The statutes of New Mexico, Compiled Laws 1884, §§
1736-1738, do not permit the receiving of usurious interest by way
of, or under the guise of discount, commission, agency, or other
subterfuge.
Those statutes make void a contract of loan providing for
usurious interest only as to the interest in excess of what the
statute allows.
Page 153 U. S. 319
The limitation of three years, under the statutes of New Mexico,
within which the borrower may sue for double the amount of usurious
interest collected and received from him does not commence to run,
and consequently the right of action therefor does not accrue,
until the lender has collected or received more than the original
debt with interest.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 153 U. S. 320
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendant in error, the Scottish Mortgage & Land
Investment Company of New Mexico, Limited, is a private corporation
organized under the laws of Great Britain for the purpose, among
others, of lending money in this country on the security "of real
or heritable or of leasehold estate," or "of cattle, sheep, or
other livestock, and movable goods and chattels."
That company agreed to loan McBroom, the plaintiff in error, the
sum of $65,000, payable six years after date, with interest at the
rate of twelve percent per annum. As evidence of the loan, he
executed and delivered his principal note for the above amount and
six interest notes, one for $2,842.19, payable December 31, 1886,
five for $7,800 each, payable, respectively, December 31, 1887,
1888, 1889, 1890, 1891, and 1892, and one for $4,965, payable
August 20, 1892. These notes were secured by a deed of trust upon
certain lands and by a chattel mortgage upon cattle, horses, and
other personal property.
The amount so borrowed was paid to McBroom by the company in the
latter part of September, 1886, and out of the sum received he paid
to Dinkel, the company's agent in New Mexico, through whom the loan
was negotiated, the sum of $6,500.
McBroom's interest note for $2,842.19, falling due December 31,
1886, was paid by him at its maturity. Aside from the bonus of
$6,500 received by the company's agent, no other payment on account
of this debt has ever been made.
By the statutes of New Mexico, it is provided that "in written
contracts for the payment of money it shall not be legal to recover
more than twelve percent interest per annum;"
Page 153 U. S. 321
that
"any person, persons, or corporation who shall hereafter charge,
collect, or receive from any person a higher rate of interest than
twelve percent per annum shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon
conviction thereof before the district court or a justice of the
peace shall be fined in a sum of not less than twenty-five dollars
nor more than one hundred dollars, and such person, persons, or
corporation shall forfeit to the person of whom such interest was
collected or received, or to his executors, administrators, or
assigns, double the amount so collected or received upon any action
brought for the recovery of the same within three years after such
cause of action accrued,"
and that
"the provisions of this act shall also apply to any person,
persons, corporation, or officer of the same who may charge,
receive, or collect a higher rate of interest than twelve percent
per annum by means of discount, commission, agency, or any other
subterfuge."
Act of April 3, 1884, Sess.Laws, New Mexico, 1884, c. 80;
Compiled Laws of New Mexico, 1884, §§ 1736-1738.
McBroom brought this action under the above statute to recover
from the defendant in error double the amount alleged to have been
collected and received by the corporation in excess of the legal
rate of interest. The declaration, in one count, charges that the
$6,500 paid to the company's agent, and the $2,842.19 paid in
discharge of the interest note maturing December 31, 1886, were in
excess of what the company was authorized by the statute to charge,
collect, or receive, and upon that basis judgment was asked for
$18,660.20. At the trial, the plaintiff withdrew all claim except
for an amount double the sum of $6,500 paid to Dinkel, the
company's agent.
There was a verdict and judgment against the company for
$13,000. The judgment was reversed by the supreme court of the
territory, and the cause was remanded with directions to proceed in
accordance with the opinion of that court. Subsequently, at the
request of McBroom in order to facilitate an appeal by him to this
Court, the judgment was so modified that a
venire de novo
was not awarded, and, upon the facts in the record, the supreme
court of the territory adjudged that the company go hence without
delay, and recover
Page 153 U. S. 322
its costs in that court as well as in the court of original
jurisdiction. The judgment of the court below therefore became a
final one. 30 P. 859.
The general grounds upon which the court below proceeded were
that the contract in question was valid to the extent of the
principal sum and the legal interest; that all payments made by the
borrower, whether such payments were made on account of usury or as
bonus or commission, should be applied in reduction of the debt,
and that the borrower was not entitled to recover the statutory
penalty while any portion of the amount really loaned, with legal
interest, after crediting all payments, remained unsatisfied.
If, when receiving the bonus of $6,500 from the borrower,
Dinkel, the agent of the defendant in New Mexico, represented his
principal, the contract in question was usurious, for that sum and
the aggregate amount of the notes given for interest exceeded the
highest rate of interest that could be charged, collected, or
received, under the laws of New Mexico, on the sum loaned to
McBroom. Upon this point, the court below said:
"In the view that we have taken of the matter, it is immaterial
to determine whether Dinkel was an agent or whether, as an officer,
he was a part of the corporation, so that a transaction with him
was a transaction with the corporation itself, for the fourth
article of the agreement between him and the home office, as
already shown, provided that all such commissions and bonuses
should inure to the benefit of the company. In view of this
provision of his contract, and of the fact that the company had
knowledge of each step taken by him, it is to be presumed that he
was acting for the company. The facts in this case bring it clearly
within the rule laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States
in the case of
Fowler v. Equitable Trust Co., 141 U. S.
384, wherein a foreign corporation (whose agent in the
state accepted a commission from the borrower on loans procured
from such foreign corporation) was held to have received the
proceeds of the usurious transaction, the commission paid to the
agent being in excess of the highest rate of interest allowed by
law."
We entirely concur in these views. The
Page 153 U. S. 323
statute of New Mexico does permit the receiving of usurious
interest, by way of, or under the guise of, "discount, commission,
agency, or other subterfuge."
Was the contract between the parties void as to the amount
loaned, with legal interest thereon, because it provided for, or in
its execution involved, the payment of usurious interest? The
plaintiff insists that it was, and consequently that a cause of
action accrued immediately upon the payment of the bonus of $6,500
to the company's agent, or at least from the first payment of
interest for a fixed period. This question must first receive
attention.
Of course, effect must be given to the intention of the
legislature as manifested by the words of the statute, interpreted
according to their natural signification. And in ascertaining that
intention, all of its provisions must be considered together. As
said in
Harris v.
Runnels, 12 How. 79,
53 U. S. 84:
"Before the rule can be applied in any case of a statute
prohibiting or enjoining things to be done, with a prohibition and
a penalty, or a penalty only for doing a thing which it forbids,
the statute must be examined as a whole to find out whether or not
the makers of it meant that a contract in contravention of it
should be void, or that it was not to be so. In other words,
whatever may be the structure of the statute in respect to
prohibition and penalty, or penalty alone, that it is not to be
taken for granted that the legislature meant that contracts in
contravention of it were to be void in the sense that they were not
to be enforced in a court of justice."
So, in
Pratt v. Short, 79 N.Y. 437, 445:
"A prohibitory statute may itself point out the consequences of
its violation, and if, on a consideration of the whole statute, it
appears that the legislature intended to define such consequences
and to exclude any other penalty or forfeiture than such as is
declared in the statute itself, no other will be enforced, and if
an action can be maintained on the transaction of which the
prohibited transaction was a part without sanctioning the
illegality, such action will be entertained."
See also Pangborn v. Eastlake, 36 Ia. 546, 549, and
authorities there cited.
The statute of New Mexico does not declare a contract
Page 153 U. S. 324
providing for usurious interest to be absolutely void in respect
to the amount loaned and legal interest thereon, but only imposes a
fine upon any person or corporation charging, collecting, or
receiving a higher rate of interest than twelve percent per annum,
and forfeits to he person from whom such interest is collected or
received, or to his executors, administrators, or assigns, double
the amount so collected or received, the action to recover such
penalty to be brought within three years after the cause of action
accrues. Construing sections 1736, 1737, and 1738 together, the
statute does not prohibit the recovery of the amount loaned, with
legal interest. No such consequence as the forfeiture of the
principal and legal interest is visited upon the lender. And that
seems to be the view expressed by the Supreme Court of the
Territory of New Mexico when, construing the local statute in
Milligan v. Cromwell, 3 N.M. 330, it said:
"If it should not be legal to recover more than 12 percent
interest per annum upon written contracts, the converse of that
proposition would seem to follow as a necessary consequence that it
shall be lawful to recover on such contract 12 percent interest per
annum."
It is true that, by necessary implication, the contract is void
as to any interest stipulated to be paid in excess of the highest
rate allowed by the statute. But as the statute only imposes a fine
for charging, collecting, or receiving usurious interest, and gives
to the borrower a right to recover double the amount of such
interest collected or received from him, the courts ought not to
declare the contract void as to principal and legal interest. That
would add a penalty not prescribed by the statute.
This question, substantially as now presented, has often arisen
in cases under the section of the National Banking Act providing
that the knowingly taking, receiving, reserving, or charging a rate
of interest in excess of that allowed by the act shall be adjudged
a forfeiture of the entire interest, and, in case a greater rate is
paid, giving the person paying it, and his legal representatives, a
right, by suit brought within a specified time, to recover back
twice the amount so paid. In reference to that act, this Court has
said that
"where a statute
Page 153 U. S. 325
prescribes a rate of interest and simply forbids the taking of
more, and more is contracted for, the contract is good for what
might lawfully be taken. . . . When the statute creates a new
offense and denounces the penalty, or gives a new right and
declares the remedy, the punishment or the remedy can be only that
which the statute prescribes."
Farmers' & Mechanics' National Bank v. Dearing,
91 U. S. 29,
91 U. S. 35. So,
in
Oates v. Bank, 100 U. S. 239,
100 U. S. 249,
where one of the questions was whether a bank could be deemed a
bona fide holder of a negotiable note, having received it
under a contract which, in its execution, involved a violation of
the usury laws of the state, this Court said:
"The statute under which the bank was organized, known as the
National Banking Act, does not declare the contract under which the
usurious interest is paid to be void. It denounces no penalty other
than a forfeiture of the interest which the note or bill carries,
giving to the debtor the right to sue for and recover twice the
amount of interest so paid. If we should declare the contract of
endorsement void, and consequently that no right of action passed
to the bank on the note transferred as collateral security, an
additional penalty would thus be added beyond those imposed by the
law itself."
These decisions are in harmony with prior and subsequent
decisions of this Court. In
Fleckner v. Bank of the United
States, 8 Wheat. 338,
21 U. S.
353-355, where one of the questions was whether a
certain discount was usurious, the Court said:
"The statutes of usury of the states, as well as of England,
contain an express provision that usurious contracts shall be
utterly void, and without such an enactment, the contract would be
valid, at least in respect to persons who were strangers to the
usury. The taking of interest by the bank beyond the sum authorized
by the charter would doubtless be a violation of its charter, for
which a remedy might be applied by the government, but as the act
of Congress does not declare that it shall avoid the contract, it
is not perceived how the original defendant could avail himself of
this ground to defeat a recovery."
Again in the same case:
"The act has not pronounced that such a violation [the dealing
in notes]
Page 153 U. S. 326
makes the contract
ipso facto void, but has punished it
by a specific penalty of treble the value."
So in
De Wolf v.
Johnson, 10 Wheat. 367,
23 U. S. 392,
in which was said:
"The law of Rhode Island certainly forbids the contract of loan
for a greater interest than six percent, and so far no court would
lend its aid to recover such interest. But the law goes no farther.
It does not forbid the contract of loan, nor preclude the recovery
of the principal under any circumstances. The sanctions of that law
are the loss of the interest, and a penalty to the amount of the
whole interest and one-third of the principal, if sued for within a
year. On what principle could this Court add another to the
penalties declared by the law itself?"
In line with the above cases are those in which national banks
have been held entitled to recover upon securities taken in the
course of business, but in violation of the act of Congress. In
National Bank v. Matthews, 98 U. S.
621,
98 U. S. 627,
the Court said:
"The statute does not declare such a security void. It is silent
upon the subject. If Congress so meant, it would have been easy to
say so, and it is hardly to be believed that this would not have
been done, instead of leaving the question to be settled by the
uncertain result of litigation and judicial decision. Where
usurious interest is contracted for, a forfeiture is prescribed and
explicitly defined."
National Bank v. Whitney, 103 U. S.
99,
103 U. S. 103;
Smith v.
Sheeley, 12 Wall. 358,
79 U. S.
361.
To this general class of cases belongs
Fritts v.
Palmer, 132 U. S. 282,
132 U. S. 289,
where the question was whether a deed for real estate in Colorado,
made to a Missouri corporation organized to do business in
Colorado, but which had not filed in the office of the secretary of
state of the latter state a copy of its charter of incorporation,
etc., was absolutely void, passing no title to the grantee. The
statutes of Colorado provided that no foreign or domestic
corporation established or maintained in any way for pecuniary
profit of its stockholders or members should purchase or hold real
estate in that state, except as provided for in the act; that every
company incorporated under the laws of any foreign state or
kingdom, or of
Page 153 U. S. 327
any state or territory of the United States beyond the limits of
Colorado, and then or thereafter doing business within that state,
should file in the office of the secretary of state a copy of its
charter of incorporation, and that failure to comply with these
provisions should render each and every officer, agent, and
stockholder so failing therein jointly and severally liable on any
and all contracts of such company made within that state during the
time that such corporation is so in default. This Court said:
"The Constitution and laws of Colorado, it should be observed,
do not prohibit foreign corporations altogether from purchasing or
holding real estate within its limits. They do not declare
absolutely or wholly void, as to all persons, and for every
purpose, a conveyance of real estate to a foreign corporation which
has not previously done what is required before it can rightfully
carry on business in the state. Nor do they declare that the title
to such property shall remain in the grantor, despite his
conveyance. So far as we are aware, the only penalty imposed by the
statutes of Colorado upon a foreign corporation carrying on
business in the state before acquiring the right to do so is found
in section 262 of the same chapter. . . . The fair implication is
that in the judgment of the Legislature of Colorado, this penalty
was ample to effect the object of the statutes prescribing the
terms upon which foreign corporations might do business in that
state. It is not for the judiciary at the instance or for the
benefit of private parties, claiming under deeds executed by the
person who had previously conveyed to the corporation, according to
the forms prescribed for passing title to real estate, to inflict
the additional and harsh penalty of forfeiting, for the benefit of
such parties, the estate thus conveyed to the corporation, and by
it conveyed to others.."
To the cases may be added the following:
Lazear v. Union
Nat. Bank, 52 Md. 78, 121, in which the court, referring to
statutes regulating usury, held that a contract, under which a
greater interest is taken than the law allows is not, for that
reason, void unless the law itself provides that the taking of
illegal interest shall be attended by that result, and
Farmers'
& Traders' Bank v. Harrison, 57 Mo. 503,
Page 153 U. S. 328
509, in which the court, referring to the prohibitions of usury
by statute, said that the measure of illegality or immorality is
the extent of the prohibition, and that applies not to the loan, in
which there is no moral vice, but only to the forbidden excess of
interest.
Our conclusion upon this branch of the case is that, upon
principle and authority, the contract of loan in question providing
for usurious interest cannot be held void except as to interest in
excess of what the statute allowed to be charged, collected, or
received.
The contract of loan not being void except as to the excess of
interest stipulated to be paid, the question arises whether the
lender is liable to an action for the penalty prescribed by the
statute, so long as the principal debt, with legal interest
thereon, after deducting all payments, is unpaid. We are of opinion
that this question must be answered in the negative. While, under
the statute, the mere charging of usurious interest may be a
misdemeanor for which the lender can be fined, whether such
usurious interest is or is not collected or received, the borrower
has no cause of action until usurious interest has been actually
collected or received from him. Such is the mandate of the statute.
And interest cannot be said to have been collected or received in
excess of what may be lawfully collected and received until the
lender has, in fact, after giving credit for all payments,
collected or received more than the sum loaned, with legal
interest. Such, in our judgment, is the true construction of the
statute of New Mexico. In this view, the limitation of three years
within which the borrower may sue for double the amount of usurious
interest collected and received from him does not commence to run,
and therefore the cause of action does not accrue, until the lender
has actually collected or received more than the original debt,
with legal interest. These conclusions are supported by adjudged
cases.
In
Duncan v. First Nat. Bank of Mount Pleasant, in the
District Court of the United States for the Western District of
Pennsylvania, it was said:
"From the origin of the loan, from the retaining of the first
discount through all the renewals
Page 153 U. S. 329
up to the time of final payment of the principal, or up to the
time of entering judgments, there is a
locus penitentiae
for the party taking the excessive interest. Any time till then, he
may consider the excessive interest paid on account of the loan,
and so apply it and lessen the principal. . . . Up to that time, he
may make this election. When payment is actually made or judgment
entered, the election is made, and if, as in these cases, judgment
is entered for the face amount of the notes or full amount of the
loan, or payment is taken is full without any reduction by taking
out the excessive interest, the cause of action is complete."
Thompson' National Bank Cases 360, 362.
In
Stevens v. Lincoln, 7 Met. (Mass.) 525, 528, which
was an action, under a statute of Massachusetts authorizing suit to
recover threefold the amount of interest paid, it being alleged
that interest had been paid at a greater rate than the law allowed,
the court said:
"In regard to the payment of $1,458.91, whether this was a
payment of the usurious interest or a part of it, we are of opinion
that while the usurious interest is unpaid, there remains the
locus penitentiae, that the party may relinquish it and
recover for the balance of his debt, the contract not being
rendered void by the statute. And in the absence of proof as to any
appropriation of a partial payment, the law will apply a payment to
the valid demand, rather than to the illegal one, and the balance
which remains unpaid, if it exceeds the usury agreed to be paid,
includes the usury, so that, on one side, the debtor shall not
recover back any part of that which he honestly owed, by the
allegation on his part that the payment made by him was the payment
of the usury; nor, on the other hand, will the law permit the
creditor to secure to himself the avails of his illegal contract,
and, when he sues for the balance due on the contract, to aver that
the usurious interest was contained in the previous payment, and
that the residue is justly due."
The same rule was affirmed in
Saunders v. Lambert, 7
Gray 484, 486.
So in
Harvey v. National Life Ins. Co., 60 Vt. 209:
"As the result of that transaction, the plaintiff went away with
$900 in money, all he had ever
Page 153 U. S. 330
received, as his own money, and the defendant with the
plaintiff's note for $1,000. . . . Hence, the one hundred dollars
usury entered into and became a part of the mortgage note. The
payments made by the plaintiff and by Mrs. Hardaker prior to the
time of taking up the note would in law be applied towards the
payment of the legal portion of the note. . . . All the payments
made by her, as well as those made by the plaintiff, up to the
final payment, were in law to be applied towards the liquidation of
the legal portion of the note. Hence, the plaintiff is entitled to
recover what was paid as the final payment of the note above what
was then legally due upon the note after applying the payments made
thereon in liquidation of the legal portion of the note with
interest."
To the same effect are the following authorities:
Kendall v.
Crouch, 88 Ky. 199, 202;
Smith v. Robinson, 10 Allen
132;
Hawkins v. Welch, 8 Mo. 490, 492;
Hall v.
Fairfield Bank, 30 Neb. 99, 102;
Jackson v. Garner,
79 Ga. 415.
In
Wright v. Laing, 3 B. & C. 165, 168, which was
an action to recover the penalties of the statute of usury, Abbott,
C.J., said:
"None of the payments were appropriated by either party at the
time of payment. If the law ought now to make such an appropriation
as the pleader has supposed in this court, the count will be
sustained by the proof; otherwise, not. We think the law ought now
to make such an appropriation. . . . And such an appropriation
works no prejudice to the party; it leaves him only where by his
own conduct he placed himself, and in the case I have put of the
payment of one bill and nonpayment of the other, if an action for
the penalties of the statute should be brought, the same principle
of law would protect the defendant, by applying the payment of the
first bill to the legal demand, and not permitting the then
plaintiff to apply it to the illegal demand -- that is, to the loan
and interest -- although it be precisely of the same amount,
because peradventure the lender might repent the illegal bargain,
and refuse to receive the full amount of the second bill, and the
law will allow him the opportunity of doing so, that he might not
be deemed a receiver of usurious
Page 153 U. S. 331
interest without clear evidence that he had not only bargained
to receive, but had actually received, such interest. And if the
law will make this appropriation of the payment, in the two cases
that I have put, in one instance against the lender, and to prevent
him from enforcing an illegal bargain, and in the other instance in
favor of the lender, and to protect him from being subject to a
penalty for an illegal bargain only, it seems very plainly to
follow that a similar appropriation ought to be made by law in the
case before the court. And this, in effect, is only saying that
where a person has two demands, one recognized by law, the other
arising on a matter forbidden by law, and an unappropriated payment
is made to him, the law will afterwards appropriate it to the
demand which it acknowledges, and not to the demand which it
prohibits."
For the reasons stated, we are of opinion that this action
cannot now be maintained under the statute, and consequently the
court below properly reversed the judgment of the court of original
jurisdiction and entered judgment in favor of the defendant.
It is proper to say that the questions determined in
Barnet
v. National Bank, 98 U. S. 555;
Driesbach v. National Bank, 104 U. S.
52;
Stephens v. Monongahela Bank, 111 U.
S. 197, and
Carter v. Carusi, 112 U.
S. 478, do not arise here. No question is presented in
the case before us as to whether the borrower, when sued for the
principal debt and legal interest, may of right set off the amount
of any penalty prescribed by the statute of New Mexico.
The judgment of the supreme court of the territory is
therefore affirmed.