Folger, J.
The plaintiff was a privy in estate to Cornelius Oakley, the first owner of the property. If the contract between him and the defendant was usurious, he could have recovered the property pledged under it; and, as a general rule, the privies in estate to him could do the same.
(Mason
v.
Lord,
40 N. Y., 476.)
The defendant advances some arguments why the plaintiff cannot, in this action, do that. First, it is claimed that the complaint does not state facts which make a case of a usurious contract. It is to be conceded that, in pleading usury, it is to be done with certainty. If the facts stated are consistent with usury, the pleading is not sufficient. I am, however, of the opinion, that the facts stated in the complaint in this action do well allege a usurious transaction, in its inception and throughout. The complaint avers an application for a loan or advance of money upon the pledge of property, and the making of a loan or advance in response to that application and upon that pledge. It then avers a succession of further like advances, on like pledges, to the sum of over $100,000; that the advances of smaller sums were, from time to time, consolidated into larger ones, and from time to time renewed, notes of Oakley being given for each advance when made, and for each renewal; that these advances and
renewals were made for a term of sixty days, or shorter period; that at the time of each advance and of eaeh'renewal a charge of one per cent on the amount of the debt was made, in addition to interest at the rate of seven per cent for the period for which the loan was renewed; that on a certain day thereafter the defendant claimed a balance of $56,733.78, due to it on all such previous transactions, and granted a renewal of the loan of that amount for another period of thirty days, on the condition that Oakley should give his promissory note therefor at that time, and an agreement pledging as security for the payment of the note the property in question, and that Oakley executed the note and agreement. The objection to the sufficiency of this complaint is, that there is no averment of any agreement that the one per cent should be paid, or that it was paid, and that the averment that there was a charge of one per cent does not amount to an averment of anything more than a demand. The word charge, however, as a technical word of legal use, conveys the meaning of obligation. “ The distinctive significance of the term rests in the idea of obligation directly bearing upon the individual thing or person to be affected, and binding him or it to the discharge of the duty or satisfaction of the claim imposed. In this view a charge will, in general terms, denote a responsibility peculiar to the person or thing affected and authoritatively imposed.” It means an exaction or demand which must be met; and though, in common phrase, as applied to a single instance, it may at times imply a demand made on the one hand, without power to enforce it, which may or may not be complied with on the other, yet in this complaint, in the association in which it is found, applied to a recurrence of transactions, it carries with it the fuller meaning of an obligation imposed and taken. So that, although the striking of a balance and the giving of the note and contract of pledge might not affect the prior transactions and vitiate them, if they were originally untainted, yet there is a substantial averment that the one per cent was demanded
as a condition of each advance and renewal, from first to last, and was at each allowed.
Second. The complaint avers that the exaction of the one per cent was not warranted by the charter of the defendant. It is claimed by the defendant that it is; and that, from the provision of the charter, it appears that there was not usury in agreeing for it.
This claim is rested upon the provision of the seventh section (Laws of 1867, chap. 378, pp. 839-842), which allows the defendant to receive and take the management, charge or custody of real or personal estate or dioses in action, and to advance moneys, securities or credits thereon, on such terms and commissions and at such rates of interest as may be established by the directors. It is expressly provided in this section that the rates of interest therein authorized shall not exceed seven per cent per annum. Interest is the compensation paid by a borrower of money to the lender of it for its use. If this one per cent on the gross amount of the debt was interest or compensation for the use of the money, then it was not authorized by the charter. If it was
Tyona
fide, a commission for the management, charge or custody of the warehouse receipts of Oakley may have been a lawful charge. If it was called a commission when it was really interest, then it was an attempt at an evasion of the prohibition of the charter and of the usury law. The complaint alleged that it was the latter, and avers facts which, undenied, tend strongly to show this, and thus presents a fair issue of fact for the jury. It is not an issue of law which can be joined in by demurrer.
Third. By the act of the legislature, passed April 6th, 1850 (Laws of 1850, chap. 172, p. 334), entitled “ An act to prohibit corporations from interposing the defence of usury in any action,” it was enacted that no corporation shall hereafter interpose the defence of usury in any action. (§ 1.)
It is claimed by the defendant that, by the operation of this statute, the plaintiff is prohibited from assailing the title and control of this property in the defendant, on the ground
that there was usury in the transaction by which a title and control was acquired by the defendant.
It cannot now be contended that the effect of this statute is limited to the case of a corporation made a party defendant in an action, and setting up usury as a defence thereto, though it is not to be denied that such is the primary or superficial meaning of the word defence. It denotes the means by which the defendant prevents the success of the plaintiff’s action. But the courts have interpreted it, in this statute, to mean more than the resistance of an action by a reliance upon the usury laws, and to mean any position or attitude in an action in which a corporation seeks to avoid its own contract by showing that it is usurious.
(Curtis
v.
Leavitt,
15 N. Y., 9;
Southern L. & T. Co.
v.
Packer,
17 id., 51;
Rosa
v.
Butterfield,
33 id. 665;
Butterworth, Recr.,
v.
O’Brien,
23 id., 275.)
This interpretation was adopted, for that the contrary would' defeat, it was said, all the beneficial aims of the act, and because the courts were constrained so to do to save the purpose of it. (33 N. Y.,
supra,.)
There are, doubtless, expressions in some of these cases which convey the idea of a legislative intention in passing the act to repeal the usury laws so far as corporations are concerned. But the force of the reasoning in them as a whole, and the bearing of the facts therein, are to the result that the purpose of the act was to prevent the avoidance by a corporation of its own contract, for the reason that it was made in contravention of the laws against usury.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Folger, J.
The plaintiff was a privy in estate to Cornelius Oakley, the first owner of the property. If the contract between him and the defendant was usurious, he could have recovered the property pledged under it; and, as a general rule, the privies in estate to him could do the same.
(Mason
v.
Lord,
40 N. Y., 476.)
The defendant advances some arguments why the plaintiff cannot, in this action, do that. First, it is claimed that the complaint does not state facts which make a case of a usurious contract. It is to be conceded that, in pleading usury, it is to be done with certainty. If the facts stated are consistent with usury, the pleading is not sufficient. I am, however, of the opinion, that the facts stated in the complaint in this action do well allege a usurious transaction, in its inception and throughout. The complaint avers an application for a loan or advance of money upon the pledge of property, and the making of a loan or advance in response to that application and upon that pledge. It then avers a succession of further like advances, on like pledges, to the sum of over $100,000; that the advances of smaller sums were, from time to time, consolidated into larger ones, and from time to time renewed, notes of Oakley being given for each advance when made, and for each renewal; that these advances and
renewals were made for a term of sixty days, or shorter period; that at the time of each advance and of eaeh'renewal a charge of one per cent on the amount of the debt was made, in addition to interest at the rate of seven per cent for the period for which the loan was renewed; that on a certain day thereafter the defendant claimed a balance of $56,733.78, due to it on all such previous transactions, and granted a renewal of the loan of that amount for another period of thirty days, on the condition that Oakley should give his promissory note therefor at that time, and an agreement pledging as security for the payment of the note the property in question, and that Oakley executed the note and agreement. The objection to the sufficiency of this complaint is, that there is no averment of any agreement that the one per cent should be paid, or that it was paid, and that the averment that there was a charge of one per cent does not amount to an averment of anything more than a demand. The word charge, however, as a technical word of legal use, conveys the meaning of obligation. “ The distinctive significance of the term rests in the idea of obligation directly bearing upon the individual thing or person to be affected, and binding him or it to the discharge of the duty or satisfaction of the claim imposed. In this view a charge will, in general terms, denote a responsibility peculiar to the person or thing affected and authoritatively imposed.” It means an exaction or demand which must be met; and though, in common phrase, as applied to a single instance, it may at times imply a demand made on the one hand, without power to enforce it, which may or may not be complied with on the other, yet in this complaint, in the association in which it is found, applied to a recurrence of transactions, it carries with it the fuller meaning of an obligation imposed and taken. So that, although the striking of a balance and the giving of the note and contract of pledge might not affect the prior transactions and vitiate them, if they were originally untainted, yet there is a substantial averment that the one per cent was demanded
as a condition of each advance and renewal, from first to last, and was at each allowed.
Second. The complaint avers that the exaction of the one per cent was not warranted by the charter of the defendant. It is claimed by the defendant that it is; and that, from the provision of the charter, it appears that there was not usury in agreeing for it.
This claim is rested upon the provision of the seventh section (Laws of 1867, chap. 378, pp. 839-842), which allows the defendant to receive and take the management, charge or custody of real or personal estate or dioses in action, and to advance moneys, securities or credits thereon, on such terms and commissions and at such rates of interest as may be established by the directors. It is expressly provided in this section that the rates of interest therein authorized shall not exceed seven per cent per annum. Interest is the compensation paid by a borrower of money to the lender of it for its use. If this one per cent on the gross amount of the debt was interest or compensation for the use of the money, then it was not authorized by the charter. If it was
Tyona
fide, a commission for the management, charge or custody of the warehouse receipts of Oakley may have been a lawful charge. If it was called a commission when it was really interest, then it was an attempt at an evasion of the prohibition of the charter and of the usury law. The complaint alleged that it was the latter, and avers facts which, undenied, tend strongly to show this, and thus presents a fair issue of fact for the jury. It is not an issue of law which can be joined in by demurrer.
Third. By the act of the legislature, passed April 6th, 1850 (Laws of 1850, chap. 172, p. 334), entitled “ An act to prohibit corporations from interposing the defence of usury in any action,” it was enacted that no corporation shall hereafter interpose the defence of usury in any action. (§ 1.)
It is claimed by the defendant that, by the operation of this statute, the plaintiff is prohibited from assailing the title and control of this property in the defendant, on the ground
that there was usury in the transaction by which a title and control was acquired by the defendant.
It cannot now be contended that the effect of this statute is limited to the case of a corporation made a party defendant in an action, and setting up usury as a defence thereto, though it is not to be denied that such is the primary or superficial meaning of the word defence. It denotes the means by which the defendant prevents the success of the plaintiff’s action. But the courts have interpreted it, in this statute, to mean more than the resistance of an action by a reliance upon the usury laws, and to mean any position or attitude in an action in which a corporation seeks to avoid its own contract by showing that it is usurious.
(Curtis
v.
Leavitt,
15 N. Y., 9;
Southern L. & T. Co.
v.
Packer,
17 id., 51;
Rosa
v.
Butterfield,
33 id. 665;
Butterworth, Recr.,
v.
O’Brien,
23 id., 275.)
This interpretation was adopted, for that the contrary would' defeat, it was said, all the beneficial aims of the act, and because the courts were constrained so to do to save the purpose of it. (33 N. Y.,
supra,.)
There are, doubtless, expressions in some of these cases which convey the idea of a legislative intention in passing the act to repeal the usury laws so far as corporations are concerned. But the force of the reasoning in them as a whole, and the bearing of the facts therein, are to the result that the purpose of the act was to prevent the avoidance by a corporation of its own contract, for the reason that it was made in contravention of the laws against usury. To reach this result the courts were obliged to put upon the language of the act a construction which enlarged the usual meaning of the word defence. They did this to reach the end at which the legislature obviously aimed, and to avoid incongruities of adjudication which would otherwise result, not from any essential difference of the principle involved in different cases, but from the different position of a corporation as party plaintiff or defendant. They held that whether defendant resisting the enforcement of its contract because it was usurious, or
plaintiff seeking to annul its contract for that reason, a corporation is equally obnoxious to the statute of 1850.
The facts of these cases, and the questions raised in them, did not carry the binding force of these authorities further than to the refusal to a corporation of the benefit of the usury laws when its own contract was, for usury in it, by itself impugned as vicious.
This court is now asked to go further, and to say that where a corporation has rightfully succeeded to a cause of action dependent upon the provision of the usury law, and which, in the hands of its assignor would be prevalent, the act of 1850 forbids the assertion of it. It is asked to decide that whoever the parties to the contract, a corporation succeeding to the legal rights of a party who might avail himself of usury, either for attack or defence, is precluded by this statute from setting up that right. We do not find anything in the language of that act which brings us to that conclusion. Uor is there any such thing in the legislative purpose with which it was passed, and which is made plain in the cases we have cited.
It is not necessary, to maintain this action, to add or interpolate a word, or to change the meaning of a word in the act, or to come short of sustaining the object of the legislature. The plaintiff, in the usual and primary sense of the word defence, is not interposing usury as a defence, hi or is it seeking to avoid any contract made by it for the vice of usury therein. These considerations meet, and dispose of all the points presented to this court in the oral argument addressed to it for the defendant. Upon the printed points handed up, other positions are taken. But these are fully met and answered in the thorough and learned opinion delivered by Jones, J.,
at Special Term; and it is not necessary that they be especially adverted to here.
The judgment should he reversed, with costs to the appellant ; and the appellant should have judgment on the demurrer, with leave to the defendant to answer in the action on payment of the costs of the action since the joining of issue
of law therein; the answer to be served within twenty days after notice of the filing in the court below of the remittitur from this court.
All concur.
Judgment accordingly.