Davis v. . Marvine

54 N.E. 704, 160 N.Y. 269, 14 E.H. Smith 269, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1154
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 N.E. 704 (Davis v. . Marvine) 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
Davis v. . Marvine, 54 N.E. 704, 160 N.Y. 269, 14 E.H. Smith 269, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1154 (N.Y. 1899).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The action is upon a promissory note; wherein the defendant, four months after date, promised to pay to Mary E. Jacobs, the plaintiff’s intestate, the sum of §8,000, “ with interest.” The answer sets up the defense of usury. Upon the trial, it appeared from Mrs. Jacobs’ evidence that, having received this money, upon a claim collected by her as administratrix of her deceased husband’s estate, from the United States government, she informed the defendant; who was the president of-a bank in the town where she resided, and who, for many years, had been the intimate and confidential friend of her husband. When her husband, shortly before his death, had become demented, the defendant was appointed the. committee of his person and property and when, upon his death, Mrs. Jacobs became administratrix of her husband’s estate, the defendant was surety upon her bond. His relations were of such intimate nature that Mrs. Jacobs advised with him, solely, about the management of her affairs. Upon being informed by her of the receipt of this money upon the government claim, he represented, that there was a flourishing manufacturing firm, or company, in the state of Ohio, which would pay eight per cent for the use of the money and deposit collateral security, and that, until the security came from Ohio, he would “ give to her §14,000 of bank stock.” Upon her objecting her ignorance about the Ohio concern, he offered to give her his note for the amount, in addition.. This satisfied her as to security for the transaction and she, then, received the defendant’s note and the bank stock. Thereafter, the defendant brought to her the security that he had said she would receive from Ohio and received back *272 his bank stock. Matters remained thus for several years, during which, as she testifies, when she would inquire as to the repayment of her loan by the' Ohio concern, he would represent it to be “ all right ” and good,” and that he thought the company would pay her .very soon. Each year the sum of $640, (being 8 per cent upon the principal sum), was paid to her and a receipt would be taken from her by the defendant, expressing the interest payment to have been upon his note. She testifies that the interest moneys were never actually sent to her; but that the defendant would inform her that her “ interest had come ” and that he would place it to her credit in the bank, and she signed the receipt asked for; either without reading it, or without giving any attention to its terms. She had lived in Ohio and she knew that loans could be lawfully made there at an interest rate of eight per cent.

The defendant testified that Mrs. Jacobs told him she was going to send the money west and that he offered to give her eight per cent interest for its use for a short time; which she consented to and, thereupon, the note in question was made. He denied making any representations that the Ohio company would take the money and pay her eight per cent, while they had it. He explained the delivery to her .of the Ohio security and its substitution for his bank stock by the statement that he needed the latter to use at an annual bank election. He and Mrs. Jacobs were the only witnesses upon the trial and, as td what was the nature of the actual transaction between them, upon the making of this note, their testimony is in direct conflict. The question was .submitted to the jury, upon the facts in evidence, whether the note was affected by an agreement of the. defendant to pay interest upon it at the usurious rate of eight per cent per annum. ■ The jury found for the plaintiff upon the issue; thereby establishing the material facts of the transaction between the litigants according to her version. Their verdict established that there was no agreement on the defendant’s part to pay the plaintiff eight per cent for the use of her money and that *273 ■should have disposed of the case; but the Appellate Division has reversed the plaintiff’s judgment, upon exceptions taken by the defendant to the rulings of the trial judge, and has ordered a new trial. But few of the exceptions raise any ■serious question and those to which our attention is mainly directed relate to the admissibility of Mrs. Jacobs’ testimony as to her intention in making the loan of her money. Upon her examination as witness, she was asked this question:

blow, Mrs. Jacobs, at the time that the note was given, did you intend then and there to make an illegal and corrupt agreement with Mr. Marvine ? ”

She was permitted to answer, over the uefendant’s objection to its competency, that she did not. She was then asked ;

“ So there was no intention on your part to loan it to him ; that was not your understanding ? ”

She was permitted, over the defendant’s objection to its competency, to answer in the negative.

The exceptions to the admission of this evidence are sought to be sustained upon the ground that it was incompetent for Mrs. Jacobs to testify as to an undisclosed intent in the transaction with the defendant, and that, in view of the sharpness of the controversy over the question whether she made a loan to the defendant, or whether she made it to an Ohio firm, or company, the admission of the testimony could not have failed to influence the jury. The majority of the learned justices of the Appellate Division took this view of the case and it must be admitted that the question is one as to which judicial minds might fairly differ. In our opinion, however, the circumstances of a case may justify such testimony and they were such here as to warrant the trial judge in permitting Mrs. Jacobs to answer the questions. The objection interposed was only as to the competency of the evidence called for by the two questions and, therefore, they may practically be considered together. Was it competent for Mrs. Jacobs to testify whether she intended to make a loan of her money to the defendant? It is necessary that the intention of the parties in such a transaction should be discovered, in order that the jury *274 may reach a determination as to its character. Did they intend to cloak their doings, so that'an evasion of the statute should he concealed ? If the plaintiff, in fact, made the loan to the defendant, then the transaction, and the note evidencing it, were tainted by usury and the defendant was entitled to defend upon the statute. But if she believed that her money had been loaned, through the defendant’s agency, to parties in Ohio and that the defendant’s note was given to her by way of assurance, or security, as to the safety of the loan, and she believed that the interest moneys placed to her credit came from the Ohio borrowers of her money, then there was no usurious agreement and a recovery upon the defendant’s note could not be defeated upon that ground. The evidence of Mrs. Jacobs was sufficient, aside from that in question, to Warrant the jury in deciding that she had no intention to make any loan to the defendant and her answers to these - questions could have worked no harm. But we think that the evidence was admissible and that her answers were competent for the consideration of the jury, in connection with the other evidence, in passing upon the question of actual intent. (Thurston v. Cornell, 38 N. Y. 281.) The facts of the transaction were susceptible of an innocent construction and her intention was a material element, in determining whether they should be given that construction.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E. 704, 160 N.Y. 269, 14 E.H. Smith 269, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-marvine-ny-1899.