Unity Plan Finance Co. v. Green

148 So. 297, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1823
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 1933
DocketNo. 14530.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 148 So. 297 (Unity Plan Finance Co. v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Unity Plan Finance Co. v. Green, 148 So. 297, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1823 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

JANVIER, Judge.

Plaintiff is a corpoi’ation engaged in the money lending business. It sues on three notes, each for an amount less than $300 and each partially unpaid. There were originally three comakers to each of the notes. One of them has died and it is conceded that the heirs of the • deceased, who, together with the other two comakers, are made parties defendant, are liable as^ fully and to the same extent as the third comaker would have been had she lived.

Defendants contend that no recovery can be had on any of the notes for the following reasons: (1) That the petition discloses no right or cause of action; (2) that the contracts evidence an agreement to pay usurious interest; (3) that the contracts contain an agreement to compound interest; (4) that the contracts provide for interest in advance; (5) that the contracts are not such as are authorized under the small loan act of Louisiana and that, therefore, plaintiff is not entitled to charge interest in excess of 8 per cent, per year; (6) that it is not permitted, under the small loan act, to lend money at discount; (7) that plaintiff did not give defendants statements showing in distinct terms the amount of each loan, etc.

The defense numbered 1 — that the petition does not disclose a cause of action— is based on the alleged absence from the petition of an allegation to the effect that plaintiff is a licensee under the so-called small loan law (Act No. 7 of the Extra Session of 1928 of the General Assembly of Louisiana) and the consequent illegality of an interest charge in excess of 8 per cent., which is the maximum rate permitted by the laws of Louisiana to all others than those licensed under the said act.

Defenses numbered 2 to 7, inclusive, are based on the contention that, even if plaintiff is a licensee under the act, it has violated the provisions thereof in the particulars set forth.

The exception of no cause of action must be overruled. It appears that it is admitted that plaintiff is a licensee under the small loan act and, therefore, although the *299 admission was made with a reservation of defendants’ right under the exception, there can be no doubt of the fact that plaintiff is such a licensee, and, therefore, its failure to allege that fact could be readily cured by amendment. No good purpose could be served by remanding the matter for the making of a mere pro forma allegation.

The judge, a quo, held that the notes sued on are violative of the provisions of the. small loan law.

It is admitted that each of- the notes was “discounted” at 10 per cent.; that is, that the amount given by plaintiff to the makers was in each case 10 per cent, less than the face of the note, and it is argued that this in itself renders the transaction illegal and violative of section 13 of the statute, which, in part, provides that where a licensee makes a'loan under the act “interest shall not be payable in advance. * *' * ” It is also said that a further violation of the statute results from the fact that in each of the notes • — -which are payable in installments — failure to pay one installment creates the right in the holder to declare all future installments due. It is contended that the enforcement of this stipulation may result in an actual interest charge enormously in excess of that permitted because, since the total interest charged at the rate of 10 per cent, has been discounted from each note, if each note, by this so-called accelerated maturity process, is declared due months in advance of the maturity conventionally fixed, then the interest rate is increased in inverse proportion to the length of time the loan remains outstanding.

It is also said that the statute does not contemplate any other form of loan than one on a monthly basis and on which the monthly rate of 3 ½ per cent, must be charged.

That each of the notes provides for a further interest charge of 8 per cent, after maturity is also criticized because, so defendants assert, this stipulation amounts to the compounding of interest, since the note itself already contains the interest for the entire term of the loan, and it is argued that to permit a charge of 8 per cent, from maturity on the total amount of the note is to permit the charging of interest on interest, or, to express it differently, is to permit the compounding of interest, which is also prohibited by section 13 of the statute, from which it appears that “interest shall not be * * ⅜ compounded.”

Finally, defendants direct their attack at that stipulation in each of the notes which provides that on each overdue installment there shall be paid 5 per cent..as liquidated damages, and they assert that this stipulation for the payment by the'- borrower of the liquidated damages sustained is in reality merely an additional interest charge' in a disguised form and, when added to the 8 per cent, charged as interest on overdue installments, makes a total charge of 13 per cent, on such installments as are not paid when due. This last contention with reference to-the 5 per cent, liquidated damages is not referred to in the agreed statement of fact, but, since we find the 5 per cent, provision in the notes themselves and since the matter is discussed in the briefs, we have given it consideration.

The most important question and the one upon which most of the other contentions rest is whether it is permitted to a licensee to make loans on a discount basis. In the statute there is no unambiguous expression of legislative intent as to this question. In section 13 it is provided that “interest shall not be payable in advance,” and to the casual reader it might appear that by this prohibition the Legislature intended to frown upon the practice of discounting. But in other sections of the statute are found expressions which, by inference at least, -permit the licensee to engage in the practice of discounting, and we reach the conclusion that, since to make interest payable in advance is prohibited, whereas, on the other hand, discount is by inference permitted, there must have been in the minds of the framers of the law a distinction between the two terms. Further investigation confirms this view and we find that prior to the enactment of the statute our Supreme Court had found that the words “interest in advance” do not necessarily mean “discount.” In Walker v. Villavaso, 18 La. Ann. 712, it was said that a payment in advance of 12 per cent, of the face of certain notes was a usurious charge, but that, had the interest been included in the notes themselves, there would -have been no objection thereto on the ground of usury; in other words, that a payment of interest in advance, if in excess of the lawful rate, constituted usury, but that to discount in excess of the lawful rate does not constitute usury. We cite this case merely to show that the Supreme Court recognized a distinction between the two terms.

Discussions of possible distinctions between the two terms “interest in advance” and “discount” are also found in Huntington v. Westerfield, 119 La. 619, 44 So. 317, and in Chadwick v. Menard, 104 La. 38, 28 So. 933.

In the last cited case the court said that there is little difference “in a business sense” between the two terms, but even in that case it was recognized that to pay interest in advance means to make a payment in cash, whereas to discount is to calculate interest and to include it in the note.

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Burley v. Bastrop Loan Co., Inc.
407 F. Supp. 773 (W.D. Louisiana, 1976)
Levin v. Missouri Pac. R. Co.
2 So. 2d 99 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1941)
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193 So. 275 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1940)
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168 So. 488 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1936)
Unity Plan Finance Co. v. Green
151 So. 85 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
148 So. 297, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unity-plan-finance-co-v-green-lactapp-1933.