgage note to him. These payments totaled $6000 which was the amount that complainants’ counsel had informed respondent the complainants would need to discharge the prior chattel mortgage to the Equitable Credit Corporation. The chattel mortgage note to the respondent was drawn in the amount of $6500 because it had been agreed the day before at respondent’s office in Pawtucket that he was to charge $500 in advance for the use of his money for ninety days. As to the note for $3000 and the real estate mortgage securing it, there was an agreement in writing that they were merely collateral security and were to be surrendered by the respondent upon receipt by him of $6500 in full payment of the chattel mortgage note.

On those facts we are of the opinion that the contract for this loan was clearly made in Rhode Island, was to be performed here and that it was governed by the law of Rhode Island. That the loan was made to persons domiciled in Massachusetts and was secured by a mortgage of chattels *46 and by another mortgage of land situated in that state are not controlling in the circumstances. On the contrary, the facts which really control the contract are these: The agreement to lend the money, the execution and delivery of the securities evidencing the loan, the actual passing of the consideration, and the making of the notes payable in Pawtucket, the domicile of the lender.

All of those acts took place in this state and they are indubitable proof that the contract between the parties was made and' was to be performed in this state. In addition, all of the negotiations preliminary to the final closing of the transaction were conducted in Rhode Island. In such circumstances there is no room for arguing that the parties must have intended that the law of Massachusetts was to govern this contract. “If all of the important elements of a loan transaction have their situs in the same state such transaction is governed as regards the question of usury by the laws of that state. Hence, ordinarily, when the contract is made, the consideration is given, and payment is to be made all in the same state, or where the contract is made and is to be performed in the same state . . . the law of such state governs the contract on the question of usury.” 66 C. J. 145, §9 c.

It is also well settled that in a transaction like the one before us, between parties similarly situated, usury inheres in the loan and not in the property mortgaged to secure its payment. Such a mortgage is no more than an incident to the principal transaction. “When a contract made and to be performed in one state is secured by a mortgage or other lien on land situated in another state, the question as to whether the interest provided for is usurious is generally held to be determined by the law of the former, on the ground that the mortgage is merely collateral to the principal obligation.” 5 R. C. L. 982, §64. It is true that the courts of a few states have allowed the law of a third state, which is the situs of the security, to be applied but that is an exception to the general rule which rigidly confines the *47 parties to the law of the two places, that of the making and that of the performance of the contract. 2 Beale, Conflict of Laws, 1081. In the case at bar even the general rule would not help the respondent, since Rhode Island is both the place of the making and of the performance of the contract.

A case somewhat similar to the one at bar is Whitman v. Conner, 40 N. Y. Super. 339. In that case all the transactions concerning a loan took place in Rhode Island, including a mortgage of chattels situated in New York, and was to be fulfilled in Rhode Island.

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Bluebook (online)
48 A.2d 181, 72 R.I. 42, 166 A.L.R. 450, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-germain-v-lapp-ri-1946.