Dean v. Herrick
This text of 54 Vt. 573 (Dean v. Herrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The writing signed by the plaintiff, dated November 13, 1875, acknowledges that he has received of the defendant sixty-nine dollars and ninety-six cents, which he is to offset upon notes which he holds against the defendant at the rate of two per cent, extra, for the time they are allowed to,remain unpaid after due; and if not exhausted in that way, the plaintiff agrees to pay the defendant cash, when the defendant pays up the balance of the notes.
Payment of this sum, by offset of two per cent", extra on the defendant’s overdue notes, is a payment of usury. The money thus paid the plaintiff holds to the use of the defendant, if he elects to call it out of the plaintiff’s hands. Such offset being illegal, is in law no payment of the $69.96. We think the fair construction to be placed upon the language of the referee’s report is that this sum has never been paid by the plaintiff except by the allowance of two per cent, extra on the defendant’s overdue notes. The referees, in substance, report, that, if payment of the sum named in the defendant’s exhibit No. 1, in the manner therein provided, would be lawful, the same has been fully paid in that way, and in no other way; but if payment in that way and manner is unlawful, and the defendant can enforce payment of the same in money, it should be allowed to the defendant in set-off. The plaintiff contends that inasmuch as the contract, in one contingency, provides [575]*575for a payment in cash, this finding by the referees is tantamount to finding that the plaintiff has paid in cash. A payment in cash would be lawful. The language of the referees has no intelligible applicability to such a payment. The plaintiff further contends that the defendant cannot be allowed this sum in offset, because the referees have not found that all of the defendant’s notes held by the plaintiff Nov. 13, 1875, have been paid, and that by the terms of the contract of that date, the $69.96 was not to be paid, in cash, until such notes were all paid. The referees have not found that all such notes have been paid. Perhaps that fact is inferable, inasmuch as the plaintiff’s specifications do not include any indebtedness which existed at that date. The referees have found that this sum has all been applied in payment of two per cent, extra interest on the overdue notes then held by the plaintiff against the defendant. Such application was a payment of usury by the defendant to the plaintiff, to recover which back a right of action immediately accrued to the defendant by force of sec. 2000, R. L., which was in force when the contract of Nov. 13, 1875, was entered into.
The result is, we find no error in the judgment of the County Court, and that judgment is affirmed.
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54 Vt. 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-herrick-vt-1882.