State Ex Inf. Taylor v. Salary Purchasing Co.

218 S.W.2d 571, 358 Mo. 1022, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 557
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 14, 1949
DocketNo. 40615.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 218 S.W.2d 571 (State Ex Inf. Taylor v. Salary Purchasing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Inf. Taylor v. Salary Purchasing Co., 218 S.W.2d 571, 358 Mo. 1022, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 557 (Mo. 1949).

Opinion

*1024 [571]

CLARK, J.

Quo Warranto filed in this court by the Attorney General, as relator, alleging that respondent has been and is violating its corporate charter and'the state law by loaning money at usurious rates of interest, praying that respondent be fined, busted from doing business in the State and required to return to its-borrowers all sums illegally exacted from them. After we issued our writ and the parties filed their pleadings, we appointed an attorney, Honorable Francis’ Smith, as our specal commissioner to hear evidence and report as to the law and the facts. His report has been filed, sustaining the allegations of the information in-all important particulars, and respondent has filed exceptions.

The record is long. Many witnesses were heard, and. many, exhibits introduced, but, as the testimony mainly follows the same pattern, the essential facts maj’' be compressed into a comparatively small volume.

Respondent was organized as a .Missouri corporation, and opened an office in Jefferson City in August, 1946. Its charter powers are stated as "to buy, acquire, discount, hold, own, collect, and receive payment of any choses in action, salary or wage [572] accounts, due or to become due to the seller or assignor, whether- earned or unearned, and any and all other claims, demands, obligations, rights of action, judgment and choses in action whether evidenced by writing or not.”

Respondent’s customers were persons of low income, unable to procure credit from banks and other conservative money lenders. They were attracted to respondent’s office by alluring advertisements and solicitation through the mail, promising easy money, without security and upon the applicant’s signature alone.. The usual procedure was as follows: An applicant.would go to the office of respondent and ask “to make a-loan” or “borrow money.” Sometimes, but not always, the person in charge of the office would tell the applicant that the company did not loan money, but would purchase a part of his salary. After a card was filled with certain information about the applicant, he was told that repayment must be made at his next payday. He then signed a contract purporting to be an assignment of earned wages to the amount advanced to him by respondent. -The advancements generally ranged from five dollars to fifty dollars. At the next payday the applicant would collect his wages from his employer, go to respondent’s office and pay the amount advanced, plus the discount charged. In many instances the applicant would execute a new assignment for the saíne amount and pay the discount charge only. In such instances the new assignment could oiily be for future unearned wages to secure a prior indebtedness. .

Although the assignment authorized respondent to notify and collect from the applicant’s employer, this was never attempted. If the *1025 advancement was to be repaid within a week, the discount was usually five or ten per cent; if the debt continued unpaid, as was nearly always true, the discounts collected at succeeding paydays in a year’s time would amount to many times the original debt. In one instance an applicant was charged one dollar for the use of ten dollars for one day.

After the information was filed in this case one J. A. Gordon, of Nashville, Tennessee, and a Mr. Diamond, of Dallas, Texas, came to respondent’s office and employed Mr. Bothwell, one of respondent’s agents, to take promissory notes from applicants who were unable to pay their debts to the company. These notes bear interest at eight per cent per annum and are payable to Gordon. Bothwell continues to work both for respondent and Gordon. When payments are made on the notes the money is deposited in the bank account of respondent and when the account exceeds $500.00 the excess is sent to Gordon at Nashville by check or money order. Cancelled checks and receipts for money orders are sent to .the President of the Salary Purchasing Company, Nashville, Tennessee.

The records in the office 'of the Missouri Secretary of State disclose that J. A. Gordon, giving his address as Birmingham, Alabama, on May 18, 1948, filed under the Fictitious Name Statute that he is operating under the name of Salary Purchasing Company at respondent’s address in Jefferson City.

From the foregoing statement it is clear beyond dispute that, if respondent is engaged in lending money, it is doing so in violation of its charter powers and at usurious rates in violation of our statutes. [All references to statutes, unless otherwise specified, will be to sections of Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1939, and Mo. R. S. A.]

Sections 3226-7 fix annual interest rates for the loan of money at six per cent, if no rate is specified, and not to exceed eight per cent if specified in the contract.

Section 4813 provides: ‘ ‘ Every person or persons, company, corporation or firm, and every agent of every person, persons, company, corporation or firm, who shall take or receive, or agree to take or reeéive, directly or indirectly, by means of commissions or brokerage charges or otherwise, for the forbearance or use of money or other commodities, any interest at a greater rate than 2 per cent per month, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than five hundred dollars, and by imprisonment in the' county jail for a [573] period of not less than thirty days nor more than ninety days. Nothing herein contained shall be construed as authorizing a higher rate of interest than is now provided by law.”

Respondent denies that it is engaged in lending money; claims that it only buys wages or salaries and that the same is legal both at common law and under Section 3356, which provides: . and all as- *1026 sig'nments of wages, salaries and earnings, not earned at tbe time the assignment is made, shall be null and void.” [The constitutionality of this statute was sustained in Heller v. Lutz, 254 Mo. 704, 164 S. W. 123.]

Respondent argues that, as Section 3356 prohibits the assignment of unearned wages only, the assignment of earned wages is valid. We are forced to concede that bona fide assignments of earned wages were valid at common law and that we now have no valid statute prohibiting such assignments.

Then respondent, while conceding that a part of its business consisted in taking assignments for unearned wages, argues that the only effect of Section 3356 is to make such assignments void and unenforceable and does not transform the transactions into loans. We fail to see any logic in that argument. Respondent was presumed to know and the evidence shows that it actually did know that such assignments were void; that they transferred no right or title in the unearned wages which they purported to assign. Yet respondent did not intend to donate to the applicants the money which it advanced on such void assignments. It intended to create the relation of debtor and creditor. It intended to collect the money so advanced and, whenever possible, it did collect the same with usurious interest. Such void assignments did not constitute sales. They could be nothing but loans and we think they were so intended by both the respondent and the applicants.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Consumer Fin. Prot. Bureau v. RD Legal Funding, LLC
332 F. Supp. 3d 729 (S.D. Illinois, 2018)
Julian v. Burrus
600 S.W.2d 133 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1980)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 S.W.2d 571, 358 Mo. 1022, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-taylor-v-salary-purchasing-co-mo-1949.