Voyager Life Ins. Co., Inc. v. Whitson
Voyager Life Ins. Co., Inc. v. Whitson
Opinion
The opinion of May 30, 1997, is withdrawn and the following is substituted therefor.
Jackie E. Whitson, as a class-representative plaintiff ("plaintiffs"), filed this class action against Central Finance, Inc., and Royal Finance, Inc. ("defendants"), claiming that the defendants' loans to the plaintiff class were void because the forms used to document the loans included a provision requiring payment in excess of that authorized by Ala. Code 1975, §
"All persons who have obtained a consumer loan contract in the State of Alabama from the defendant, Central Finance, Inc. and/or from the defendant, Royal Finance, Inc., wherein the last payment of principal or charges on said contract occurred on or after March 17, 1993, using a form which is designated as 'Alabama Small Loan Form No. CR3010-F(AL) Stock # 841' and which contains the following contract language:
" 'DEFAULT/DECLARING THE ENTIRE BALANCE DUE: If Borrower is in default, the full amount Borrower owes, less unearned charges computed as set out in the prepayment section of the Note, will become due at Lender's option without advising Borrower; thereafter, Borrower shall pay interest on the unpaid balance at the stated Annual Percentage Rate until said Note is paid in full.' "
On the same day it certified the class, the trial court granted the plaintiffs motion for a summary judgment, holding that the language on the back of "Alabama Small Loan Form No. CR3010-F(AL) Stock # 841" constituted a charge contracted for by the plaintiff class that violated §
After a hearing to determine the amount of damages and attorney fees to be awarded to the plaintiff class, the trial court rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff class and against defendant Central for $650,430.43 plus attorney fees equal to 50% of the "common fund" ($328,815.21); and against defendant Royal for $456,751.29 plus attorney fees equal to 50% of the "common fund" ($228,375.64).
The defendants did not appeal, but Voyager did. The plaintiff moved to dismiss Voyager's appeal, arguing that the judgment appealed from does not adjudicate any rights or liabilities of Voyager; that Voyager is not a party to the "action" between the plaintiff class and the defendants; that the plaintiff is not a party to the "action" between the defendants and Voyager; and, therefore, that Voyager has "no standing to prosecute an appeal from a judgment entered between the plaintiff and the defendants in this case."
The plaintiff relies on Sho-Me Motor Lodges, Inc. v.Jehle-Slauson Construction Co.,
"Who may appeal from a judgment? Ordinarily, one who is not a party to a cause cannot appeal. . . . Moreover, when an error applies only to a party who does not appeal therefrom, another party cannot make any such error an issue on appeal. . . . Although Southern Roof is a third-party defendant in this case [and thus meets the party-to-a-cause criterion], plaintiff Sho-Me is in no way aggrieved by the summary judgment entered in Southern Roofs favor and against Jehle-Slauson. Jehle-Slauson filed a third-party complaint against Southern Roof, seeking indemnity for any liability it might have to Sho-Me. Sho-Me has not asserted any claim directly against Southern Roof, and it has not been shown to us that Sho-Me has any interest in Jehle-Slauson's third-party action. . . . Sho-Me, for aught that appears, has looked to Jehle-Slauson for its recovery, and has been indifferent to the manner and means by which Jehle-Slauson, in turn, might protect itself. . ..
"Because Sho-Me was not a party aggrieved by the judgment entered against Jehle-Slauson in its third-party claim against Southern Roof, it could not appeal from that judgment."
466 So.2d at 88. (Citations omitted.)
In this case, Voyager was a party to the action.Sho-Me. Voyager, in its answer to the defendants' third-party claim for indemnity from Voyager for any judgment rendered against the defendants in the plaintiff's favor, asserted, as a defense, that the third-party complaint, to which a copy of the plaintiff's complaint was attached as an exhibit, failed to state a claim on which relief could be granted.
Voyager filed a memorandum in opposition to the plaintiff's motion for summary judgment against the defendants. Royal went out of business in June 1994, over two years before the summary judgment was entered against it. Central was in the process of liquidating before the summary judgment was entered against it. Clearly, Voyager is a party aggrieved by the summary judgment for the plaintiff class against the defendants, which assessed damages and fees of $1,664,372.57.
Rule 14, A.R.Civ.P., provides, in part:
"The third-party defendant may assert against the plaintiff any defenses which the third-party plaintiff has to the plaintiff's claim."
The defendants were licensees under the Alabama Small Loan Act ("the Act") (Acts of Alabama 1959, No. 374, which is codified as Ala. Code 1975, §§
"After maturity, interest will be charged at the highest lawful contract rate, unless the balance remains unpaid 6 months after the final installment date, then interest will be calculated at 8% per annum."
Hereinafter, this quoted statement is referred to as "the first provision."
The term "Annual Percentage Rate" appears twice on the first page of the agreement. In one place it is defined as "the cost of your credit as a yearly rate." In the other place, the term "Annual Percentage Rate" appears with an arrow pointing to a blank space, which was filled in with a number in excess of 8%.
On the second page of the Agreement, the following appears:
"If Borrower is in default, the full amount Borrower owes, less unearned charges computed as set out in the prepayment *Page 948 section of the Note, will become due at Lender's option without advising Borrower; thereafter, Borrower shall pay interest on the unpaid balance at the stated Annual Percentage Rate until said note is paid in full."
(Emphasis added.) Hereinafter, this statement is referred to as "the second provision."
"Stated" is defined in Black's Law Dictionary 1407 (6th ed. 199), as "[d]etermined, fixed, or settled." In The AmericanHeritage Dictionary of the English Language 1259 (1969), "state" is defined as "[t]o set forth in words; declare." In determining what the plaintiff and the defendants contracted for, we have to determine whether the "stated Annual Percentage Rate" was to be "the cost of credit as a yearly rate," which would include the cost of the credit before the maturity of the note, the highest lawful contract rate from maturity until 6 months after the final installment date, and 8% per annum from 6 months after the final installment date until the debt was paid in full; or whether the "stated Annual Percentage Rate" was to be the amount that would be written in the space beside the words "Annual Percentage Rate":
__________ ANNUAL PERCENTAGE __________ RATE
If the stated "Annual Percentage Rate" is the former, it does not violate the Alabama Small Loan Act; if it is the latter, it violates that Act and the contract is void.
"[A] document is unambiguous if only one reasonable meaning emerges." Wayne J. Griffin Electric, Inc. v. Dunn ConstructionCo.,
With a choice between a valid construction and an invalid construction, the court has a duty to accept the construction that will uphold, rather than destroy, the contract.Wilson v. World Omni Leasing, Inc.,
In accordance with this rule of construction, the "stated Annual Percentage Rate" in the default provision on the second page of the agreement would be "the cost of credit as a yearly rate," which would be the cost of credit before maturity of the note for that period of time; the highest lawful contract rate that could be charged from maturity until 6 months after the final installment date in the contract, for that period of time; and 8% per annum from 6 months after the final installment date until the debt is paid in full, for that period of time.
Even if we assumed that there was no ambiguity as to what the term "stated Annual Percentage Rate" meant in the second provision and that it clearly meant the illegal rate that would cause the agreement to be void, we would still find an ambiguity in the agreement arising from the difference between the second provision and the first provision.Griffin Electric, supra. *Page 949
Again, we would have to apply the rule of construction holding that when there is a choice between a valid construction and an invalid construction, the court has a duty to accept the construction that will uphold, rather than destroy, the contract. See Wilson v. World Omni Leasing, Inc., and the other cases cited with it, supra. One other established rule of construction when an examination is limited to the four corners of the agreement itself, is that the first of two conflicting provisions prevails over the second provision.
Any inconsistencies between clauses or conditions that cannot be reconciled must be resolved in favor of the first clause. City of Fairhope v. Town of Daphne,
If one must go beyond the four corners of the agreement in construing an ambiguous agreement, the surrounding circumstances, including the practical construction put on the language of the agreement by the parties to the agreement, are controlling in resolving the ambiguity.Walls v. Bank of Prattville,
It is undisputed that the defendants knew the amount of interest they were legally allowed to charge six months after the last installment was due. There was no evidence that they ever charged or attempted to charge in excess of that amount. It is undisputed that the defendants were not aware of the second provision in the agreement. The only reasonable construction that can be put on the agreement, in accordance with our established rules of construction, is that if the first provision and the second provision conflict and thereby create an ambiguity, then the plaintiff and the defendants contracted for the interest provided for in the first provision.
The plaintiff relies on New Finance, Ltd. v. Ellis,
The key words in Ala. Code 1975, §
We also note the plaintiff's contention that the defendants' loans to the class were void because the defendants had contracted to include earned interest as part of the "unpaid principal balance" for purposes of computing interest due upon default. (The second provision states, in part, that upon default the "full amount Borrower owes, lessunearned charges . . ., will become due." (Emphasis added.)) Specifically, the plaintiff cites §
"When the loan contract requires repayment in substantially equal and consecutive monthly installments of principal and charges or interest combined, the charges or interest may be precomputed at the agreed monthly or periodic rate not in excess of that provided for in subsection (a) or (b) of this section on scheduled unpaid principal balances according to the terms of the contract and added to the principal of the loan. Every payment may be applied to the combined total of principal and precomputed charge until the contract is fully paid. The acceptance or payment of charges on loans made under the provisions of this subsection shall not be deemed to constitute payment, deduction or receipt thereof in advance nor compounding under subdivision (1) above."
(Emphasis added.) As we read this section, interest earned before default on an installment contract is considered to be part of the "unpaid principal balance" for purposes of computing default interest. Reading this provision together with the other provisions in §
OPINION OF MAY 30, 1997, WITHDRAWN; OPINION SUBSTITUTED; APPLICATION GRANTED; REVERSED AND REMANDED.
HOOPER, C.J., and MADDOX and SEE, JJ., concur.
COOK and BUTTS, JJ., concur in the result.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Voyager Life Insurance Company, Inc. v. Jackie E. Whitson
- Cited By
- 53 cases
- Status
- Published