Great Eastern Credit Union v. Cooper

120 Misc. 79
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 Misc. 79 (Great Eastern Credit Union v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great Eastern Credit Union v. Cooper, 120 Misc. 79 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

Under section 453 of the Banking Law of this state, among the “general powers” conferred upon the credit unions is the power “ to lend money to its members upon such terms and conditions as the by-laws provide and as the credit committee shall approve, at rates not exceeding one per centum per month, inclusive of all charges incident to the making of such loan.” The discounting or retention of interest in advance at the rate of six per cent upon an obligation for the payment of money had been held under proper circumstances not to constitute usury (Marvine v. Hymers, 12 N. Y. 223), but in the present case the instrument being repayable in weekly installments extending over six months, a discount or retention of interest in advance at the rate of one per cent per month for the full six months would enable the plaintiff to obtain interest on the loan at the rate of approximately two per cent per month, for the average amount owing to the plaintiff at the end of each week during the six months would be only $1,250 provided the payments were made by defendant as agreed. For these reasons the learned trial justice has held that the loan was usurious and I agree with him .at least to the extent that the making of the loan was not justified in any way by the general power of the plaintiff to lend money “ at rates not exceeding one per cent per month.” The trial justice has further held that if the loan is usurious, then it is entirely void and unenforcible under section 373 of the General Business Law and that the plaintiff cannot claim the benefit of section 114 of the Banking Law which limits the penalty for usury by a bank or private or individual banker to the forfeiture of the entire interest, and I agree with the trial justice that under the statute a “ credit union ” like the plaintiff is not a “ bank ” or “ banker ” within the statutory definition or meaning. I seriously doubt, however, [81]*81whether a loan made by the officers of a credit union, whereby interest at a greater rate than one per cent per month is reserved or received, though evidently beyond the corporate powers* is also usurious, or to put the question in another form, whether the general statutes concerning usury apply to a credit union. Section 373 of the General Business Law, which makes all usurious contracts void, is limited to contracts where a greater sum or greater value is reserved or taken “ than is above prescribed,” and the words “ above prescribed ” refer to sections 371 and 372 which limit interest to six per cent. The limitations contained in sections 371 and 372 do not, however, in terms apply to credit unions, for as pointed out above these unions are not limited to making loans at six per cent per annum or less, but are expressly given power to lend money to its members * * * at rates not exceeding one per cent per month,” i. e., twelve per cent per annum. The real question in this case is, therefore, whether the legislature in giving this power to the credit unions intended merely to increase the rate of interest which a credit union could receive upon a loan without incurring the penalty of forfeiture and whether section 373 of the General Business Law, though in terms limited to contracts which contravene sections 371 and 372 of the same statute, should by implication be held to apply also to contracts under which interest is retained at more than the increased rate allowed by the special statute to corporations of this class.

A somewhat similar question was passed upon in the case of Lowry v. Collateral Loan Association, 172 N. Y. 394, in which the Court of Appeals decided that the act which created the penalty of forfeiture for usurious contracts applied to the contracts of a corporation incorporated as a " personal loan company ” under the provisions of the “ act to provide for the incorporation of associations for the lending of money on personal property and to forbid certain loans of money, property or credit ” (Laws of 1895, chap. 326, since amd. and incorporated in the Banking Law, §§ 340 et seq.), whenever such contracts provide for a rate of interest in excess of the increased rate authorized by the statute under which the lender was incorporated. "

At first glance this decision might be considered as authority for the contention of the defendants herein and the judgment in their favor, but upon analysis of the actual decision and the reasoning of the court by which it reached that decision the case seems to me to lead logically rather to the opposite conclusion.

Corporations incorporated under the act there under consideration were authorized in certain cases to make loans at a rate of [82]*82interest greater than was permitted under the General Usury Law and the statute specifically provided that no person or corporation, other than corporations organized pursuant to this act, shall directly or indirectly, charge or receive any interest, discount or consideration greater than at the rate of six per cent per annum upon the loan, use or forbearance of money, goods or things in action less than two hundred dollars in value,” and it further provided that any person and the several officers of any corporation who shall violate the foregoing prohibition shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon proof of such fact the debt shall be discharged and the security shall be void.”

The court pointed out that the “ primary object of the statute of 1895 was not to create a new kind of corporation for the purpose of enabling the incorporators to make money, but to rescue people of small means from the grasp of those who were supposed to take advantage of the ignorant and needy borrower.

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Related

Koven v. Kline
245 A.D. 307 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
120 Misc. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-eastern-credit-union-v-cooper-nyappterm-1922.