Union Central Life Insurance v. Hilliard

16 Ohio C.C. 434, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 437
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMarch 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio C.C. 434 (Union Central Life Insurance v. Hilliard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts 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. Hilliard, 16 Ohio C.C. 434, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 437 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Smyseb, J.

J. V. Hilliard, as administrator of John Strawn, deceased, filed his petition in the probate court of this county, asking for the sale of certain real estate to pay debts. The Union Central Life Insurance Company was made a party to that action, and answered in the probate court, setting up various notes of Strawn, secured by two mortgages, asserting a lien, and asking that its lien be first paid out of the proceeds of the sale. To this answer and cross-petition of the Insurance Company, the heirs of Strawn filed an answer; and the only defense that is material to be noticed here is that of usury in the loan made by the company to Strawn, and setting out various payments that had been made by Strawn in his lifetime, that ought to be credited upon the indebtedness; and that the rate of interest being usurious, the rate of interest ought to be limited to six per cent instead of seven per cent., as written in the notes. The case was heard in the probate court and appealed to the common pleas, and I did not notice whether it was here or in the probate court, but I think it was in the common pleas, that Hilliard, as administrator, filed as answer to the answer and cross-petition of the Insurance Company, setting up substantially the same facts that had been recited in the answer of the heirs.

In the court of common pleas a finding of facts and law was asked, and that was made, and is before us. A bill of exceptions was also taken, embodying all the evidence, and that is before us.

The whole contention is, that the court below erred in [436]*436finding from the facts, as the court found them, that there .was usury ,in this loan 'made by the Insurance Company to Strawn.

In 1889, in May, Strawn made an application for a loan of $12,500, He executed five notes; one for $10,500, and four for five hundred dollars each, bearing seven per cent, interest, payable anually. These notes were secured by mortgage. At the same time he executed four notes for five hundred and thirty-two dollars each, bearing the same Tate of interest, and they were secured by mortgage on the same real estate. At the same time or substantially so, a life insurance policy was issued by this company, not on the life of John Strawn, and not on the life of J. H. Strawn, a son who it was contemplated in the first instance was to b.e the party insured, but upon one Edward Roberts, a grandson of Strawn. This policy was for $12,500,and was on the ten year annual premium plan; and out of the moneys that were furnished Strawn by the company, the first premium, five hundred and thirty-two dollars, was retained by the company. Roberts was a minor. It was part of the arrangement, as is found in the finding of facta here, that this policy was to be assigned to the Insurance Company, as collateral security for the loan made to Strawn. Roberts was only about seventeen years of age at the time of this transaction-. By the transaction Strawn was bound to pay by his notes and mortgages the loan mace — the $12,500, and the twenty-one hundred and odd dollars secured by the second mortgage, all bearing 7 per cent, payable annually, while he received from the company but $11,968.0Q. The defense here is usury. What is usury? Usury is th,e demanding, the exacting and receiving by the lender of more than the legal rate of interest. It is contended as against this Company that the giving ofs the notes, and the execution of two mortgages were one transaction, and that the taking out of this insurance policy was - de[437]*437manded of Strawn as a bonus, and as a condition upon which the loan would be made. It is conceded that the money that Strawn was to. get was $12,500. He was not oh insurable age. His son, who was contemplated to be insured in the first instance, for some reason was declined by the.Company, and the young man, Roberts, substituted.

At the very outset we recur to the 25 Ohio .St., 420, the case of Kilgore v. Dempsey, decision by Judge Gilmore:

“In this case it appears from Indorsements on the note, that no interest was paid till long after the note was due, and it matters not what the parties may have done years afterwards, in continuing or extending the timé of payment of the loan, such subsequent acts will not affect the original transaction and render it usurious if it was not so when entered into.”

It is contended here on behalf of the company, and that is the law, that in order to find this contract usurious, whatever occurred subsequently would not affect it — would not taint it, but that usury must have been present at the inception of the contract. I read from the same authority (25 Ohio St., 420):

“These cases illustrate what shifts or devices are” (having recited various cases) “and the facts from which they will be inferred or presumed. Of course, their name is legion; but whatever they may be, they must enter into and be of the substance of the contract at the time it is made, to make it .usurious.”

But the courts, it is suggested, will look at the transaction, no matter what the shift or device may be that is resorted to for the purpose of disguising the true character of the transaction; courts will look at the transaction as it is, and, if usury is apparent, relief will be afforded.

There is a case in 14 Ohio St., 200, a decision by Judge Brinkerhoff. I read from page 209:

“We think the averments of the answer make out a plain case of usury under those sections of the statute; and one which avoids the paper in its hands tainted with [438]*438the usury, and any mortgage given to securó it; because such usurious contracts are expressly prohibited by law;” * * * “If a per centum, charged as exchange, or any part of it, was intended as a cover for usurious interest, the form in which it was done, and the name under which it was taken, will not protect the bill from the consequences of usurious agreements; and if the fact be established, it must be dealt with in the same manner as if the usury was expressly contracted for in the bill itself. ”

And I might cite the 90 N. Y., 549. So that the rule is well established that whatever device, or trick, or artifice, or shift may be resorted to for covering up the real transaction, if there was usury, relief can be afforded.

There are two authorities furnished us, 1 McCrary’s Reports, 234, and 2 McCrary’s Reports, 576, that hold that an agreement to take life insurance and pay premiums thereon in addition to the highest rate of interest allowed by law, is usury. They were both life inurance policies issued and a loan of money made at the same time.

In this case, if the insurance was demanded —'required as a condition upon which the loan was made —if it was on additional burden to the interest that was demanded, it would be usurious.

What is the evidence as it appears from the bill of exceptions and the finding of facts ? The young man Roberts is called as a witness; he says he is a grandson; he was then seventen years old, “I was born in 1876; I really didn’t know much about this business; I paid no premium myself; it was done to secure this loan to my grandfather of $12, 500 from said Company. I was not indebted to my grandfather in any way; I was never a partner of his in any way. No policy of insurance was ever delivered to me, and I never saw any policy I was going to school then.” On cross-examination: “I carried out the insurance transaction as they wanted me to.” “Yes, I believe that the application [439]

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Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance v. Schaefer
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Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio C.C. 434, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-central-life-insurance-v-hilliard-ohiocirct-1898.