1. A corporation engaged in lending money or credit may
legitimately stipulate for repayment in the state in which it is
organized and conducts its business, in accordance with its laws
and at the interest rate there allowable, even though the agreement
for the loan was entered into in another state where a different
law and a lower rate of interest prevail. P.
274 U. S.
407.
2. The
bona fides of a written agreement between the
parties to a loan for repayment in the the lender is not impeached,
nor a waiver established, by proof of other instances in which the
repayments under similar agreements between them were made in the
borrower's state where the legal interest rate was lower. P.
274 U. S.
409.
7 F.2d 999 affirmed.
Page 274 U. S. 404
Certiorari (269 U.S. 543) to a judgment of the circuit court of
appeals which reversed a judgment of the district court recovered
by Seeman
et al. in an action against the warehouse
company for conversion of pledged goods.
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent brought suit in the District Court for Southern New
York to recover for the conversion of a quantity of canned salmon
pledged to it as security for a loan. The pledgor, who had
fraudulently regained possession, sold the salmon to petitioners.
The defense set up was that the transaction between respondent and
the pledgor was usurious, and therefore void under the law of New
York, where the pledgor conducted its business, and where
petitioners contend the pledge agreement was made.
The trial court charged the jury that the New York law was
applicable. The jury returned a verdict for petitioners. The
judgment on the verdict was reversed by the Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit.
Philadelphia Warehouse Co. v.
Seeman, 7 F.2d 999. This Court granted certiorari. 269 U.S.
543.
Respondent is a Pennsylvania corporation, having its only office
or place of business in Philadelphia. It has an established credit,
and for many years has engaged in a business which is carried on
according to the routine followed in the present case, which,
respondent contends, results in loans of credit, and not of money.
To applicants in need of funds it delivers its promissory note,
payable to its own order and then indorsed. The applicant in
exchange gives the required security -- here warehouse
Page 274 U. S. 405
receipts for the salmon -- and a pledge agreement by which he
undertakes to pay the amount of the note at maturity to respondent
at its office in Philadelphia, and agrees that the collateral
pledged shall be security for all obligations present and
prospective. At the same time, the applicant pays to respondent a
"commission" for its "services" and for the "advance of its
credit," computed at the rate of 3 percent per annum on the face of
the note. He is then free to discount the note and to use the
proceeds. In practice, as in the present case, respondent usually,
with the consent of the borrower, delivers the note to its own note
broker in Philadelphia, receives from him the proceeds of the note,
less discount and brokerage, and pays or forwards the amount so
received to the borrower. At maturity, he must pay the face value
of the note to respondent, or, as was the case here, renew the note
by paying a new commission and the amount of the discount on the
matured note. On each transaction, the applicant thus pays, in
addition to the amount of the proceeds of the note, the commission
and the discount. Respondent, after taking up its note, retains the
commission alone as the net compensation for its part in the
transaction. In addition, the applicant may, as was the case here,
pay the fees of the note broker and the fee or compensation of a
loan broker, acting as intermediary in securing the accommodation
by respondent, a total amount far exceeding 6 percent, the legal
rate of interest in New York. The commission and discount paid here
varied from 8 1/2 to 10 1/2 percent per annum of the face amount of
the notes, taking no account of fees paid to brokers.
In Pennsylvania, the exaction of interest on loans of money in
excess of 6 percent, the lawful rate, does not invalidate the
entire transaction, but excess interest may be recovered by the
borrower. Penn.Stat. 1920, §§ 12491, 12492;
Montague
v. McDowell, 99 Pa. 265, 269;
Stayton
Page 274 U. S. 406
v. Riddle, 114 Pa. 464, 469;
Marr v. Marr, 110
Pa. 60. The business carried on by respondent as described was
considered and upheld by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania as not
usurious in
Righter, Cowgill & Co. v. Philadelphia
Warehouse Co., 99 Pa. 289.
To avoid the application of the Pennsylvania law to the present
transaction and others for which the salmon was held as security,
and to bring them within the prohibition of the New York law,
petitioners at the trial relied on evidence that preliminary
negotiations were had in New York City between the pledgor and the
agent of respondent from which it might be inferred that the
agreement was in fact made there, although the formal documents
were dated at Philadelphia and respondent actually executed its
note and delivered it to the note broker there. Petitioners also
relied on the special circumstances of the case, particularly the
fact that respondent itself procured the proceeds of the note in
Philadelphia and forwarded them to the borrower in New York, as
ground for the inference by the jury that the real transaction was
the loan of money thinly disguised as a loan or sale of credit. As
the total amount paid to respondent included both the discount and
the commission, aggregating more than the legal rate of interest,
it is insisted that these charges, if for a loan of money, were
usurious, even though respondent retained only the commission after
satisfying the demands of the discounting banks.
The court below held that there was no evidence that the
transaction was other than that of its form, a loan of credit, that
the agreement between the lender and the borrower was completed
only when the respondent delivered its note to the broker in
Philadelphia, and that the agreement must therefore be regarded as
a Pennsylvania contract, valid under the law of that state, and
that, in
Page 274 U. S. 407
any case, as Philadelphia, by the express terms of the contract,
was made the place of payment by the borrower, the legality of the
transaction must be determined by the law of Pennsylvania, and not
of New York.
But, in the view we take, we think it immaterial whether the
contract was entered into in New York of Pennsylvania, and it may
be assumed for the purposes of our decision that the jury might
have found that, in fact, the parties stipulated for a loan of
money, rather than of credit.
* Respondent, a
Pennsylvania corporation having its place of business in
Philadelphia, could legitimately lend funds outside the state, and
stipulate for repayment in Pennsylvania in accordance with its
laws, and at the rate of interest there lawful, even though the
agreement for the loan were entered into in another state, where a
different law and a different rate of interest prevailed. In the
federal courts, as was said in
Andrews v.
Pond, 13 Pet. 65, 77-78:
"The general principle in relation to contracts made in one
place, to be executed in another, is well settled. They are to be
governed by the law of the place of performance, and if the
interest allowed by the laws of the place of performance is higher
than that permitted at the place of the contract, the parties may
stipulate for the higher interest, without incurring the penalties
of usury."
Miller v.
Tiffany, 1 Wall. 298;
Bedford v. Eastern
Building & Loan Association, 181 U.
S. 227,
181 U. S.
242-243;
See Junction R. Co. v. Bank of
Ashland, 12 Wall. 226,
79 U. S. 229;
Peyton v. Heinekin, 131 U.S. Append. ci;
cf. Cromwell
v. County of Sac, 96 U. S. 51,
96 U. S. 62.
In support of a policy of upholding contractual obligations
assumed in good faith, this Court has adopted the
Page 274 U. S. 408
converse of the rule quoted from
Andrews v. Pond,
supra:
"If the rate of interest be higher at the place of the contract
than at the place of performance, the parties may lawfully contract
in that case also for the higher rate."
See Miller v. Tiffany, supra, 68 U. S. 310;
Junction R. Co. Bank of Ashland, supra, 79 U. S. 229;
Cromwell v. County of Sac, supra, 96 U. S. 62;
Wharton, Conflict of Laws, § 510h;
cf. 88 U.
S. Blair, 21 Wall. 241,
and see Cockle v.
Flack, 93 U. S. 344,
93 U. S. 347.
A qualification of these rules, as sometimes stated, is that the
parties must act in good faith, and that the form of the
transaction must not "disguise its real character."
See Miller
v. Tiffany, supra, 68 U. S. 310.
As thus stated, the qualification, if taken too literally, would
destroy the rules themselves, for they obviously are to be invoked
only to save the contract from the operation of the usury laws of
the one jurisdiction or the other. The effect of the qualification
is merely to prevent the evasion or avoidance at will of the usury
law otherwise applicable by the parties' entering into the contract
or stipulating for its performance at a place which has no normal
relation to the transaction and to whose law they would not
otherwise be subject. Wharton, in his Conflict of Laws, §
210o, in discussing this qualification, says:
"Assuming that their real,
bona fide intention was to
fix the situs of the contract at a certain place which has a
natural and vital connection with the transaction, the fact that
they were actuated in so doing by an intention to obtain a higher
rate of interest than is allowable by the situs of some of the
other elements of the transaction does not prevent the application
of the law allowing the higher rate."
See Van Vleet v. Sledge, 45 F. 743, 752;
Goodrich
v. Williams, 50 Ga. 425, 435;
U.S. Savings & Loan Co.
v. Harris, 113 F. 27, 32.
Here respondent, organized and conducting its business in
Pennsylvania, was subject to laws of that state, and
Page 274 U. S. 409
had a legitimate interest in seeking their benefit. The loan
contract, which stipulated for repayment there, and which thus
chose that law as governing its validity, cannot be condemned as an
evasion of the law of New York, which might otherwise be deemed
applicable.
Petitioners rely upon the fact that, in some instances, in
connection with other transactions between respondent and the
pledgor, payments on account of amounts due were made by deposits
in respondent's account in a New York bank, although the other
payments were made in Philadelphia. But we do not think this
circumstance, standing alone, is sufficient to vary the application
of the rule. There is no suggestion to be found in the record that
in the negotiations preliminary to the signing of the contract, or
at any other time, there was any agreement by the parties that
payment should be made other than in accordance with the tenor of
the written agreement. The pledgor never did pay the amount of the
note involved in the present transaction. It was three times
renewed, and on each renewal the discount on the maturing note and
the commission on the renewal were either paid by the pledgor by
check in Philadelphia or deducted there by his authority from the
proceeds of the renewal note. The fact that, in some instances
wholly unexplained, such payments were received elsewhere affords
no basis for the contention that the written stipulation for
payment in Philadelphia was not the real one, or that its
obligation was waived. If the creditor might have compelled payment
in the federal courts in New York (
see Bedford v. Eastern
Building & Loan Association, supra), he could receive
payment there of a part of the debt without forfeiting the
balance.
Judgment affirmed.
*
See Forgotston v. McKeon, 14 App.Div. 342;
Gilbert v. Warren, 56 App.Div. 289;
In re Samuel
Wilde's Sons, 133 F. 562;
Dry Dock Bank v. American Life
Ins. & Trust Co., 3 N.Y. 344;
Williams v. Fowler,
22 How.Prac. 4.