Whitworth & Yancey v. Adams

5 Va. 333
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 5, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Va. 333 (Whitworth & Yancey v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitworth & Yancey v. Adams, 5 Va. 333 (Va. 1827).

Opinion

The Judges delivered their opinions.

Judge Carr.

This is an action of assumpsit, by the holder of. a negotiable note against the maker. It was a note made for the accommodation of the payees, who endorsed it in blank, and gave it to a broker to raise money on. lie sold it to Johnson at a discount of 3 per eent. a month. The statute of usury has been pleaded in various forms, and a special verdict found, which will be considered hereafter.

It has been a good deal the fashion of late, to decry the policy and justice of our laws, regulating the rate of interest. These considerations, I know, do not belong to us. It is our duty to give to every law an honest and manly support, whatever may be our opinion of its wisdom. It may be permitted to observe, however, that if the experience of ages, and the general opinion of mankind, deserve weight in legislation, their voice is in favor of usury laws. They have prevailed in all civilized countries, and in all time. Their object too is a humane one. In Brown v. Morris, Cowp. Rep. 792, Lord MANSFrEim says, “These statutes were made to protect needy and necessitous persons from the oppression of usurers and monied men, who are eager to take advantage of the distress of others; while they, on the other hand, from the pressure of their distress, are ready to come to any terms; and with their eyes open, not only break the law, but complete their ruin.” In Lowe v. Waller, Doug. 736, the same Judge says, “ The statute of usury was made to protect those who act with their eyes open;—to protect them against themselves. Upon this principle, it makes it penal for a man to take more than the fixed rate of interest; i! being well known, that the borrower., in distress, would agree to any terms.”

[336]*336The early. statutes against usury attempted to put it down, by legislating in detail against the various forms, which it from time to time assumed; and it is curious to trace the progress of the contest between the law, constantly attacking, and the usurer, ever ready with some new device to elude and baffle the pursuit. Sometimes a colourable risque was added to the loan, or it was disguised under the form of a post obit or bottomry bond; sometimes, what was called dry exchange. The borrower drew a bill on a fictitious person, supposed to reside abroad. The bill was never sent abroad, but protested for non-payment, and the borrower charged with exchange, re-exchange, and other expenses beyond legal interest. Sometimes stock was lent, or money in the funds, to be returned by the borrower at a future day, till which time he is charged with interest for more than the market price of the stock. Sometimes, by advancing money on a pretended partnership; by which means the lender gets exorbitant interest, under the pretext of partnership profits. Sometimes, by giving the loan the shape of the purchase of a life-annuity. Sometimes, by obtaining a beneficial lease, in considera» tion of a loan of money. Sometimes, by discounting notes and bills of exchange, under the cloak of a purchase and sale. These are a few of the thousand devices resorted to, for evasion of the usury laws. The Legislature, in their later statutes, giving up the vain pursuit of usury in its particular forms, and striking at the root of the evil, have forbidden the taking exorbitant interest directly or indirectly; thus throwing upon the ministers of the law, the duty of detecting and defeating every attempted evasion of it. Well may these ministers exclaim, quo teneam vultus mutantem Protea nodo? Yet are they bound to pursue this Proteus through all his changing forms; and the law has given' them ample powers.

In Barton’s Case, 5 Co. Rep. 70, it is said, e( If in truth, the contract be usurious, against the statute, no colours nor shews of words will serve, but the party may shew it, and [337]*337shall not, be concluded or estopped by any deed or any ather matter whatsoever, for the statute gives averment in such case.”

la Flayer v. Edwards, Cowp. 112, Lord Mansfield says, “The statute of 12th Anne, prohibits any body from taking, any how, on the loan of money, above 5 per cent. (6 with us) for forbearance of payment; and all contracts for any loan of money, goods, merchandize, &e. bearing interest above 5 per cent,, with an agreement for principal and interest, are null and void. It depends principally upon the contract’s being a loan, and the statute uses the words directly or indirectly. Therefore, in all questions, in whatever respect repugnant to the statute, we must get at the nature and substance of the transaction. The view of the parties must be ascertained to satisfy the Court that there is a loan and borrowing; and that the substance was, to borrow on the one part, and lend on the other; and where the real truth is a loan of money, the wit of man cannot find a shift to take it out of the statute. If the substance be a loan of money, nothing will protect the taking more than Sper cent.; and though the statute mention only for 'loan of monies, wares, merchandize, or other commodities,’ yet any other contrivance, if the substance of it be a loan, will come under the word indirectly.”

Again, in Lowe v. Waller, Doug. 736, Lord Mansfield says, “Before the statute of Henry 8th, all interest on money lent was prohibited by the common law, as it is now in Roman Catholic countries. This gave rise to many shifts and devices to evade the law. One, which was then most common, was provided against by that statute; but, the prohibition being confined to that particular sort of transaction, usurers were thereby put upon other contrivances; and experience taught the Legislature, in more modern statutes, not to particularize specific modes of usury, because that only led to evasion; but to enact, generally, that no shift should enable a man to take more than legal interest opon a loan. Therefore, the only qnes[338]*338tion in all cases like the present is, what is the real substance of the transaction, not what is the colour and form”

The correctness of these views I have never seen or heard doubted; and surely they tell us, that the usury laws are not to be construed strictly like penal statutes; but liberally, with a view to advance the remedy, and suppress the mischief. Every transaction is to be stripped of the covering, which ingenuity has thrown around it, and exposed in its nakedness. In this spirit, let us look at the special verdict before us, and see what was the real substance of the transaction.

Wilson fy Orr, and Whitworth fy Adams, were two mercantile houses, doing business in Petersburg. On the 10th of September, 1817, Wilson, the acting partner of his house, applied to Belches, a broker of the town, to know whether he could raise money for him; who answered, “yes, on good paper.” On the evening of the same day, Wilson sent a verbal message to Belches, to en-quire whether the names of Whitworth Yancey would do; but Belches not being at home, did not receive the message. On the 11th of September, Whitworth fy Yancey, for accommodation merely, made the note in question to Wilson Sc Orr, being a negotiable note in due form, purporting to be for value received, which was endorsed by Wilson fy Orr

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Bluebook (online)
5 Va. 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitworth-yancey-v-adams-va-1827.