Melville v. American Benefit Building Ass'n

33 Barb. 103, 1860 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 160
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 Barb. 103 (Melville v. American Benefit Building Ass'n) 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
Melville v. American Benefit Building Ass'n, 33 Barb. 103, 1860 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 160 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

This action is hy a mortgagee, to have several mortgages given by him cancelled as usurious and void. One of the mortgages is a fair sample of the others. The plaintiff borrowed $1985, and agreed to pay $35 a month until each share of the association should he worth $600, and in case of default in making any monthly payment, then to pay the further sum of $2.25 for the first month, $2.50 for the second month, $3.75 for the third, and $5 for the fourth month, and for each succeeding month. At the time each share was estimated at about $193. If the plaintiff were charged simple interest on the $1490, and had [108]*108paid $25 a month, or $420 per annum, and the payments were credited to him only at the end of the year, the whole principal and interest of the debt would be paid in less than six years. There is not the slightest evidence that there was any probability that in the most favorable circumstances for the association, their shares could become in six years three times as valuable as when the mortgage was given, as should be the case to make each share worth $600. The arrangement can therefore be regarded only as a contrivance to avoid the appearance of usury, and yet to charge much more than the legal interest. The effect of it also was certain ruin to every borrower; and if the association should continue 10 or 20 years, the borrower would still be bound to pay his $420 per annum, during all the- continuance of its existence heyond the six years, when he would have paid all the principal and interest on his loan; and he, for all the time beyond the first six years of the loan, would receive no benefit from the association. If, in addition to this, he should make default in his monthly payments, he would be liable, in addition to the $420 per annum above mentioned, to pay the fines also above stated, those would be $47.50 for the first year, and $60 for each of the remaining five years, (if the calculation is limited to six years,) and for the non-payment of the $35 for the first month only, which would be $347.50, for that one month’s default. The second month’s default would be $5 less, and as each would diminish by $5 in arithmetical progression for 68 months, and the remaining three months would be $1.25, $2.50 and $3.75, or $7.50 together, thus the fines alone would be nearly $12,000 when the six years were ended.

Whatever aversion may be naturally felt to declaring a contract void for usury when the excess is but small, there should be no hesitation in pronouncing such a contract as this, within the law against usury. It would be more agreeable (as was held in cases where the contract was made with similar institutions after they were incorporated under [109]*109an act which prevented the associates from alleging usury in such contract) to decide that it was void, only on account of its not being possible that the contract could have been understood by the borrower, or intended to be entered into by him in such a form. This mortgage was executed before that act was passed, and is not prohibited by it.

D. P. Barnard, for the appellants. R. S. Emmet, for the respondent.

The nature of the articles of association leads to the conclusion that the very object of this association was to evade the usury laws, and to enable such of the members as were able to lend money and to pay their dues, to take advantage of the poor who were compelled to borrow, and too ignorant to comprehend the nature of the bargain made by them.

The defendants must surrender the bonds and mortgages and cause them to be cancelled of record. The costs are in the discretion of the court, and may be left to each party to bear his own.”

From the judgment entered in pursuance of the above decision the defendants appealed.

By the Court,

Bonney, J.

The plaintiff by his complaint alleges that certain agreements made between him and the association (now corporation) called the American Benefit Building Association,” under which he received certain sums of money, and several mortgages made by him pursuant to such agreements, are usurious; and he demands to have such agreements and mortgages adjudged to be void and to be delivered up and cancelled, and to have the money which he has paid thereon, repaid to him with interest. The defendants deny that there is any usury in the transactions referred to, and insist that said agreements and mortgages are valid.

There is no controversy as to the facts of the case. The [110]*110court, at special term, adjudged the several agreements and mortgages made by the plaintiff, and mentioned in the pleadings, to be usurious and void. From this judgment the defendants have apjoealed. The plaintiff executed to the building association three mortgages, each upon a distinct and separate agreement, but under, substantially, the same circumstances, and the question as to each of them is, whether the transaction was in intent and effect a loan of money, as to which usury can be predicated; or a dealing with the co-partnership or associated funds for the common benefit of the association, and the members comprising it, pursuant to their articles of association. If the transactions are loans, then it is scarcely denied that they are usurious; if not loans, they cannot be affected with usury.

The articles of association of The American Benefit Building Association, adopted in April, 1848, (among other things,) provide'—that there shall be a meeting of the association on the third Tuesday in each month ; that the members of the association shall be those who subscribe the articles and hold one or more shares ; the number of which is not limited : that every member of the association, at the first regular meeting after the adoption of the articles, and at each regular meeting thereafter, shall pay for each share subscribed by him $2.50 as monthly dues, during the continuance of the association, and for any neglect in so doing, shall be fined for non-payment of such monthly dues on each share as follows: for the first month 12|- cents, second month 25 cents, third month 37|- cents, fourth and each succeeding month 50 cents; and when the fines charged shall be equal to the monthly dues paid on every share, such share shall be forfeited, and jts holder considered as yielding up all interest therein : that, until the third regular meeting of the association, after the articles shall go into effect, every new member shall pay an entrance fee of fifty cénits per share ; after which time new members, or members subscribing for additional shares, shall, in addition to the entrance fee and monthly dues from [111]*111the commencement of the association, pay such bonus per share, as the standing committee shall judge to be sufficient to place the new members or new shares upon the same footing as the original shares : that whenever the funds of the association shall amount to enough for the redemption of one or more shares, the same shall be applied to the redemption of any share, the holder of which shall offer to receive the lowest sum therefor ; and any member whose offer has been accepted, may subscribe to as many additional shares, not exceeding five at one time, as he may desire to have redeemed, which shall be so redeemed out of the funds on hand, or the first funds which shall be received thereafter : that immediately upon the acceptance of an offer for redemption, the money shall be set apart to the member

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Bluebook (online)
33 Barb. 103, 1860 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melville-v-american-benefit-building-assn-nysupct-1860.