Winecoff v. Atlanta Title & Trust Co.

192 S.E. 29, 184 Ga. 488, 1937 Ga. LEXIS 573
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 17, 1937
DocketNo. 11750
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 192 S.E. 29 (Winecoff v. Atlanta Title & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winecoff v. Atlanta Title & Trust Co., 192 S.E. 29, 184 Ga. 488, 1937 Ga. LEXIS 573 (Ga. 1937).

Opinion

Beck, Presiding Justice.

On November 1, 1929, Winecoff sold certain land to Glynn Investment Company and took back a security deed for the purchase-money. This deed contained a power of sale in Winecoff, or his assigns, if the five purchase-money notes for $30,415.20 each should not be promptly paid. On May 26, 1930, Winecoff issued $45,000 worth of bonds payable to bearer, and due May 26, 1933. To secure these bonds he pledged with the Atlanta Title & Trust Compaq, as trustee, the five purchase-money notes given to him by Gtynn Investment Company. In article IV of a trust deed which Winecoff executed to the Atlanta Title & Trust Company as trustee, he provided for the sale of the collateral, to wit, the Glynn Investment Company notes, if Winecoff should default in the payment of the $45,000 of bonds. In section 9 of article VII of this trust deed, he limits the power of the Atlanta Title & Trust Company, as assignee, to execute the power of sale contained in' the purchase-money security deed of the Glynn Investment Company, and provides that such power of sale shall not be exercised by the Atlanta Title & Trust Company unless W. F. Winecoff shall request it, or unless he “shall be in default in the payment of principal or interest on the bonds secured by this indenture.” He further provides that if the debt shall be in default, “the trustee shall have the right to foreclose said deed to secure debt against the Glynn Investment Company, or to sell said property under power, in the discretion of the holders of 33-1/3% of the outstanding bonds thereby secured.” The petition in this case further shows that at the time Atlanta Title & Trust Company exercised this power of sale by selling the property of Glynn Investment Company, the holders of one third of the bonds had requested it, and proper notice thereof had been given to Winecoff. At the time this power of sale was exercised, Winecoff was in default; and all of the Glynn Investment Company notes were in default, except the last one.

Considering the facts just stated and those appearing in the statement of facts preceding this opinion, it is apparent that the [492]*492action of the Atlanta Title & Trust Company in selling the property was taken under section 9 of article VII of the trust deed, and that the foreclosure was not under article IV thereof. While it appears from the allegations of the petition that there was usury in the $45,000 loan, it also appears that if the usury was deducted, Winecoff would still be indebted at the time of the exercise of the power of sale in an amount over $31,000, after purging the usury. And even if there was usury in the $45,000 loan, that would not have prevented the Atlanta Title & Trust Company from foreclosing against the Glynn Investment Company. It would only bring up a question when the proceeds of the Glynn Investment Company foreclosure were ready for distribution to the holders of the $45,000 bonds. A promise not to plead usury is no consideration, because it is null and void and unenforceable. Usury could not be waived under this executory contract, and a promise to waive it is of no force and effect. It could not have been enforced against Winecoff, and consequently can not be enforced against the defendants. The contract relied on is simply an extension of renewal of the original contract — an agreement to extend the loan for three years upon Winecoff’s promise not to plead usury. If the original contract was usurious, the new contract likewise is usurious. It is a promise to pay usury in either event. The usury has never been purged, but is included in the new promise. A contract once usurious is always usurious until completely executed on both sides. If Winecoff had given the defendants a deed to the property upon their agreement to permit him to redeem by the payment of the full amount of the loan, including usury, the contract would be void and unenforceable. The transaction does not amount to a novation with the usury purged; there has never been a cancellation of the old contract, and no substitution of a new one for the old one. The agreement was in effect a device or subterfuge to cover up the usury. A promise not to plead usury, when made at the maturity of the note or during foreclosure, is no more enforceable than if it had been contained in the body of the note itself. In either event the promise is nugatory and affords no consideration for a contract. Such, in substance, are the contentions made in the brief of counsel for the defendants in error; and we agree with them because they are sustained by numerous authorities, and we find no decisions laying down a different principle.

[493]*493In Siesel v. Harris, 48 Ga. 652 (2), money was loaned at a usurious rafe to the firm composed of A, B, and C, and a mortgage was given by the firm to secure the debt. The mortgage was foreclosed, and the fi. fa. was to be levied, when, the mortgagor insisting upon indulgence being given and threatening to raise the question of usury against the debt and the fi. fa., it was agreed that the mortgage should be canceled, a part of the debt paid in cash and the balance in three installments, A and B giving three notes for the installments. One of the notes was paid, and a suit was brought on the others against A and B, C having left the jurisdiction. It was held that there was no legal novation, and that the original contract was not purged of its usury and the new notes were likewise usurious. The court said: “It is true the mortgage was given up; but if that were sufficient to purge a contract of usury, it would open the door so that the whole law of usury could have been set aside, if the lender ever demanded and took a mortgage as a security and afterwards, upon agreement, canceled it. . . The Code says, ‘The effect of usury is to annul and make void the contract for the usury; the lender having'the right to recover the principal sum loaned, with interest/ If by the statute that portion of the contract in excess of the lawful rate of interest is annuled and made void, the parties to that contract can not mate it valid and binding. The substitution by the parties of a new note or bond for one affected by usury will not avail. . . Comyn on Usury lays down the general rule that when the original parties to the usury are parties to the new contract or security, and it be given in substitution of the old one, such new contract of security will be void.”

In -66 C. J. 280, the following appears in the note: “On the other hand, since the usury statutes are based on public policy, it has been held that a usurious contract is wholly incapable of confirmation while it is executory, and that the debtor can not, by any agreement entered into either when the usurious agreement is made or afterward, waive the right to set up usury in defense, or validate the contract by ratification.” And in the same note (p. 278) we find the following: “On the other hand, it has been held that a party can not. estop himself from asserting usury as a defense by an agreement not to plead usury, since this would in effect be a nullification of the usury laws. Written authority by [494]*494a debtor to .enter judgment against him on a usurious contract does not, before entry of the judgment, estop him to plead usury; nor can he estop himself by his mere promise to pay the usurious rate agreed upon.” In Clark v. Spencer, 14 Kan. 398, 404 (19 Am. R.

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.E. 29, 184 Ga. 488, 1937 Ga. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winecoff-v-atlanta-title-trust-co-ga-1937.