Vermont Loan & Trust Co. v. Whithed

49 N.W. 318, 2 N.D. 82, 1891 N.D. LEXIS 23
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 49 N.W. 318 (Vermont Loan & Trust Co. v. Whithed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vermont Loan & Trust Co. v. Whithed, 49 N.W. 318, 2 N.D. 82, 1891 N.D. LEXIS 23 (N.D. 1891).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bartholomew, J.

This is an agreed case submitted to the district court of the First district under the provisions of § 5540 of the Compiled Laws. The action is brought to recover judgment on a promissory note, and the statement shows that on Juíy 1, 1890, appellant executed and delivered to respondent his promissory note of $575, due in five years, with interest at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum. The first interest payment became due September 1, 1890, and subsequent interest to be paid semi-annually. At the time of executing the note the appellant received from the respondent the sum of $500 and no more. The remaining $75 was by agreement retained by respondent as a compensation or fee for making such loan. ■ Default was made in the first interest payment. The case turns largely upon the constitutionality of chapter 184 of the Laws of 1890. This chapter is entitled “ An act defining usury and the penalty for taking the same,” and it fixes the rate of interest, in the absence of a different contract, at 7 per cent, per annum, and fixes 12 per cent, as the limit that may be lawfully contracted for, and declares all contracts whereby a greater rate is, either directly or indirectly, received or contracted to be paid, to be usurious and void from the beginning, with an exception saving negotiable paper in the hands of a bona Ude purchaser for value before maturity. The fourth section reads as follaws: “ In all written contracts for the loan of money, the exact amount [91]*91agreed upon to be received for tbe use, by tbe borrower, shall be stated in the contract, and, separately therefrom, the rate per cent, thereon of interest contracted to be charged; and if in any contract, either verbal or written, for the loan of money, the borrower receives a less sum than the principal sum so agreed upon and contracted to be loaned to and received by the borrower, the said contract shall be deemed to be usurious, except as otherwise herein provided.” The seventh section provides that any broker, loan agent, or other person may receive a compensation for obtaining a loan, or forbearance of money, where such compensation, added to the interest expressed in the contract, does not exceed in the aggregate 12 per cent, per annum interest. If the compensation and interest named exceed 12 per cent., then the entire contract is declared usurious and void. It is apparently conceded, as no question is made on the point, that the note in suit in this case violates the provisions of § 4, above quoted, unless the words, “except as otherwise herein provided,” bring the transaction within the provisions of § 7. As the $75 retained added to the 7 per cent, stated in the note, would not exceed in the aggregate 12 per cent, per annum on $500 for five years, it is claimed that the transaction is valid, under § 7. We cannot admit such construction. In this case there is no middleman. The la.w can recognize no consideration passing from respondent to appellant except the loan of the money, and the amonnt retained by respondent was simply interest taken in advance. We do not think the transaction can be brought within the terms of § 7. Section, 4 was enacted for a specific, well understood purpose. Few contracts are made that are usurious on their face. It is the almost universal custom to cover up the usury, either by misstating the amount of the loan or the correct rate of interest paid or contracted to be paid. The legislature intended by § 4 to effectually destroy any such cover, and to that end it, in positive terms, required parties to embody in the written contract the true contract, both as to amount loaned and interest paid or contracted to be paid. It matters not what the rate may be. It must be truly stated, or the contract is declared usurious and void. If the contracts mentioned in 8 4 are [92]*92usurious only when the interest exceeds 12 per cent., or when the interest and compensation together exceed 12 per cent., then § 4 is a useless and purposeless enactment; as such contracts would in every case be usurious and void under the other sections o£ the chapter. ¥e cannot adopt a construction of § 4 which renders it mere surplusage. The fact that the law is unusually stringent or even harsh in some of its provisions, or that by it our legislature has declared contracts usurious for reasons not heretofore known to the law, are matters with which we are not concerned, if the statute is a constitutional enactment. But, granting that the note in question violates the provisions of § 4, it is contended that said section, and the entire chapter 184 is unconstitutional by reason of the exception contained in § 11, which reads as follows : “ None of the provisions of this act shall apply to any building and loan association incorporated under the provisions of any law of this state.” It is claimed that this section is a violation of § 11 of the state constitution, which requires all laws of a general nature to have a uniform operation; and also of § 20, which forbids the granting of privileges or immunities to any citizen, or class of citizens, which, upon the same terms, shall not be granted to all citizens; and also of subdivision 13 of § 69, which prohibits the legislature from passing any special law “ regulating the rate of interest on money.” The questions thus presented are by no means free from embarrassment. We are asked to annul an important legislative enactment — one that reached the statute book only after receiving the sanction of the deliberate judgment of the legislature and the executive.. The subject, too, is one peculiarly within the legislative branch of the government, and a proper control of the matter of usury has long been regarded as one of the most beneficial and salutatory objects of legislation. This is a case which demands implicit adherence to that well established rule which requires courts to respect and enforce the will of the legislature, unless there has been a clear and unequivocal violation of the fundamental law of the state. “ A statute relating to persons or things as a class is a general law; one relating to particular persons or things of a class is [93]*93special.” Suth. St. Const. § 121. “Special laws are those made for individual cases, or for less than a class requiring laws appropriate to its peculiar condition and circumstances.” Id § 127. An inspection of the statute under consideration at once discloses that it does not come within the above definition of a special law. Nor does it grant any privileges or immunities to any citizen that would not equally extend to any other citizen coming within the class to which the exception applies. It is a statute general in form and general in its nature. If its operation be in any manner special, or if it grant privileges or immunities to any citizen or class of citizens that are not granted to all, it is because the statute is not literally uniform in its operation; and it becomes important to determine whether this lack of uniformity is of such a character as to violate the constitutional provision requiring all laws of a general nature to have a uniform operation. This provision is found in the constitution of a number of the states, and it has been before the courts in a large number of cases, and it has also been held that this provision was intended to prevent the granting to any citizen or class of citizens of privileges or immunities which, upon the same terms, shall not belong to all citizens. McGill v. State, 34 Ohio St. 237; Suth. St. Const. § 121; French v. Teschemacher, 24 Cal. 544.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 N.W. 318, 2 N.D. 82, 1891 N.D. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vermont-loan-trust-co-v-whithed-nd-1891.