Gainesville Financial Services, Inc. v. McDougal, 59046

Decision Date28 May 1980
Docket NumberNo. 59046,59046
Citation270 S.E.2d 40,154 Ga.App. 820
PartiesGAINESVILLE FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. v. McDOUGAL et al.
CourtGeorgia Court of Appeals

Robert W. Lawson, Jr., Gainesville, for appellant.

Hammond Johnson, Jr., Gainesville, for appellees.

BIRDSONG, Judge.

Georgia Industrial Loan Act. The trial court sustained the debtors' motion to set aside a default judgment obtained by the appellant, Gainesville Financial Services, Inc. in 1973.

The loan contract here was entered into in 1972 and the judgment rendered in 1973. Execution of the fi.fa. was not sought to be enforced until 1978, when in response thereto the debtors interposed a motion to set aside the judgment on grounds that the loan instrument was null and void by operation of Section 20 of the Georgia Industrial Loan Act, Code § 25-9903. The debtors alleged in particular that the loan contract contained an acceleration clause whereby appellant "contracted for charges in excess of those permitted by said Act," in violation of Code § 25-316; more particularly, that said loan contract was made in violation of the decision of Lawrimore v. Sun Finance Co., 131 Ga.App. 96, 205 S.E.2d 110, affirmed 232 Ga. 637, 208 S.E.2d 454.

Appellant conceded that the loan contract contains a Lawrimore violation; that is, a clause providing that the debtor's "failure to pay any installment when due . . . shall at the option of the holder hereof render all remaining installments at once due and collectible." However, appellant does not expressly concede that Lawrimore applies retroactively to its contract; indeed, it argues that at the time of the execution of the contract, it was made in good faith in conformity with all laws of Georgia, particularly the Industrial Loan Act as interpreted by the appellate courts of this state; and that the 1978 amendment to Code § 25-9903, which provides a good faith defense to the penalties of the act, should be applied retroactively to validate the contract. Held :

The appellees argue, correctly we think, that the 1978 amendment to Code § 25-9903 providing a good faith defense to the penalties of the act, should not apply retroactively because it is a subsequent statutory enactment which cannot render enforceable a contract which was null and void at the time it was made. Layton v. Liberty Loans, 152 Ga.App. 504, 505-506, 263 S.E.2d 167, reversed on other grounds, FinanceAmerica Corp. v. Drake, 154 Ga. App. 811, 270 S.E.2d 449 (1980). However, that conclusion is inapplicable to the case because we conclude that the trial court erred in ruling that the contract was null and void at the time it was made.

The trial court's basis for holding the contract null and void (and the appellee debtors' basis for urging that it was so) was the retroactive application of Lawrimore, supra (1975), to a loan contract entered into in 1972, upon which a judgment had been rendered in 1973. This court in FinanceAmerica, supra, recently declined to apply another appellate case (Consolidated Credit Corp. v. Peppers, 144 Ga.App. 401, 240 S.E.2d 922) retroactively so as to make null and void under the Industrial Loan Act a loan contract which was good when made and made in good faith. The rationale stated there we find eminently reasonable in this case as well. FinanceAmerica examined the Peppers case in light of standards enunciated in Allan v. Allan, 236 Ga. 199, 207-208, 223 S.E.2d 445 and Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson, 404 U.S. 97, 92 S.Ct. 349, 30 L.Ed.2d 296, and determined that Peppers should not be applied retroactively to render the subject contract void because Peppers had addressed a question of first impression whose resolution was not clearly foreshadowed; and because to hold usurious a loan contract which would have been non-usurious under prior appellate decisions of this court, and which was entered into in good faith, would not "further the purpose and operation of the Industrial Loan Act to provide regulation of the business of making loans (Code § 25-302)," nor "promote stability in the regulation of such business." Under these circumstances, as in FinanceAmerica, we should not indulge in the fiction that the law announced in Lawrimore was always the law. FinanceAmerica, supra, 154 Ga.App. p. 819, 270 S.E.2d 454; Chevron Oil Co., supra, 404 U.S. p. 107, 92 S.Ct. p. 355-356.

This is precisely the situation before us and we therefore decline to apply Lawrimore, supra, retroactively to render void the loan contract entered into in 1972. In deciding Lawrimore in 1975, this court specifically extended the 1971 holding in Lewis v. Termplan, 124 Ga.App. 507, 508, 184 S.E.2d 473. In 1971, one year before the subject contract was entered, Lewis, at p. 508, 184 S.E.2d at p. 474 held that "when the plaintiff opted to accelerate and claim unearned interest on the otherwise unmature installments . . . this amount was usurious and the instrument authorizing its collection is void under Code § 25-9903." (Emphasis supplied.) The obligation (not, in fact, the instrument) sued on in Lewis was held void not because the acceleration clause in the contract provided for the collection of unearned interest, but because the creditor opted to collect it. Lewis expressly distinguished another case which had affirmed a judgment that did not include the added-on interest but only that part of the balance reflecting principal indebtedness (McDonald v. G. A. C. Finance Corp., 115 Ga.App. 361 (1), 154 S.E.2d 825). It is clear from a precise reading of Lewis that in 1971 (and until 1975, with the advent of Lawrimore ) the mere presence of an acceleration clause in the loan contract did not render the obligation void from inception. As the court in Lewis pointed out, "the statute does not deal with the effect of acceleration clauses and . . . there may be a valid exercise of acceleration provisions where only the principal balance is sought, . . . ." (Lewis, supra, 124 Ga.App. p. 509, 184 S.E.2d p. 475.) The plaintiff in Lewis "did knowingly charge contract for, and obtain a judgment...

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