Hall v. Ditson

55 How. Pr. 19, 5 Abb. N. Cas. 198
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 55 How. Pr. 19 (Hall v. Ditson) 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
Hall v. Ditson, 55 How. Pr. 19, 5 Abb. N. Cas. 198 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1878).

Opinion

Van Vorst, J.

The plaintiff 'claims that the printing contract, bearing even date 'with the chattel mortgage executed by Hall & Son to the defendants Ditson & Co., was a hard and unconscionable agreement and a clog upon the mortgage. He does not, however, urge that the transaction was usurious. The executors of the last will of William Hall, [21]*21deceased, who are made defendants, by their answer, interpose a claim that the mortgage was usurious in its inception, the usury growing out of the advantage gained by the mortgagees through the printing contract, which, it is claimed, was part and parcel of the transaction through which the moneys were loaned, for the security of which the chattel mortgage was in part made, and that the printing contract was exacted by the mortgagees and yielded by the mortgagors, and that the transaction, in its inception, was designed to secure to the mortgagees an advantage, in the way of gain, over and above the legal interest they would realize on the loan and forbearance of the money advanced and secured by the mortgage. These defendants also claim that the vice of usury enters into the Pond mortgage, which was assigned to Ditson & Co. at the time the mortgage and printing contract abovb-mentioned were made and delivered.

The plaintiff claims that the agreement should be set aside as unconscionable. The executors claim that the mortgages are void for usury.

Equity will not, as is urged by the learned counsel for the plaintiff, allow a mortgagee to clog the equity of redemption with any by-agreement, and will not uphold any oppressive arrangement or advantage exacted by the mortgagee at the time of the loan of money. But a careful consideration of the evidence fails to discover any thing in the circumstances under which the printing contract was executed, hard or unconscionable on the part of Ditson & Co., or any thing, in a true sense, unfair or inequitable in the arrangement, even though it be considered as standing by itself, apart from the mortgage. It was not so regarded at the time, nor has subsequent events demonstrated it to be such.

Carried out according to its true intent, the printing contract secured rights and interests of mutual advantage.

A similar agreement had been made by Hall & Son with William A. Pond, in December, 1871, on an occasion when they borrowed money from him. Ho complaint appears to [22]*22have been made at any time that such agreement was hard or unfair in its terms or operation, or that Pond had secured thereby any unfair advantage or disproportionate gain.

The fact that Hall & Son were willing, under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence, freely and of their own, accord to enter into a similar arrangement with Ditson & Co., would indicate that the arrangements were by them regarded as favorable to their interests.

The evidence does, indeed, justify the conclusion that the agreement for the loan of money by Ditson & Co., and the postponement of the payment of their existing claim against Hall & Son, the payment of which was to be secured by a chattel mortgage on the music plates and copyrights, was made at the same time when the terms of the printing contract were agreed upon.

In one sense they were truly part and parcel of one general arrangement, and were, in the end, formally put in shape on the same occasion at the office of Messrs. Estee & Barnard. Yet under the evidence I cannot say that they were absolutely and unqualifiedly dependent, the one on the other.

It may well he that the fact that the printing contract was also tendered and to be executed was a controlling reason inducing Ditson & Co. to agree to make the loan and postpone payment, and to take up the Pond and Morrison mortgages. But in the end, after the Pond and Morrison mortgages had been assigned and the money paid therefor, and the mortgage to Ditson & Co. had been executed by Hall & Son, the option was distinctly and unqualifiedly left with them as to whether they would execute the printing contract, and they, without hesitation, concluded to do so.

It is suggested by plaintiff’s counsel that the offer to abandon the printing contract at this time made by Ditson & Co. was neither sincere nor honest.

I do not know that we are fully justified in detracting from the offer made by Ditson & Co. the elements of sincerity and honesty.

[23]*23In making the offer Ditson & Co. may have supposed that-Hall & Son would not withdraw but that they would be still willing, and perhaps claim, that the printing contract should be made, and that they should assume the responsibility of making advances under it. I think that the speech and acts of parties are entitled to be considered as springing from good and honest motives, where the facts and circumstances do not establish the contrary and that parties mean what they say. But the fact that Ditson & Co. then expressed a willingness to give up the printing contract is distinctly proven and strips the transaction of that hardness and severity which is sought to be impressed on it, if there be in fact any thing inequitable in its terms. There was a “ locus joenitmtice ” for Hall & Son, and the option was tendered them of withdrawing from that part of the arrangement.

That they then expressed a desire for the contract is well established by the evidence, and they freely made it.

There is a fair inference to be drawn from the evidence that it was for the real advantage of Hall & Son that the printing contract with Ditson & Co. should be made. Hall & Son were in straitened circumstances; they had not the means at hand to carry on the work of printing promptly. They were then largely in arrears to the printer for work theretofore done, and encountered difficulty in discharging the obligation, and further work was to be paid for as the work was done.

Hnder the printing contract Hall & Son were entitled to receive one-half of the profits of all music which Ditson & Co. should print from the plates, over and above the costs and expenses of printing and materials furnished.

While I can see that such arrangement would be of advantage to Hall & Son, I am not prepared to say that one-half the profits would be an undue proportion of advantage to be realized by Ditson & Co. for their advances, care and risk in carrying out the arrangement. Hall & Son reserved to themselves the right to print for their own business from the plates.

[24]*24The arrangement was well and clearly understood, and was, without doubt, deemed to be of mutual advantage. And, when the contract was executed, Hall & Son expressed the hope that Ditson & Co. would produce and sell more music than Pond had done under his contract.

I cannot, therefore, conclude that there was any thing in the circumstances under which this contract was made, or in the contract itself, which entitles the plaintiff to any "relief against it for the reasons assigned by him. . It was voluntarily and understandingly entered into by them, after an experience under a similar contract made some years before with Pond, through which they had a proper comprehension of the advantages and operation of such an arrangement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 How. Pr. 19, 5 Abb. N. Cas. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-ditson-nysupct-1878.