Henderson ex rel. Second National Bank v. Waid

96 Pa. 460, 1868 Pa. LEXIS 263
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 6, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 96 Pa. 460 (Henderson ex rel. Second National Bank v. Waid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson ex rel. Second National Bank v. Waid, 96 Pa. 460, 1868 Pa. LEXIS 263 (Pa. 1868).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Paxson

delivered the opinion of tne court, May 6th 1868.

This controversy has arisen in the distribution of the proceeds of a sheriff’s sale of the real estate of Zephaniah Waid. At the date of the sale the Second National Bank of Titusville held a judgment amounting to $2156.12, and William M. Henderson was plaintiff in a judgment for the use of the same bank, amounting to $1879.73. Waid became the endorser of a note of Shugert & Starr to the bank for $2500 on the 18th’ of December 1872. In a suit subsequently brought on it judgment was obtained on the 29th of May 1873. Before the note was given interest at the rate of ten per cent, had been paid by Shugert & Starr on the debt it represented to the amount of $125.68. When it was given on the 18th of December 1872, a discount at the rate of twelve per cent., amounting to $77.50, was retained. It was the second renewal of a note originally given on the 3d of May, and first renewed on the 6th of September 1872. It was only at the date of the second renewal that Waid became endorser. Upon the proof that usurious interest had been reserved the auditor decided that “ the interest bearing power of the obligation had been destroyed,” and “ a.s [461]*461there was no point of time in the history of such paper at which it could be freed from the taint of illegality, so it followed that there could be no point of time from which it would bear interest.” Under the view of the law thus taken in the report, the costs, the attorney’s commission of five per cent., stipulated for in the note, charges for protests, and all interest accrued on the original note and its renewals, and on the judgment, were excluded from the allowance made to the bank. There'was also deducted the interest, attorney’s fees and costs accrued in a judgment on a note for $1700, made up in part of an independent note for $1500, previously discounted, and in part of interest and costs of the judgment obtained on the note of Shugert & Starr. On the same ground of usury the sum of $111.99 was deducted from the Henderson judgment.

These rulings of the auditor were affirmed by the court upon exceptions. It has been settled by a line of authority that in the distribution of a fund an auditor cannot inquire into the validity of a judgment regular upon its face : Dyott’s Estate, 2 W. & S. 557; Leeds v. Bender, 6 Id. 315; Ellmaker v. Insurance Co., Id. 442 ; Thompson’s Appeal, 7 P. F. Smith 175. But he may receive testimony to show that since its rendition the judgment has been paid or otherwise satisfied: Borland’s Appeal, 16 P. F. Smith 470; and he may disregard a judgment void upon its face: Brunner’s Appeal, 11 Wright 67; but not because it is merely erroneous: Harris’s Appeal, 5 W. & S. 473; or a fraud upon the debtor: Thompson’s Appeal, supra. All the cases say that the mere fact that the debtor has been overreached and a fraud perpetrated upon him by the creditor gives no right to other creditors to attack the judgment collaterally. So long as it stands as a valid judgment against the defendant it is good against them. They have no right to complain of a fraud upon him. In such cases the only person who can impeach the judgment is the defendant himself, and this must be done by a motion in the proper court to open it. When a judgment is assailed in this way before an auditor, it is his duty, as was pointed out in Dyott’s Estate and Leeds v. Bender, supra, to suspend his decision until its validity can be decided by the court in which it was entered. It would be an anomalous proceeding for an auditor to try the validity as between the parties of a solemn judgment of the court that appointed him, yet more so of the judgment of the court of another county or another state. When, however, a judgment has been fraudulently given by collusion between the debtor and the plaintiff in such judgment for the purpose of hindering and delaying creditors it may be attacked collaterally by the creditors intended to be defrauded: Dougherty’s Estate, 9 W. & S. 189; Lewis v. Rogers, 4 Harris 19; Thompson’s Appeal, supra. As to them such judgment is void. But they can only 'have it set aside as to themselves. They cannot impair it as between the parties.

[462]*462If, then, creditors may not impeach a judgment before an auditor for a fraud upon the debtor, it follows that, in order to sustain the auditor and the court below, we must go to the extent of holding that the usury complained of was a fraud upon the creditors — a collusive fraud to hinder and delay them. That there was fraud and collusion in fact is not pretended, which drives us to the yet narrower question, whether an usurious contract is a fraud per se upon creditors. It was said in Good v. Grant, 26 P. F. Smith 52, that “ to pay interest in excess of the legal rate is not necessarily fraudulent as to creditors.” And in Miners’ Trust Company Bank v. Roseberry, 81 P. F. Smith 309, it was said by Mercur, J., “whenever the usurious contract is intended to defraud creditors, or when the circumstances of the debtor are known to be such that it can reasonably be presumed that this will be the natural effect, the right of creditors to postpone the excess of interest must be conceded;” but in each of these cases the question whether any one but the borrower could go behind the judgment was left undecided, as it had been left undecided in Vernon v. Carson, 10 P. F. Smith 440. In Greene v. Tyler, 3 Wright 361, it was held competent for a second mortgagee to question in a distribution a prior mortgage on the ground of usury, and in Bachdell’s Appeal, 16 P. F. Smith 386, the syllabus states the point of the case to be that “ an auditor reported that judgment-creditors could question the validity of a prior judgment, on the ground of usury, and reduce a usurious judgment. Accordingly the court below, on exceptions, confirmed the report in this particular.” The decision of the auditor was rested wholly on the authority of Greene v. Tyler. This point was not alluded to by Chief Justice Thompson in delivering the opinion of the court, which consisted of nine lines devoted to reversing the decree, because interest had been allowed on a judgment after the day of sale. No paper book was furnished on behalf of the appellee, and the point was manifestly overlooked by the Chief Justice, who delivered the opinion in the subsequent case of Edwards’s Appeal, 26 P. F. Smith 89. Greene v. Tyler certainly decided that a usurious consideration could be inquired into by a subsequent mortgagee, and, as before observed, Bachdell’s Appeal was ruled by the auditor solely on this authority. It would seem by an examination of the opinion in Greene v. Tyler that considerable stress was laid upon the fact that the.second mortgagee had a specific lien on the very thing sold by the sheriff, and that his lien attached before the judgment was confessed upon the first mortgage, as to which the usury was charged. It also appeared that the mortgage was given for $2000 more than was actually received or loaned thereon. It is not essential, however, to question the soundness of either of those decisions. While the broad question whether usury was a fraud per se upon creditors appears rather to have been assumed than discussed, we may concede those cases to have, been rightly [463]*463decided to the extent of their own facts. At that time the taking of more than six per cent, interest was unlawful, and subjected the lender to a penalty. It is not so now. The Act of 28th of May 1858, Pamph. L. 622, has made a radical change in this respect.

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Bluebook (online)
96 Pa. 460, 1868 Pa. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-ex-rel-second-national-bank-v-waid-pa-1868.