Bell v. . Day

32 N.Y. 165
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 32 N.Y. 165 (Bell v. . Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. . Day, 32 N.Y. 165 (N.Y. 1865).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 167 The court below, in reversing the order for a new trial made by the judge at circuit, distinguished this case from Condit v.Baldwin (21 N.Y., 219), and held that neither the charge as given nor the request to charge raised the point involved in that case. The conviction of the learned justice, by whom the opinion of the court below was pronounced, that "the doctrine of Condit v. Baldwin is somewhat novel and difficult to sustain, and for that reason should not be applied to cases not clearly falling within it," led him, it is apprehended, to seek for a distinction where no real difference exists. In Condit v. Baldwin, the plaintiff had left in the hands of her agent, $400, to be loaned for her. In the absence of any proof to the contrary, the court assumed that the authority of the agent was to invest according to the laws of the State. "All the authority, says DAVIES, J., given to Williams as her agent and attorney to transact the business of his principal, must, in the absence of any counter proof, be construed to transact it according to the laws *Page 169 of the place where it was to be exercised. The law will never presume that parties intend to violate its precepts." (Owings v. Hull, 9 Pet., 607.)

Williams, the agent, loaned the money upon a promissory note, reserving on its face interest at seven per cent. Between him and the party who effected the loan, it was agreed that he should have $25 for his fees; and this sum was paid to him out of the moneys loaned. This court held that this did not constitute usury in the principal, nor affect the security in her hands. In the case now before us, the plaintiff delivered $1,000 to her agent to be loaned upon the note in suit, which was precisely for that sum, with lawful interest. The particular note had been described to her; and she had been "argued," as the case states, into a consent to loan the money upon it by the agent's representation that "it was as good as a mortgage." She had no knowledge of any agreement by which the agent was to receive the fifty dollars. It stands uncontradicted in the case that the fact that fifty dollars was to be, and was paid to the agent, was wholly unknown to her till after she brought her suit upon the note. The facts, therefore, in this case are stronger even, for saying that the authority she gave her agent was to invest her money according to the laws of the State. The presumption arises not simply on the absence of proof of any intent to violate the law, but upon affirmative proof that she was informed that a note which, upon its face, conforms to the law, was to be the security for the loan, and was, in fact, totally ignorant of the alleged agreement to pay her agent fifty dollars. The distinction made by the court below between this case and the one cited is based upon the suggestion that neither the charge nor the request to charge presented the idea that the agent was to receive the fifty dollars for himself and not for the plaintiff. This suggestion is true, so far as the charge that was made, is concerned. In that the justice stated to the jury that "if the agent of the plaintiff claimed and took the fifty dollars for the plaintiff as her agent," the plaintiff was bound by his act, although she had not specially authorized it, and was ignorant of the fact. The court further charged that the *Page 170 principal is bound by the acts of the agent in loaning money at a usurious rate of interest, although the same be done without the knowledge or consent of the principal, to which plaintiff also excepted. The plaintiff's counsel then asked the court to charge "that if Glover took or received the fifty dollars without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, it was not usury, and the plaintiff would be entitled to recover upon the note in suit." This the court refused, and plaintiff excepted. Glover, it is true, was the agent, but it is manifest from such a request following such a charge, that Glover, the person, and not Glover, the agent, was meant by the request. Otherwise the request simply asks the court to negative, by a further charge, the exact proposition just presented to the jury and excepted to by plaintiff. Besides, it is manifest that the judge himself understood the request to mean "if Glover, for himself, took and received the bonus," for in deciding the motion for a new trial on his minutes, he says: "The case of Condit v. Baldwin (19 N.Y., 219), has never seemed to me to be sound law; but it is very clear that this court is bound by it until it shall be reversed by the court of last resort. The evidence on the part of the plaintiff warranted her in asking the court distinctly to put the proposition to the jury whether Glover "exacted the bonus for himself as a condition of making the loan without the knowledge or authority of his principal." This, it seems to me, was the substance of the request to charge; and under the rule laid down in Condit v. Baldwin, I think the court committed an error in refusing to charge as requested. There was, therefore, no misleading of the court at the trial by any absence of explicitness in the request; and where that fact palpably appears by a ruling of the judge who tried the cause, this court is not called upon to exert any severity of criticism to condemn the form of the request. But it further appears in this case, as it seems to me, that the only agreement the evidence tended to prove, so far as it went to uphold the defendant's case, was, that the fifty dollars was to be paid to Glover as a bonus to himself for making the loan. He bargained for himself; he received the money; he kept it and lost it; the plaintiff remaining *Page 171 all the while in complete ignorance of his agreement and of his acts in respect to it. The request to charge is, therefore, properly referable to these facts, and should be construed to mean "if Glover took and received the money, as the evidence tends to show," then it was not usurious. A careful examination of this question brings me to the conviction that so far as relates to the question presented by the request to charge, this case is not justly distinguishable from Condit v. Baldwin; and if that case be conclusive evidence of the law, the judgment in this should be reversed and a new trial granted.

But I am not without hope that this court is prepared to revoke its decision in Condit v. Baldwin. The error of that case has not become so inveterate, that to adhere to it is better than to return to sound principles. The circumstances of the times since its promulgation, owing to the inflation and character of the currency, have been such, that the usurer's "occupation's gone." It has wrought, therefore, little if any of the evil that ordinarily would attend a practical annulment of the statute against usury. To retract the decision now, will be in time to guard to some extent against the ills of a future revulsion, in which avarice may prey upon necessity, through the wide breach that case has opened in the law of usury. After the clear and forcible dissenting opinion of COMSTOCK, Ch. J., in Condit v.Baldwin, it borders on arrogance in me to assume to discuss the question. The few suggestions to be made, can hardly escape the censure of being unnecessary repetitions.

In this case (as in Condit v. Baldwin

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.Y. 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-day-ny-1865.