Hilgert v. Levin

Ellison, J.

This action is for the conversion of a diamond shirt stud valued at $200. Defendant is a pawnbroker and her defense is placed principally on that ground. The case shows that as such broker she loaned plaintiff $65 (defendant says $70) for thirty days and received the diamond in pledge. After the expiration of the time the loan was twice renewed. After the expiration of sixty days from the expiration of the last renewal she sold the jewel to one Lowenstein. Plaintiff tendered defendant the sum of $75, being in full of the principal and interest due defendant, and demanded the pledge. It being refused, plaintiff instituted an action of replevin against defendant which resulted adversely to him for the “reason solely, ” as stated in the judgment, that defendant did not have possession at the time the suit was instituted.

usury: release By reason of section 7208, Revised Statutes 1889, a pawnbroker may lawfully charge two per cent per month for a loan on articles pawned. He may likewise lawfully sell such articles sixty days after the expiration of the time of the loan. By the terms of section 2, Laws 1891, p. 171, it is declared that the exacting of usury by a chattel mortgagee or pledgee shall render the mortgage or pledge invalid and illegal. The terms of this section were enforced in the case of a chattel mortgage in American Rubber Co. v. Wilson, 55 Mo. App. 656. The evidence showed clearly that defendant demanded and received of plaintiff more than two per cent per month for the sum loaned. She was therefore guilty of exacting usury and the court properly held the pledge illegal.

*51WsuryTpfeldtoi. *50Complaint is made of the instruction given for plaintiff. Our opinion is that the instruction is partly *51erroneous, but that the error is against the plaintiff. It makes it requisite that plaintiff should have tendered to defendant the amount of the loan before he was entitled to recover; and it permitted the jury to deduct the amount of the loan from the value of the diamond. The statute enacts that if usury is exacted the pledge is “invalid and illegal.” This is tantamount to a declaration that the property is wrongfully in the hands of the pawnbroker. There is no lien upon it. The pawnbroker is not entitled to the possession of it. The right of possession is in the owner without the condition of paying the amount borrowed. If this were not so — if the property could be retained until the sum borrowed was paid, it would be making effective that which the statute says shall be noneffective. The plaintiff owed the defendant the amount borrowed less credit of usurious interest paid. The defendant has a claim against plaintiff for such sum, but it is an unsecured claim, and she has no right to retain the property. Whether defendant in an action of conversion against him in the circumstances here considered has the legal right to have deducted the amount owing to him by plaintiff need not be considered, since such matter is not set up in the answer.

pledgor pnrciiaspledgees venIt is said that there was evidence tending to show that plaintiff purchased the diamond of Lowenstein to whom defendant had sold it and that he confirmed or recognized the sale made by defendant to Lowenstein. Plaintiff could have recognized the sale from defendant to Lowenstein as being valid without depriving himself of any right of action against defendant. For since plaintiff put defendant in possession of the diamond and clothed him with the indicia or appearance of ownership, a sale to an innocent purchaser would be good *52against plaintiff. Dymock v. R’y, 54 Mo. App. 409. If Lowenstein had a good title to the property he could convey a good title. Anyone must be at full liberty to buy of him — if some are disabled from buying of him he would not have the complete right of property which attends full ownership. It follows that plaintiff could buy of Lowenstein without subjecting himself to any disability, or making it necessary to surrender any rights on that account.

Uñ¿sfeacTof fspí" But it is contended that the usury act, Laws 1891, p. 170, has no application to this case. Section 1 of that act supersedes section 5976 of the general statutes of 1889. But section 2 of that act is applicable to pawnbrokers. It reads:

“In actions for the enforcements of liens upon personal property pledged or mortgaged to secure indebtedness, or to maintain or secure possession of property so pledged or mortgaged,- or in any other case when the validity of such lien is drawn in question, proof upon the trial that the party holding or claiming to hold any such lien has received or exacted usurious interest for such indebtedness shall render any mortgage or pledge of personal property, or any lien whatsoever thereon given to secure such indebtedness, invalid and illegal.”

While it is true that the general subject of pawnbrokers is embraced in chapter 124, Revised Statutes 1889, and that a punishment for a violation of the act is there prescribed, yet this does not prevent the application of another and later statute plainly enacted for the purpose of inflicting disabilities in addition to the punishment already prescribed.

What has been already said necessarily disposes of all the material objections offered by defendant to the action of the trial court. A full examination of the *53record satisfies us that the verdict was for the right party and that no error was committed which affected defendant. The judgment will therefore be affirmed.

All concur.