Hagaman v. Reinach

48 Misc. 206, 96 N.Y.S. 719
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Misc. 206 (Hagaman v. Reinach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hagaman v. Reinach, 48 Misc. 206, 96 N.Y.S. 719 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Bischoff, J.

An inspection of the instruments executed between the plaintiffs and the defendant’s testator under date of September 8, 1897, shows, and there is no pretense to the contrary, that the plaintiffs’ assignment of their and each of their interests in the estate of Benjamin Hagaman, deceased, situated in Ohio, was given by them, and received by the defendant’s testator, as security merely, firstly, for the collection charges agreed to be paid the testator; secondly, for an immediate advance of $3,200 to Benjamin Hagaman, one of the plaintiffs, and a further advance of $1,000 to be made him on December 8,1897, and, thirdly, for such future ¡advances as the defendant’s testator, the assignee, Max Beinach, might make to the plaintiffs or either of them. According to the terms of the agreement , all the advances; immediate and future, were to be repaid from the proceeds of the assignee’s collections, less his agreed charges for such collection, with interest at and after the rate of five per centum per annum, the interest on the advances particularly mentioned to date from the 8th day of September, 1898, one year after the date of the agrément. As to these two advances, or loans, for such they were, whatever name be given them (Freeman v. Brittin, 17 N. J. Law, 191, 206), no usury is apparent from the evidence. True, the plaintiff, Benjamin Hagaman, paid a bonus of $200 at the time of the loan of $3,200, but it should be borne in mind that the interest reserved upon that sum, in addition to the bonus paid, was less than the limit of the lawful rate, six per [208]*208centum per annum; that the interest reserved was to date from a year after the loan was made, and that the time for repayment of the principal was indefinite, repayment having been expressly agreed to be made when the net proceeds of the testator’s collections should suffice for that purpose, the happening of which event was not fixed as to time. Crediting the testator, therefore, with six per centum, the lawful rate of interest, for the year immediately after the date of the loan, on $3,000, the net amount advanced by him, which is $180, there is nothing to show that the parties intended that the remaining $20 of the bonus paid, with the interest on the sum ostensibly loaned, at the rate actually reserved, five per centum, would or could in the aggregate exceed in the amount of the interest at the limit of the lawful rate, at the time of the repayment of the principal; and waiving the question as to whether the taking of the bonus, as a charge for interest, in advance, was or was not usury (Marvine v. Hymers, 12 N. Y. 227), under the circumstances, the bonus exacted covering the entire period of the loan, that is until the net proceeds of the collection sufficed for its repayment, whatever the time might be, and charging the testator with interest at the lawful rate, $12, on the amount of the bonus exacted, for the first year after the loan, the situation remains unaltered. The interest expressly reserved as such was but five per centum per annum, or one per centum less than the limit of the lawful rate, and the time of repayment of the principal was indefinite, that is, repayment was expressly postponed to be made out of the net proceeds of the collections, whenever the condition of the latter permitted it. On $3,000, the net loan, the interest at the limit of the lawful rate, was $180, and on $3,200, the ostensible loan, it was but $160, at the agreed rate, or $20 less per annum than at the limit of the lawful rate. In the absence, therefore, of proof of an agreement for repayment of the loan at a fixed time there is no basis for the computation of the interest actually reserved, in addition to the bonus exacted, with the interest on the amount of such bonus for the first year, so as to carry the aggregate charge for the use of the money loaned above the limit of the lawful [209]*209rate of interest, and hence it cannot be said that the testator exacted or intended to exact more than the lawful rate, or that the loan was tainted with usury. With respect to the loan of $1,000, agreed to be made December 8, 1897, it appears that this sum was actually advanced by the téstator on October 30, 1897, without any deductions whatsoever. Under the agreement it was also to be repaid out of the net proceeds of the collections, with interest at and after the rate of five per centum per annum, to be calculated from September- 8, 1898, so that for nearly eleven months after the loan the plaintiff, Benjamin Hagaman, was to have, and did have the actual use of the money without any charge. If the bonus of $200 is taken as a charge for interest for the first year, on both loans, it will be found to have been less than the interest at the limit of the lawful rate, six per centum. The assignment and agreement of September 8, 1897, therefore, cannot be said to have been affected with usury at their inception, and being valid at that time as security for the testator’s collection charges, and the loans above particularly discussed, they are not to be adjudged invalid as to those matters because of any subsequent usurious transaction.

The item of August 12, 1898, $125, presents none of the features of a loan and appears to have been a legitimate transaction. The testator had received for account of the plaintiff, Benjamin Hagaman, from the executor of his uncle’s estate, a check for $125, the proceeds of which he turned over to the plaintiff, less $12.50, the agreed collection charges of ten per cent. These collection charges may.have been exorbitant and their exaction oppressive, under the particular circumstances, but the instruments of September 8, 1897, are not, for that reason, to be set aside as usurious, and are not assailed upon any other ground.

As to the latter loans or advances, however, usury is unblushingly apparent. On December 4, 1897, the plaintiff, Benjamin Hagaman, had $2,100 out of which he returned to the testator $1,000, as an agreed bonus. On December 27, 1897, he had $1,500 and returned $350. On August 22, 1898, he had $3,500. and returned $1,550, and on April 1, [210]*2101899, he applied for and was promised an advance of $5,000. Of this amount he received $1,000 at once, which also was returned to the testator, and accepted by the latter, as an agreed bonus, and on April 17, 1899, the remaining $4,000 was forwarded to him. It appears that in every instance of these last mentioned loans the defendant’s testator exacted the promise of the plaintiff, Benjamin Hagaman, to repay the amount of the ostensible loan, that is, the sum actually loaned, with the bonus added thereto, and that these advances were severally made with reliance by both parties upon the agreement of September 8, 1897, whereby, it is to be remembered, repayment of all the advances was agreed to be made out of the net proceeds .of the collections of the testator on account of the estate assigned to him, with interest at and after the rate of five per centum per annum. Computing the interest at that rate, not upon the amount of the net advances, but upon the amount of the ostensible loans, which the borrower agreed to repay, with interest, the usurious character of the transaction is in each instance undeniably present, the interest reserved exceeding the limit of the lawful rate. The element of uncertainty as to the time for which the loan was to endure, cannot, as in the instance of the advance of $3,200, hereinbefore first considered, absolve these later loans of their usurious character for in respect to those there was a clear agreement to pay and to receive more than six per centum per annum on the sums actually loaned.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Misc. 206, 96 N.Y.S. 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagaman-v-reinach-nysupct-1905.