Morton v. . Thurber

85 N.Y. 550
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 85 N.Y. 550 (Morton v. . Thurber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morton v. . Thurber, 85 N.Y. 550 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

In the first of these cases the only claim made on the present appeal is that the deed and bill of sale to the defendant Thurber should be declared to be mortgages merely, and to be void for usury, yo relief by way of redemption is demanded, nor is the ready offer to pay the mortgage debt.

Assuming that the instruments in question were taken by the defendant Thurber as security merely and are to be treated as mortgages, we are of opinion that the plaintiff has failed to make out a case of usury.

The facts upon which the charge is predicated are, as- found by the referee, substantially as follows : The plaintiff was the lessee of certain premises in the city of Brooklyn, where he carried on a bakery, and had • made improvements thereon to the amount of about $28,000. The property was about being sold under mortgage foreclosures, which would have cut off the plaintiff’s interest therein. The defendant Thurber undertook to advance the funds necessary to buy in the property; to take the title thereto in his own name, and also to take a bill of sale of the machinery on the premises, and lease the whole to the plaintiff at a rent equal to the interest on his advances, and to convey the property, real and personal, to the plaintiff on payment within five years of an amount equal to *556 the sum advanced for the purchase of the property, and a balance due Thurber from plaintiff on another account, for machinery, etc., with interest. Thurber bought in the property at the foreclosure sale, and pa'id for the same $35,000 in cash and a mortgage of $12,000 ; the balance due from plaintiff to Thurber on the machinery account was $20,000, making in all $67,000. But in the lease which Thurber executed to the plaintiff" the amount to be paid by the plaintiff to redeem the property was fixed at $68,000, and the rent reserved was the interest on that sum, besides taxes, etc. The $1,000 difference is alleged to constitute usury. The referee finds that the plaintiff did not agree to pay this sum to Thurber for the loan of his money, but that he assented to its allowance under the belief that it was an expense incurred by Thurber, and on his representation that he had to pay that sum to procure a mortgage loan of the $35,000 payable on the purchase of the property.- In fact Thurber did not incur that expense. He arranged with the defendant Smith to borrow of him $35,000 on mortgage on the property, but this arrangement was subject to the condition that if Smith should need the money for another purchase for which he was at the time negotiating, the loan was to be returned. Smith did make the other purchase, and Thurber returned him the $35,000, never having paid the $1,000 in question. There was no agreement between the parties which authorized Thurber to charge the plaintiff with the $1,000 under these circumstances. If he had collected this $1,000 from the plaintiff, suppressing the fact that he had not paid it, it would have been a clear fraud upon the plaintiff, but would not have constituted usury. To constitute usury it must be shown that the additional interest is paid or retained in pursuance of a mutual agreement between the parties, (Guggenheimer v. Geiszler, 81 N. Y. 293.)

On the argument in this court, the transaction is claimed to be usurious on the further ground that the $20,000 of indebtedness included in Thurber’s lien on the property consisted in part of advances made by him under an agreement dated October 6, 1870, whereby H. K. Thurber & Co. agreed to ad *557 vanee to the plaintiff $5,000, at seven per cent interest, for three years, for the purpose of buying machinery and ovens to manufacture fancy London biscuit. This agreement stated that as an inducement to Thurber & Co. to loan said money, the plaintiff agreed that they should be the sole agents in New York city of the product of such machinery and ovens, and should have, over and above the greatest discount given to any other person or firm, a further discount of five "per cent; meaning that they should have the goods sold by them five per cent lower than any other person or firm. It is now claimed that this agreement was .usurious, and that its vice infects the entire security held by the defendants.

No such claim appears to have been made on the trial or in the court below. The complaint was twice amended, and avers that the charge of $1,000 was usurious, but makes no such charge in respect to the agreement of October 6. This agreement was properly and necessarily put in evidence as a part of the history of the transactions between the parties, but although there were over forty requests on the part of the plaintiff, there is no finding or request to find, either as matter of fact or law, that this agreement was usurious. It is too late now to raise the point for the first time, and we will not, therefore, discuss it. We conclude that the complaint in the first action was properly dismissed.

The second action is of a different character, and is in the nature of an action of trespass for taking and carrying away chattels of the plaintiff, and for damages for wrongfully entering upon his premises, cutting down his chimneys, building an additional story on the building occupied by him as a bakery, erecting a building upon a vacant lot adjoining, and so negligently carrying on such building operations as to injure his business and his stock and utensils, and cause his store and bakery to be flooded by rain water, etc.

It appears that the defendant Thurber, in pursuance of his arrangement with the plaintiff to buy in the property, took a deed thereof from the referee on the foreclosure sale, on the 4th of March, 1871. The property consisted of a building on *558 the south-easterly corner of Elm place and Fulton street in the city of Brooklyn, which the plaintiff had for several years occupied as a bakery, and three vacant lots adjoining, on the southerly side of Fulton street. The plaintiff had on said premises a large amount of machinery, ovens, etc., including those which had been purchased with the funds of the defendant Thurber, advanced for the purpose, under the agreement of October 6, 1870. By this agreement Thurber was to have a lien on all machinery purchased with his advances. At the time of taking the referee’s deed (March 4, 1871), Thurber also took a bill of sale from the plaintiff, of the machinery, etc., on the premises, and all the tools then in use in the bakery. He, on the same day, executed a lease to the plaintiff of the real estate, and the fixtures and machinery thereon, which contained a clause that the plaintiff would permit Thurber, or any person by his order, to enter upon the three vacant lots and build upon or improve them as he might at any time desire. This lease also provided that the covenant therein contained to sell the property to the plaintiff should be void and of no effect if any payment .for rent, taxes, assessments, etc., should remain in arrear for thirty days.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.Y. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-v-thurber-ny-1881.