Citation Numbers: 36 A.2d 114, 130 Conn. 552, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 195
Judges: Maltbie, Brown, Jennings, Ells, Dickenson
Filed Date: 2/10/1944
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The plaintiff brought this action to recover on a note and the defendant pleaded that it was usurious and that the action was barred by the Statute of Limitations. Judgment was for the plaintiff and the defendant has appealed. The issues presented on the record arise out of the overruling of the two defenses. It is not necessary, however, to consider a subsidiary claim made by the defendant that the note in suit was tainted with usury because it represented a balance due from him to the plaintiff upon a previous note which was usurious, or the question whether the action was barred by the Statute of Limitations.
The finding, in which no change material to the decisive issues can be made, states these facts: The plaintiff has been engaged in the business of loaning money on second mortgages since 1911, the mortgages usually including a bonus of 15 per cent and being payable in ten equal instalments. The note in suit dated April 29, 1932, was for $920, payable in ten semiannual instalments of $92 each, with interest at 6 per cent and with a provision that in case of default in any payment for thirty days the whole of the principal sum should become at once due and payable. The note was secured by a second mortgage on real estate. The sum of $800 was due the plaintiff from the defendant on a prior transaction between them, and to this the plaintiff required the addition of a bonus of $120, making the face of the note $920. No payment was made *Page 554 by the defendant on the note, but there was a credit entered upon it on August 16, 1934, of $110.40 as payment of interest and $39.50 as principal under circumstances which the plaintiff claimed tolled the Statute of Limitations.
Section 4732 of the General Statutes provides that no person shall loan money to another and, "directly or indirectly, charge, demand, accept or make any agreement to receive" interest at a greater rate than 12 per cent per annum; and 4733 provides that no person "shall, with intent to evade the provisions of section 4732, accept a note or notes for a greater amount than that actually loaned." The trial court concluded that the amount to be received by the plaintiff, including interest and bonus, did not exceed 12 per cent per annum, that the note did not, therefore, violate 4732 and that there was no intent to evade the provisions of that section, as required to constitute a violation of 4733. Upon its face, the note in suit, it is true, is not usurious. In determining whether it violated the statute, it is necessary to apply the highest interest rate permitted to the amount actually loaned; Bochicchio v. Petrocelli,
The trial court also concluded that the plaintiff had no intent to violate the statute. The amount of the bonus would very likely not have destroyed the bona fides of the mortgage so as to prevent its foreclosure for the full amount of the note; Cohen v. Mansi,
The intent which is necessary to constitute usury is not the specific intent to violate the statute but the intent to exact payments which exceed the amount of interest allowed by the statute. Atlas Realty Corporation v. House,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment for the defendant.
In this opinion BROWN, ELLS and DICKENSON, Js., concurred.
Douglass v. Boulevard Co. , 91 Conn. 601 ( 1917 )
Cohen v. Mansi , 113 Conn. 91 ( 1931 )
Mutual Protective Corporation v. Palatnick , 118 Conn. 1 ( 1934 )
Devito v. Freberg , 94 Conn. 145 ( 1919 )
Columbus Industrial Bank v. Rosenblatt , 111 Conn. 84 ( 1930 )
Contino v. Turello , 101 Conn. 555 ( 1924 )
Council v. Bernard , 319 Ill. 392 ( 1925 )
Atlas Realty Corp. v. House , 123 Conn. 94 ( 1937 )
Atlas Realty Corporation v. House , 120 Conn. 661 ( 1936 )
Gemelli v. Berman, No. 0055045 (Aug. 20, 1991) , 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 889 ( 1991 )
Brauman v. Oplinger, No. 107492 (Jun. 26, 1996) , 17 Conn. L. Rptr. 229 ( 1996 )
Cohen v. District of Columbia National Bank , 382 F. Supp. 270 ( 1974 )
State v. DeGennaro , 147 Conn. 296 ( 1960 )
Community Credit Union, Inc. v. Connors , 141 Conn. 301 ( 1954 )
Loucks v. Smith , 154 Neb. 597 ( 1951 )
Wesley v. DeFonce Contracting Corporation , 153 Conn. 400 ( 1966 )
Haworth v. Dieffenbach , 133 Conn. App. 773 ( 2012 )
MONTGOMERY FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASS'N v. Baer , 1973 D.C. App. LEXIS 337 ( 1973 )
Whaler Portfolio, LLC v. Quartarone, No. Cv-96-0560155-S (... , 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 5320 ( 1997 )