Marfisi v. Wilson & Co.

166 Misc. 881, 5 N.Y.S.2d 179, 1911 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 30
CourtBuffalo City Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 166 Misc. 881 (Marfisi v. Wilson & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Buffalo City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marfisi v. Wilson & Co., 166 Misc. 881, 5 N.Y.S.2d 179, 1911 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 30 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Hodson, J.

On the 3d day of December, 1909, the plaintiff pawned a gold watch with an Elgin movement, of the alleged value of twenty-five dollars, with the defendant, who is a pawnbroker in the city of Buffalo, N. Y., and obtained a loan thereon of five dollars, and, pursuant to such transaction, the defendant issued to the plaintiff a pawn ticket, whereby the defendant agreed to return such pledge upon the payment of the amount loaned, with interest, according to the ordinances of the city of Buffalo, which said ticket contained the statement that after four months the said pledge would be sold without notice and that the interest charged on the said loan would be ten per cent per month; at the same time the plaintiff delivered to the defendant a writing wherein he waived personal notice of any such sale, and stipulated that the sale of said pledge could be at public or private sale if unredeemed, according to the ordinances of the city of Buffalo relating to pawnbrokers. Said loan was not paid, and said pledge was not redeemed on the 6th day of May, 1910, on which date the defendant sold said watch for the sum of six dollars, less than the amount of said loan with accrued interest at the rate of ten per cent per month.

The plaintiff now brings this action against the defendant, claiming that the agreement for said loan and pledge was usurious and void because it provided for the payment of interest at the rate of ten per cent per month; and the plaintiff also claimed and now urges that the defendant had no right to sell such pledge after the expiration of the four months from the time the same was pledged, but should have kept the same for at least one year from said time, and cites., sections 40 to 52 of the General Business Law, constituting a part of the Consolidated Laws of the State of New York, as the basis of such contention.

Everybody concedes that the defendant was well within its rights in contracting such loan, taking such pledge, charging such [883]*883interest and making such sale, providing subdivision (6) of section 17 of the charter of the city of Buffalo and section 9 of chapter 22 of the ordinances of the city of Buffalo were in effect and of force at the time said loan was made; but the very existence of said charter provision and ordinances is challenged in this case upon the ground, as the plaintiff’s counsel argued, that they have been repealed by the general law above referred to.

This contention on the part of the plaintiff leads this court into a most interesting and important examination of the laws of the State of New York applicable to the city of Buffalo, because it will be seen that, although the amount involved in this case is small, yet the courts are now called upon, for the first time in over twenty years, to determine whether or not the city of Buffalo has proceeded rightfully in the matter of regulating the pawnbrokerage business within the city of Buffalo, and, indirectly, also, the legality or illegality of the various loans which have been made by the pawnbrokers. This is quite as serious a problem as it is to define the rule for the regulation of such business in the future, and this court is thus required to make a decision in this case and send it along to the upper courts for their review, to the end that intelligent and legal authority may be established on this subject for the guidance of everyone concerned.

In the year 1883 the Legislature of this State passed a law which is known as chapter 339, and the provisions of that chapter are the source of the General Business Law above referred to. That law expressly states that it applies only to cities having a population of 200,000 or more. At that time (1883) the city of Buffalo had a population of less than 200,000, but it is a matter of public record and common knowledge that its population has exceeded 200,000 for many years. Without citing any particular articles or section of that law, it may be briefly said that it provides in substance as follows: That no pawnbroker shall sell any pawn or pledge until the same shall have remained one year in his possession, and that all such sales shall be at public auction, and that no pawnbroker shall ask, demand or receive any greater rate of interest than three per centum per month or any fraction of a month, for the first six months, and two per centum per month for each succeeding month upon any loan not exceeding the sum of $100.

At the time of the passage of this act, which was made, as I have said, applicable to all cities in the State having 200,000 inhabitants, the charter of the city of Buffalo, which was a special act of the Legislature passed in the year 1870 (Laws of 1870, chap. 519), was in existence, and section 8 of title 3 of said charter provided, among other things: “ The city shall have power by its com[884]*884mon council froto, time to time, to enact ordinances: * * * To license and regulate * * * pawnbrokers and the business of pawnbrokerage.”

No claim was ever made that such general law repealed the above section of the city charter, which is a special act, although during the period from 1883 down to the year 1891 the city of Buffalo had become possessed of more than 200,000 population, and had passed an ordinance pursuant to such charter provisions, regulating the business of pawnbrokerage, and the pawnbrokers in this city had conducted their business under the supervision of the city officials accordingly.

By chapter 105 of the Laws of 1891, which became a law March 27, 1891, and went into effect January 1, 1892, the Legislature gave to the city of Buffalo a revised charter, under which it is now conducting its business, and the provisions of the old charter, with some amplifications, were re-enacted so far as it related to the power of the common council to enact ordinances. Subdivision (6) of section 37 of title 2 of the present city charter provides: “ The common council shall, from time to time, enact ordinances * * * to license and regulate * * * pawnbrokers and the business of pawnbrokerage, and to fix the rates to be charged by pawnbrokers in their business.”

Pursuant to this chapter provision, the common council did ..enact chapter 20 of the ordinances of the city of Buffalo upon the subject of pawnbrokers, and therein defined the rights, limited the powers, fixed the rates and generally established a code of rules governing the licensing and the business of pawnbrokers within the city of Buffalo.

By section 9 of that chapter of the ordinances it is provided, in effect, that pawnbrokers may receive as interest upon a loan of from one dollar to ten dollars ten per cent per month, and by section 12 of the same chapter it is, in effect, provided that the pawnbroker may sell the pledge after the expiration of three months from the time limited for the payment of the loan.

From this statement of facts and law, therefore, we may summarize the rights and interests of the parties to this controversy as follows: If the provision of the charter and ordinances of the city of Buffalo apply to the transaction of the plaintiff and defendant concerning said loan, then the defendant should prevail and the plaintiff's complaint should be dismissed. But if the general State law above quoted applies to said transaction, then it is equally clear that the defendant has not complied with that law and should respond to the plaintiff for the value of the property of which he has been deprived.

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Stone v. Jacobson
258 A.D. 300 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1939)
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Bluebook (online)
166 Misc. 881, 5 N.Y.S.2d 179, 1911 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marfisi-v-wilson-co-nybuffalocityct-1911.