Lovett v. Cowman

6 Hill & Den. 223
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Hill & Den. 223 (Lovett v. Cowman) 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
Lovett v. Cowman, 6 Hill & Den. 223 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1843).

Opinion

By the Court, Bronson, J.

It will not be necessary to notice more than one of the objections to this motion. Under the law of 1837, when the defendant pleads or gives notice of the defence of usury, and verifies his plea or notice by affidavit, he may call and examine the plaintiff as a witness to prove the usury. (Stat. 1837, p. 487, § 2.) Although this law may be constitutional—a question which I shall not examine—still, as the consequence of making out the usury is a forfeiture of the whole debt, I thought the morality of the statute very questionable, and said as much in the Bank of Salina v. Henry, (1 Hill, 555.) A law which does not stop with redressing the wrong, but inflicts a heavy penalty, and then compels the party to become his own accuser—thus placing his worldly interests in one scale, and his duty to God and his own consciencec in the other—such a law, instead of proving our onward course in civilization, points backward to the dark ages, when the rack was thought a fitting instrument for eliciting truth and for regulating men’s opinions. Such laws operate as a snare to the conscience. There have been many cases where the defendant has sworn, to the defence of usury, and called the plaintiff as a witness to prove it: but I have never heard of one where the defence succeeded on the trial. There must of course have been perjury on one side or the other; and that is about all the good which has been accomplished by this statute.

Nothing was said in the Bank of Salina v. Henry about the morality or the policy of usury laws in general. I spoke only of that branch of the law of 1837, which compels a party to testify against himself upon a question going to the forfeiture of the whole debt—a feature that I have never seen in any other usury law, ancient or modern. And my opinion did not [225]*225turn on the morality or the policy of the law, as has been very erroneously supposed; but was based upon the principle that it was the business of the courts to administer the laws as they were made, and leave the work of amending them to the legislature. Although the judgment in that case has recently been reversed, the decision of the court of errors does not touch the present question,

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Bluebook (online)
6 Hill & Den. 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovett-v-cowman-nysupct-1843.