Carnegie Trust Co. v. Chapman

153 A.D. 783, 138 N.Y.S. 715, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9363
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 6, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 153 A.D. 783 (Carnegie Trust Co. v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carnegie Trust Co. v. Chapman, 153 A.D. 783, 138 N.Y.S. 715, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9363 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinions

Ingraham, P. J.:

The. action was upon a promissory note dated the 7th of December, 1909, whereby the defendant promised to pay to the order of the plaintiff on demand the sum of $67,009.23, with interest. The complaint alleges that the defendant was entitled to a credit of $8,891, the amount received by the plaintiff for the sale of certain collateral securities sold by the plain[784]*784tiff, and that there is .now due and owing from the defendant to the plaintiff the sum of $58,119.73, with interest. The only allegation of the complaint denied in the answer is that contained in the 7th clause of the complaint relating to the credit due to the plaintiff. The answer then sets up, first, an affirmative defense to the whole cause of action; second, a partial defense; and, third, a counterclaim; and demands judgment that the note declared on and the notes of which it was a renewal he declared fraudulent and void; that what was called an escrow card he declared to have been procured by fraud, and that the sales of certain of the collateral securities were unauthorized and void; and that the plaintiff deliver to the defendant the remainder of said collateral or pay to the defendant the value thereof; and for other and"further relief.

The first defense alleged the procuring by the defendant from the plaintiff of certain loans of money; that these loans were usurious and void in consequence of the plaintiff’s exacting from the defendant certain commissions for making the loans; that the plaintiff held on or about October 7, 1909, certain notes of the defendant which were unpaid, and claimed to have sold certain securities held to secure the payment of these notes and by the purchase thereof had acquired legal title to the same, but that at said date the plaintiff had not acquired legal title to the said securities, but held that as trustee for the defendant and as pledgee of the defendant; that on October 8, 1909, the plaintiff was pressing the defendant for payment of the said notes and threatened to sue him for the amount of the principal and interest, and the defendant was desirous of obtaining time for the payment of the samé, and insisted that he was entitled in accordance with plaintiff’s» agreement to an extension of said loans; that the plaintiff refused to perform its said agreement and took undue advantage of the necessities of the defendant and compelled him to submit to certain terms exacted by the plaintiff; that the plaintiff then and there informed defendant that it owned 200 shares of the stock of a corporation known as the American Piano Company; that said stock, as plaintiff well knew, was of no market value; that defendant then and there informed plaintiff that he did net want said stock and would not take it; that, [785]*785notwithstanding, the plaintiff as a condition of renewing the notes above mentioned and consolidating the same into a single note, and extending the time of payment, substituted therefor, and in order to conceal the real consideration of the transaction and to evade the interest and usury laws of the State of New York, required of the defendant as a condition of plaintiff’s forbearing its demand for payment of the said four notes for a period of sixty days, that the defendant would purchase and accept' and agree to pay the sum of $12,000 for the said shares of stock of the American Piano Company and agree to pay in addition $2,500; that the purpose of such insistence and nominal sale to the defendant was to enable the plaintiff to charge as consideration of the said forbearance and of the loan hereinafter mentioned the sum of $12,000, and the defendant agreed to pay and did pay said sum. and also the sum of $2,500 in addition thereto for the forbearance and loan hereinafter mentioned; that such payments were in addition to the payment of legal interest upon the amount of said loan; that for the purpose of renewing the four promissory notes and purchasing said collateral security which plaintiff claimed to have disposed of, defendant delivered to plaintiff a certain promissory note dated October 8, 1909, whereby the plaintiff agreed to pay to the defendant $66,345.78 sixty days after October 8, 1909, with interest, which last-mentioned promissory note and the whole thereof was illegal, usurious and void to the extent of $20,421.13 thereof, and that there was included in the amount thereby promised to be paid $12,000 for the purchase of this piano stock and $2,500 as commissions for the extension of the loan; that when this $66,345.78 matured the defendant, on the demand of the plaintiff on December 7, 1909, executed the note mentioned in the complaint, and that the sole consideration of the said note was the usurious notes hereinbefore mentioned; that the said last-named note for $67,009.53 was and is usurious and void to the extent of at least $20,696.35; that there was included within the amount therein provided to be paid legal interest upon the loans amounting to $1,283, and $663.45 legal interest which had been forfeited by reason of the usurious demands specified. .

[786]*786The second partial defense-was that the defendant had on deposit with the plaintiff the sum of $5,500 or thereabouts belonging to the defendant, which should be applied in part payment of the amount actually due on the notes mentioned in the complaint. The defendant also set up in the answer a counterclaim which involved substantially the same allegations set up as a defense to the note, and then demanded the affirmative relief hereinbefore specified.

Upon the trial the court submitted certain specified questions to the jury, whereby the jury found that the defendant had on deposit with the plaintiff -on April 18, 1910, the date of the commencement of the action, the sum of $4,559.10, whereupon the plaintiff asked for the direction of a verdict of $44,817.39. Upon consideration the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff for $40,714.13 and dismissed the equitable counterclaim, and from the judgment entered upon that verdict the defendant appeals.

There are but two questions which it is necessary to discuss in considering this appeal. The first is the right of the defendant to offset the amount of these commissions which the plaintiff exacted from the defendant as a condition for continuing the loans; and, second, whether the plaintiff can recover the so-called purchase price for the 200 shares of piano stock which the defendant was compelled to purchase of the plaintiff as a condition of renewing the various loans represented by the four notes which became due on October 8, 1909.

It was proved by the defendant that the plaintiff had exacted from the defendant various commissions for making and extending various loans which the defendant procured from the plaintiff; that those commissions were in excess of legal interest and were included in the note in suit. The defendant, however, in his answer expressly alleges that these various sums of money known as commissions were paid by the defendant to the plaintiff- as consideration for the making or extending of the loans represented by the defendant’s notes then held by the plaintiff; and it would appear that these exactions were illegal and in violation of the laws of this State. Such sums of money having been paid by the defendant to the plaintiff, the question is, whether they can be recovered or offset in this [787]*787action as against the amount included in the note which the defendant had promised to pay to'the plaintiff. The plaintiff is a trust company organized under the laws of the State of New York.

By section 74 of the Banking Law (Consol.

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Related

Bishop v. Rider
143 Misc. 291 (New York County Courts, 1930)
Teplitz v. Bloomingdale
195 A.D. 15 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1921)
Empire Trust Co. v. Coleman
85 Misc. 312 (New York Supreme Court, 1914)
Carnegie Trust Co. v. Chapman
139 N.Y.S. 1119 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
153 A.D. 783, 138 N.Y.S. 715, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carnegie-trust-co-v-chapman-nyappdiv-1912.