Ketchum v. Barber

4 Hill & Den. 224

This text of 4 Hill & Den. 224 (Ketchum v. Barber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ketchum v. Barber, 4 Hill & Den. 224 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1843).

Opinion

Nelson, Cb. J.

Our statute against usury, (1 R. S. 760, 2d ed.) provides, that the rate of interest upon the loan or forbearance of any money, goods or things in action, shall continue to be seven dollars upon the hundred; (§ 1;) that no person or corporation shall, directly or indirectly,’take or-receive in money, goods or things in action, or in' any other way, any greater sum . or greater value, for the loan or forbearance &c.; (§ 2 ;) and that.all bonds, bills, notes &c., and all other contracts or securities whatsoever &c., whereby there shall be reserved or taken, or secured or agreed to be reserved-or taken, any greater sum or greater value for the loan See. than as before prescribed, shall be void. 5.)

It has been repeatedly decided under this act, which is taken, substantially, from the statute .of Anne, that, in order to make a transaction usurious, there must be a loan of u money, • goods or things in action,” (to use the words of our statute,) and an agreement to take more than legal interest for the forbearance ; or some device contrived for the purpose of evading- or concealing the appearance of a loan, when in truth it was such. The authorities are full to this effect. (Loyd v. Wil - [228]*228liams, 3 Wils. 261; Barclay v. Walmsley, 4 East, 55 ; Lloyd v. Scott, 4 Peters, 205 ; Chitty on Bills, 100, Am. ed. of 1839 ; Comyn on Usury, 156 ; Ord on Usury, 24.) ' It is not usury, therefore, for an acceptor to discount for a premium his own acceptance due at a future day, for this is not a loan, but an anticipation of payment; (Barclay v. Walmsley, 4 East, 55 ;) nor is the bona fide sale of a bill for a less sum than the amount payable upon its face, usurious. (Ex parte Lee, 1 P. Williams, 782 ; King v. Ridge, 4 Price, 50; Stoveld v. Eade, 4 Bing. 81; Cram v. Hendricks, 7 Wend. 569.) And a contract, made at the time of sale, to pay more than legal interest on the purchase money of an estate 6ona^de sold, has been decided not to be usurious. (Beete v. Bidgood, 7 Barn. & Cress. 453 ; 1 Man. & Ryl 143, S. C. ; Doe v. Brown, Holt’s N. P. C. 295.) So, of a sale of goods at three months credit, with a stipulation that, in case the money be not paid, the vendee shall allow a half penny an ounce per month till the debt is discharged ; provided the transaction be a bona fidSe sale. (Floyer v. Edwards, Cowp. 112.) In all these cases, however, if the transaction be a mere device to cover and conceal a loan at unlawful interest, it then comes within the statute. But whether there was such a device—a corrupt intention to evade the law—is a question of fact for. the jury to determine upon a consideration of all the surrounding circumstances. (Hammett v. Yea, 1 Bos. & Pull. 153 ; Hutchinson v. Piper, 4 Taunt. 810 ; Lee v. Cass, 1 id. 511; Masterman v. Cowrie, 3 Campb. 488; Com. on Usury, 123 to 138, and the cases there cited.) ■ Applying this test to the present case, I am unable to see how we can declare,- as matter of law, after the finding of the referee, that the transaction is within the statute. We see there was no loan between the parties; and that, so far as respects the plaintiff’s connection with the first notes, he merely sold the guaranty of his firm. There was no application for a loan ; and the referee, has expressly found that none was directly or indirectly made. In short, the dealing between the parties Was in fact just what [229]*229it purports to have been, viz. a stipulated compensation for the guaranty of the plaintiff’s firm.

The case is therefore narrowed down to the question whether a bona fide sale of one’s credit or security for the use and benefit of another, unconnected with a loan, is, per se, usurious.

Assuming, as' we must, that there was no loan, the transaction does not fall within those decisions which have now firmly established that bankers and merchants may, in addition to lawful interest on the discount of bills and notes, take a reasonable commission by way of compensation for trouble and expense 3 provided such commission be not intended as a device to cover a usurious loan. (Auriol v. Thomas, 2 T. R. 52, and Winch v. Fenn, in note 3 Hammett v. Yea, 1 Bos. & Pull. 144 ; Brooke v. Middleton, 1 Campb. 445 ; Masterman v. Cowrie, 3 id. 488 ; Baynes v. Fry, 15 Ves. 120 ; Carstairs v. Stein, 4 Maule & Selw. 192 ; Chit. on Bills, 100 to 105, Am. ed. of 1839.) The cases upon this subject may therefore be laid out of view, as having no direct application to the question before us.

The case of Kent v. Lowen, (1 Campb. 177,) is a direct authority in favor of the defendants. Lord Ellenborough there held a bill of exchange void for usury, on the ground that the accommodation acceptor, through whom the plaintiff claimed title, had charged a commission over and above lawful interest. He said, country bankers had been allowed to take, besides legal interest, a certain commission for trouble and expense 3 but that was in discounting, not for accepting bills. This case. was, in effect, overruled by the same learned -judge five years .afterwards, in Masterman v. Cowrie, (3 Campb. 488,) where he held, that an agreement by a London banker to accept and pay bills of exchange drawn in the country for a certain commission, he to be furnished with funds to pay the bills before they became due, could not be usurious, there being no contemplation of an advance of money 3 and that if an advance had been contemplated, it would have presented a question of [230]*230fact, whether the commission was a shift to obtain more than legal interest for the forbearance, or a compensation for trouble and expense incurred in accepting and paying the bills. There is another feature in Masterman v. Cowrie, which is applicable to the case before us. After the parties had dealt together for some time, the plaintiff expressed himself dissatisfied with the manner in which the bills were drawn, and requested that they should be drawn for the future by some respectable person in the country. It was then agreed that, if the plaintiff would procure such a person, he should be allowed one shilling per cent, for his trouble in drawing the bills. M., a country banker, assented to the proposition, drew the future bills, and received the commission. Lord Ellenborough said • ££ The only question arising out of the one shilling allowed to the drawer is, whether that was a color for usury. If it was ■ íonajide applied to M.’s use, it cannot be usurious.”

In Lee v. Cass, (1 Taunt. 511,) there was a loan of money, and the lender made it a condition that he should receive, in addition to lawful interest, three and a half per cent, for guarantying the payment of the bill by the acceptors. There was no doubt, upon the evidence, as to the solvency of the acceptors ; and the jury found, that the charge was a device to get more than legal interest.

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29 U.S. 205 (Supreme Court, 1830)
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Steele v. Whipple
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Colton v. Dunham & Wadsworth
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Williams v. Hance
7 Paige Ch. 581 (New York Court of Chancery, 1839)
Cram v. Hendricks
7 Wend. 569 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1831)
Ford v. Keith
1 Mass. 139 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1804)

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4 Hill & Den. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ketchum-v-barber-nycterr-1843.