First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Lindsey
First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Lindsey
Opinion of the Court
This is an action to recover usury paid on an obligation within twelve months before the institution of the action. Code § 57-115. The basis and theory of the action is that, treating all of the dealings alleged between the parties as one transaction, the plaintiff paid the alleged amount of usury to the defendant within one year prior to the filing of the action. Assuming that the petition otherwise shows all the elements necessaiy to a cause of action of this kind, unless the petition, construed against the plaintiff on demurrer, shows that the amount sought to be recovered, or a part it, was paid 'as usury to the defendant, within one year prior to the filing
Nothing herein ruled shall be construed to mean that the plaintiff in the trial court, defendant in error here, may not by amendment to the petition in this case show by appropriate allegations that he is entitled to recover some sum as usurious interest paid within one year prior to the filing of this action.
The court erred in overruling the defendant’s general demurrer and the special demurrers specially ruled on. The court did not err in overruling the other special demurrers.
Concurring Opinion
concurring specially. I do not agree with all that is said in the majority opinion, though the result reached appears to be correct. I think the execution of the notes by the plaintiff to the defendant and the payments made upon them were dealings between the parties constituting one continuous transaction, as in First Federal Savings & Loan Assn. v. Norwood Realty Co., 212 Ga. 524 (93 S. E. 2d 763). In my opinion it is not material to the decision of the case to determine whether the payments made by the plaintiff were with or without directions as to their application. This is true because the direction of payment to usurious interest is as illegal as the original contract to pay usury. Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Puckett, 181 Ga. 288, 294 (181 S. E. 861, 101 A.L.R. 735). Before the debt is fully satisfied, as in Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Puckett, First Federal Savings & Loan Assn. v. Norwood Realty Co., both supra, and Lilly v. DeLaPeriere, 76 Ga. 348, a plea of payment may set up payments of usurious interest made at any time, even more than one year before the plea is filed. But where the debt has been fully satisfied and more than a year’s time has elapsed since the payment of the usurious interest the debtor ’ cannot institute an independent action to recover such payments, nor can he set them off against a claim arising out of a transaction not connected with that in which the usurious interest is charged. Bailey v. Lumpkin, 1 Ga. 392; Gramling, Spalding & Co. v. Pool, 111 Ga. 93 (36 S. E. 430).
The line of demarcation between the two lines of cases is narrow and technical.
However, if a plea in the nature of a plea of payment could not, at any time before the debt is satisfied, set up the payment of usurious interest and require the forfeiture of all interest that would otherwise be due upon the debt there would be no meaning to Code § 57-112 which reads: “Any person, company, or corporation violating the provisions of section 57-101, shall forfeit the entire interest so charged or taken, or contracted to be reserved, charged or taken. No further penalty or forfeiture shall be occasioned, suffered or allowed.” If the payment of
In my opinion the petition sufficiently alleges the plaintiff’s right to recover some amount, and for this reason is not subject to general demurrer. Hudson v. Hudson, 119 Ga. 637 (1) (46 S. E. 874). The petition is open to several grounds of special demurrer and for this reason a reversal of the trial court’s judgment is necessary.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.