Union Central Life Insurance v. Edwards

294 S.W. 502, 219 Ky. 748, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 453
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 26, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 294 S.W. 502 (Union Central Life Insurance v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Central Life Insurance v. Edwards, 294 S.W. 502, 219 Ky. 748, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 453 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

*749 Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge—

Reversing.

On August 1, 1919, appellant, Union Central Life Insurance Company, of Cincinnati, Ohm, lent to appellee J. W. Edwards $12,000, on the 20-year amortization plan, taking from him, as evidence of the indebtedness, 20 promissory notes for $1,046.22 each, one of them due each year for 20 years. To secure the payment of these notes, appellees Edwards and wife executed to the insurance company a mortgage on 479 acres of land owned by him, located in Pulaski county, Ky. Appellee paid the first three notes, and, having defaulted in the payment of the fourth, under a precipitation clause, the unpaid notes all became due, and appellant instituted action to enforce their collection under the mortgage lien. Appellee defended as to $1,046.22 paid the day the loan was effected, upon the theory that it was usury, and sought to have credit by that amount paid as of August 1, 1919. The chancellor so adjudged, and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

These facts appear: Andrew L. Todd, of Murfreesboro, Tenn., by written contract entered into with appellant, Union Central Life Insurance Company, had been appointed its financial correspondent, with authority to solicit and procure applications for loans for it upon certain terms and conditions set out in the contract. Certain portions of the states of Tennessee and Kentucky were assigned to him as his territory. Bert L. Sims, of Lexington, Ky., had an arrangement with Mr. Todd by which any applications that he might have for loans would be forwarded to Mr. Todd. Mr. Sims, in turn, made an arrangement with Rufe Ashurst, of Somerset, Ky., by which the latter should forward to him any applications for farm loans which might be made to him. Appellee J. W. Edwards desired to borrow $12,000, and, having learned in some way that Mr' Ashurst could procure loans, went to see him and started 'the negotiations which led to appellant, insurance company, lending to him the $12,000. Ashurst submitted the matter to Sims, who, in turn, submitted it to Todd, and Todd furnished appellant, insurance company, with the information that Edwards desired a loan. It then sent its appraisers to examine the Edwards farm offered as security for the loan, and satisfied itself that the security was ample. *750 Edwards submitted to it Ms written and signed application for the loan which was approved by the insurance company. Edwards had an abstract of the title of his farm made and had it surveyed to establish its boundary. Pursuant to the written application, and on the judgment of its appraisers that the security offered was ample, and on the evidence of his title, as shown by the abstract, appellant, insurance company, agreed to lend Edwards $12,000, and prepared 20 notes for $1,046.22 each, one due at the end of each of the next ensuing 20- years, and a mortgage to itself from Edwards and his wife to secure it in the payment of the notes.' The notes and mortgage, together with its check for $12,000, payable to Edwards, were forwarded to Mr. Todd with instructions that the check be delivered to Mr. Edwards upon his executing and delivering to him for it the notes and mortgage and his payment of the recording fees and recording tax fees. These papers were forwarded by Mr. Todd to Mr. Sims at Lexington. Sims took them to Somerset, Ky., and he and Ashurst closed the transaction. Edwards and his wife signed and acknowledged the mortgage and signed the notes, and the mortgage was recorded, and the fees were paid, and appellant’s check for $12,000 was delivered to Mr. Edwards. He and Ashurst both testify that when these things were done Sims told Edwards that a cash payment of $1,046.22 was due, which, together with the 20 notes executed by Mm, would repay the loan, and Edwards testified that he, believing such to be- the case, and relying upon the representations so made to him, then gave his check to Sims for $1,046.22, which he understood was a payment on the loan. This amount was divided among Ashurst, Sims, and Todd. The 20 notes and the mortgage were forwarded to appellant, insurance company. There is no evidence that appellant received any portion of the cash paid by Edwards or had any knowledge of that transaction.

Under these facts it is earnestly insisted-for appellee, and the chancellor adjudged, that this cash payment made by appellee, together with the 20 notes, aggregated more than the repayment of the $12,000 with legal interest, and was usury.

Appellant insists that in the matter of the application for the loan the intermediaries were the agents of the borrower; that it received no part of tiffs alleged usurious -payment;- that it lent the $12,000 to Edwards *751 upon Ms written application and in accordance with, the terms set forth therein and in the notes and mortgage which Edwards executed and delivered to it; and that it may not be made to respond for the money procured by the intermediaries from Edwards, however it may have been procured.

It is well settled in this jurisdiction that one who lends his own money to a borrower may not charge the borrower brokerage fees or commissions where such fees, together with the interest, exceed the legal rate of interest. Commonwealth Farm Loan Co. v. Caudle, Adm’r, 203 Ky. 761, 263 S. W. 24.

It is also equally as well settled that, when a person with funds to lend constitutes another his agent for the purpose, with full authority to act for him in that particular, the agent may not lend his principal’s money at the full legal rate of interest and exact from the borrower fees or commissions for effecting the loan. See Payne v. Henderson, 106 Ky. 135, 50 S. W. 34, 20 Ky. Law Rep. 1739.

It is also well settled in this jurisdiction that sums paid by a borrower to his own agents as commission for procuring a loan is not usury. See Todd’s Executor v. First National Bank, 173 Ky. 60, 190 S W. 468, and Harston v. Ralston et al., 174 Ky. 509, 192 S. W. 646.

In view of these well-settled principles we may determine whether appellant may be charged with the $1,-046.22 collected by the intermediaries by determimng whether they were its agents in so doing, or were acting in the scope or apparent scope of their authority.

It is earnestly insisted for appellee that this case- is indistinguishable from that of Payne v. Henderson, supra. A careful consideration of the facts of the two cases, however, discloses a clear 'distinction between them. There the appellee, Henderson, constituted Buckner & Cummings, a firm of brokers, her agents to lend her money. They were given full authority to act for her in negotiating loans. They, for her, determined when and to whom and upon what terms as to interest rates and security the loans should be made; so- that in lending. her money their acts were her acts. .Consequently, it wa-s held, when in making the loan of $7,500 and taking notes payable to their principal,' bearing the full legal rate of interest, the agents deducted from the $7,500 lent $375 as commission for effecting the loan, that *752 to that extent the transaction was usurious,; in other words, the situation was the same as if the lender had undertaken to do the same thing, because what was there done was done by the lender acting through her agents who had authority to act for her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
294 S.W. 502, 219 Ky. 748, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-central-life-insurance-v-edwards-kyctapphigh-1927.