Cole v. Savage

1 Cl. Ch. 482
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1841
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Cl. Ch. 482 (Cole v. Savage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Savage, 1 Cl. Ch. 482 (N.Y. 1841).

Opinion

The Vice Chancellor.

This cáse has been once before the court upon a motion to dissolve the injunction upon the bill alone, (ante, page 50.) That motion was denied; and if the proceedings had gone on under that decision, without amendment, the final hearing would only have determined the amount which the defendants were entitled to receive, and the complainant bound to pay, as the true sum due upon the mortgage. This could .have, worked no injury to any party—any injury, I mean, in the eye of an equity court; The question of usury would have been excluded, and the mortgage could not have been wholly avoided. The complainant would have been bound to pay and the defendants would have been entitled to receive the actual amount advanced by their testator, with lawful interest, deducting all payments, and no more. This result would have been equitable and just to all parties. But the case now assumes a new aspect. The complainant has amended his bill so as by the admission of all the [485]*485parties, to make a sufficient allegation of usuiy. The frame of the bill is principally to avoid the mortgage on this ground, and on this ground alone. This is the special prayer of the bill. It is filed by a purchaser of the mortgaged premises, with a full knowledge of the mortgage, and against the representations. of the mortgagee. The demurrer raises grave and important questions under our legislative enactments in relation to usury, the bearing and effect of which it becomes the duty of the court to examine and pass upon.

Before the Revised Statutes, the legislative enactments declared, as they do now, that every usurious contract and every instrument of whatever kind or description, taken as evidence of such contract, were absolutely void. Then, as now, the borrower or any other person proceeded against upon such usurious contract, had only to show by proof, that there was usury, and the recovery could be defeated both as to the usurious excess and the sum actually loaned. The contract and securities were void, and the defence was perfect at law, if the defendant had proofs sufficient to substantiate the usury. But previous to the Revised Statutes, if the defendant had occasion for any. reason to invoke the aid of a court of equity to show the usury, he was met by the maxim that “ He who asks equity, must do equityand a court of Chancery would afford such applicant no relief until he paid the other party the amount which was in justice and equity due to him, viz. the amount loaned, with the lawful interest thereon. A party coming into this court as a complainant to set aside a contract for usury, must make such payment—offer to make such payment, or to bring the money into [486]*486court, or his bill would be demurrable. This was the settled and well recognized law of this court, in . . , . . relation to such questions, previous to the passage 0f the Revised Statutes.

The legislature, for the evident purpose of modifying or qualifying this ■ rule, in the revision of the statutes, (Vol. 1, p. 761, Sec. 8, new ed.) enacted that “ whenever any borrower of any money, goods, “ or things in action, shall file a bill in Chancery for “ a discovery of the money, goods, or things in ac- “ tion, taken or received in violation of either of the “ foregoing provisions, it shall not be necessary for “ him to pay or offer to pay any interest whatever “ on the sum or thing loaned ; nor shall any court of “ equity require or compel the payment or deposit of “ the principal' sum or any part thereof, as a condi- “ tion of granting relief to the borrower, in any case “of an Usurious loan forbidden by this chapter.”

Under this statute; the court of Chancery have decided that a complainant, even though he be the borrower, cannot call upon a defendant for a discovery as to usury, unless he pays or offers to pay the amount equitably due, with legal interest. This decision was affirmed on appeal, by the court of the last resort. (Livingston vs. Harris, 3 Paige, 528. Same case, 11 Wendell’s Rep. 329.) Under the same statute, both courts seem to have held that where relief was asked for without discovery, it must be granted without compelling payment of the principal or making a deposit. The provisions of the 6th section of the same statute, (1 Rev. Stat. p. 761,) were not held to conflict with this position, which requires that “ every person offending against “ the provisions of this title, shall be compelled to [487]*487“ answer on oath any bill that may be exhibited “ against him in the court of Chancery, for the dis- “ covery of any sum of money, goods, or things in “ action so taken, accepted, or received, in violation “of the foregoing provision, or either of them,” because this statute was like the former one; but neither of them prescribes the terms upon which relief should be given, and the court of Chancery had long before settled the terms upon which relief should be given, under a similar section with which the legislature must be presumed to have been cognizant.

The alteration of the Chancery Rule is confined to the 8th section, and that has received a judicial construction, as has been before remarked. But the 8th section specifies a borrower who is entitled to discovery and relief upon different terms from that practised upon by the court of Chancery, previously. The judicial construction already alluded to, confines the language of this statute narrowly, and does not permit it to make a greater encroachment upon the old Chancery Rule, than its words and language will fairly import. In this spirit, such construction declares that a complainant filing a bill for a discovery of usury, need not pay interest, but must pay the principal, before he can enforce a discovery of the usury. As to the payment of interest, the old rule is relaxed by the legislature ; as to the payment of principal, not. This is the judicial construction, and is of that high character that no court can properly say it is not bound by it. I am bound by it, and not only bound by its letter, but its spirit. If the judicial law is so nice as to distinguish between bills for discovery and bills for relief to govern the acts necessary to be done by the complainant preliminary [488]*488t0 either, I must, in the same spirit, give a character and definition to the term “ borrower” used in the 8th section. The courts have held, it is true, and justly, that a surety or joint maker of the usurious oblig’a.tion comes within the term “ borrower,” and this after some debate and cavil.

But in the case now before us, the complainant is a grantee of the mortgaged premises—is a stranger to the original usurious contract—does not seek to avoid the bond or personal obligation, but only to avoid the mortgage which is a lien upon the land. Upon filing his bill, he has made no payment, no deposit, no offer to pay the amount originally loaned, as a condition of removing this usurious incumbrance upon the farm he has purchased. He is in no sense, common or legal, a “ borrower.” It is true he does not ask for discovery, but only for relief; and it is the question under this aspect of the case, whether he is entitled ta relief, situated as he is, without first paying or offering to pay the amount actually loaned, with interest—in other words, as to such a complainant, have the Revised Statutes abolished the old Chancery rule ? It is conceded that by the statutes the complainant, if he was the borrower, might file a bill for relief,

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Related

Colton v. Ross
2 Paige Ch. 396 (New York Court of Chancery, 1831)
Livingston v. Harris
3 Paige Ch. 528 (New York Court of Chancery, 1831)
Lloyd v. Brewster
4 Paige Ch. 537 (New York Court of Chancery, 1834)
Perrine v. Striker
7 Paige Ch. 598 (New York Court of Chancery, 1839)

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1 Cl. Ch. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-savage-nychanct-1841.