Del Rubio v. Duchesne

284 A.D. 89, 130 N.Y.S.2d 572
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 11, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 284 A.D. 89 (Del Rubio v. Duchesne) 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
Del Rubio v. Duchesne, 284 A.D. 89, 130 N.Y.S.2d 572 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Bergan, J.

The complaint is in the usual form for the foreclosure of a purchase-money mortgage which plaintiff holds as assignee. The defendants Cálvente, who were the mortgagors, and the defendant Duchesne, their grantee now in possession, assert that the mortgage is usurious and unenforcible. The court at Special Term was of opinion that usury is no answer to the foreclosure of a purchase-money mortgage and plaintiff has had summary judgment.

A purchase-money mortgage is, of course, a closely integral part of a bargain and sale transaction in passing real property. It is not legally objectionable for a man to pay too much for property; and it is not objectionable when he does pay too much to give the excessive consideration in the form of a mortgage rather than in cash. This may be hard dealing but it is not usury. The seller may also properly demand and get a higher price for his property because part of the price will be paid by a mortgage. This, too, may not be usury even though the higher price reflects itself in the amount of the very mortgage given.

There are circumstances, however, when the usual protection afforded to the holders of purchase-money mortgages are utilized as a cloak to cover a truly usurious loan; and if the mortgage becomes unenforcible for usury its invalidity does not disappear because of the legal name it bears.

This would usually involve some separation of the course of bargaining from the making of the loan; and some separation of the true party in interest selling the land from the party loaning the money. It would suggest a device by which the form of a purchase-money mortgage would be used to help a lender of money to obtain a premium on a loan rather than the expression of a better price on a sale.

There are some difficulties inherent in the closely overrunning legal concepts involved and even larger difficulty in the pattern of proof possible, but the ease before us seems to illustrate one way in which a purchase-money mortgage might be found to have been usurious.

For the purpose of reviewing the order granting plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment of foreclosure we accept as true the factual statements made in defendants’ opposing affidavits relating to the purchase of the property and the execution of the mortgage; because defendants are entitled on the motion, and on the appeal from the order against them, to the benefit of the facts they set up in support of their right to a trial under their pleading. In this case there is the additional consideration that the facts as thus set up are not denied by the plaintiff.

[91]*91The affidavit of the defendant Vincente Cálvente shows that for fifty years he was a merchant seaman. Desiring to retire, he became interested in the purchase of a four-story building at 128 East 109th Street, Manhattan, to provide some income. He and his wife could speak English to a “ limited extent ” but could not read or write it. The owner of the property was Frank Rosado. Mr. Rosado told Mr. and Mrs. Cálvente that “ the price was $10,000 ” but he wanted all cash. “We told him that we were interested, but that we had only $3,000.00 in cash, and that we could not pay all cash.”

A real estate broker who was acting in the transaction said “ Well, we can get you a mortgage of $7,000.00, and I will ask Mr. Del Rubio, who is here in the office if he wants to give such a mortgage.” The “ Mr. Del Rubio ” referred to is the plaintiff here who sues as assignee of the purchase-money mortgage.

The Cálvente affidavit continues that ‘ ‘ Mr. Del Rubio agreed to lend us $7,000.00 to complete the transaction, but told us that we would have to pay $11,000.00 in five years.” The mortgage was given to Rosado for $11,000. The stamps on the deed indicate a consideration of $14,000.

The mortgage and the deed were executed on April 15, 1948 and recorded April 16th. The assignment of the mortgage from Rosado to plaintiff Del Rubio was executed also on April 15, 1948 and recorded also on April 16th. The deed recited that it was “ subject to a purchase money mortgage in the sum of $11,000 to be recorded simultaneously herewith ”.

The affidavit of plaintiff Del Rubio on the subject of defendant’s claim of usury is circumspect. He does not deny the conversation attributed to him that in lending the Calventes $7,000 he told them that they would “ have to pay $11,000.00 in five years. ’ ’

He merely states that in their pleadings defendants do not deny that plaintiff “ had nothing to do with the sale of the premises, the price to be paid on the terms of purchase, etc.” This is an argument addressed to a pleading and not a statement of fact; and it is not a denial of the factual statements in the Cálvente affidavit. After reciting sundry formal matters the affidavit ends with the plea that plaintiff “ purchased the first mortgage simply as a business transaction.”

If on the trial it be found as a fact that the $11,000 mortgage did not truly reflect the magnitude of the purchase price, but that it was a device by which plaintiff received an $11,000 mortgage on a loan of $7,000 as part of a transaction in which the [92]*92full consideration between seller and buyer was fixed at $10,000, and in which the forms of instruments were used merely to cloak a usurious transaction, the court would be justified in granting appropriate relief to the parties whose legal rights were affected.

The statutory language which, in a somewhat penal tone prohibits usury, cuts through form to reach substance. (General Business Law, § 371.) No person shall" directly or indirectly ” it reads, take or receive in money " or things in action, or in any other way ” any greater value for " the loan or forbearance ” than prescribed in the preceding section.

Devices of some ingenuity, as might have been expected, have been created in avoidance of this language, but when the devices have been seen beneath the color and shape of legal form to be truly usurious in function and purpose, the court has not withheld appropriate relief. (Grannis v. Stevens, 216 N. Y. 583; Friend v. Friedman, 126 Misc. 654, affd. 218 App. Div. 797.) The facts considered in Michaels v. Single (138 Misc. 446) are an example of judicial penetration into a usurious mortgage good in form and appearance.

Essentially the factual issue here will be whether the mortgage transaction was a bargain of price with the named mortgagee, who then sold the land; or whether it was " the loan ” made by the plaintiff to which the statutory text applies.

On April 25, 1949, however, defendants Cálvente sold the premises to defendant Duchesne. The deed recited that it was " subject to a first mortgage now reduced to $9,800 ” making due reference to the place of mortgage recording.

The complaint seeks to foreclose the rights of Duchesne and seeks a deficiency judgment against defendants Cálvente who in their answer ask the denial of the relief sought by plaintiff against them on the ground of usury; and on the same ground assert a counterclaim for the recovery of the payments they made on the mortgage. Defendant Duchesne counterclaims on the same ground for the amounts he has paid on the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
284 A.D. 89, 130 N.Y.S.2d 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/del-rubio-v-duchesne-nyappdiv-1954.