Nagin v. Long Island Savings Bank

114 Misc. 2d 61, 450 N.Y.S.2d 725, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3435
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 114 Misc. 2d 61 (Nagin v. Long Island Savings Bank) 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
Nagin v. Long Island Savings Bank, 114 Misc. 2d 61, 450 N.Y.S.2d 725, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3435 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Howard E. Levitt, J.

Motion and cross motions for summary judgment are disposed of as hereinafter set forth.

[62]*62Plaintiffs, owners of a condominium residence at The Greens of North Hills, located in North Hills, New York, seek to invalidate as allegedly usurious, a mortgage note and mortgage in the principal amount of $80,000 and bearing interest at the rate of 10%% per annum, which was executed in favor of defendant Long Island Savings Bank to secure a mortgage loan made in connection with said purchase. Plaintiffs initially sought class action status in order to represent other similarly situated borrowers. The-class action motion was denied by this court on June 17, 1981 because a statutory penalty was sought for alleged usury (Carter v Frito-Lay,, 74 AD2d 550). However, the defendant’s cross motion for permission to add other similarly situated parties as “additional parties on counterclaim” was granted.

The Long Island Savings Bank, the defendant herein, a savings bank duly organized under the laws of the State of New York, cross-moves for summary judgment, dismissing the complaint of the plaintiffs, and the cross claims of certain of the additional parties in this action which seek to invalidate, as allegedly usurious, 38 mortgage loans made by the bank to them as purchasers of the subject condominiums.

The predicate for the plaintiffs’ action, joined in by the cross motions for summary judgment of certain of the additional parties, is the since repealed subdivision 10 of section 14-a of the Banking Law, a statute which allowed the permissible mortgage rate in New York to rise periodically from the then long-standing 8%% limit to a maximum rate prescribed by the New York State Banking Board. That statute, however, limited to 81/2% the maximum interest rate charged upon mortgage loans for which either a “commitment” was issued and “executory” prior to December 8, 1978, or for which a “completed application” was submitted within the preceding 120-day period.

The statute provides in relevant part: “[T]he rate of interest so charged, taken or received on any loan or forbearance secured primarily by an interest in real property improved by a one-to-six family residence which is to be occupied by the owner * * * with respect to which a written commitment shall have been issued and is execu[63]*63tory prior to December eighth, nineteen hundred seventy-eight, shall be deemed to be the rate specified in the letter of commitment but in no event shall such rate exceed eight and one-half per centum per annum * * * and on any such loan or forbearance for which a completed application was submitted not more than one hundred twenty days prior to December eighth, nineteen hundred seventy-eight shall be deemed to be the prevailing rate of interest fixed by law at the time the application was submitted regardless of whether a commitment at a higher rate of interest was issued, but in no event shall such rate exceed eight and one-half per centum per annum”. (L 1979, ch 7, § 1; emphasis added.)

This statute was repealed by section 2 of chapter 883 of the Laws of 1980. Thus, because of its extremely short life, the courts of New York have not until now been required to construe it with reference to expired commitments obtained prior to December 8, 1978 or to applications filed within 120 days before that date.

For the following reasons the court grants summary judgment to the defendant dismissing the plaintiffs’ complaints and denies plaintiffs’ motions accordingly.

The plaintiffs and the 37 sets of mortgagors joined by the bank’s supplemental summons and amended answer, are purchasers of condominium residences at The Greens, for whom mortgage loans were made by the bank. As to each of the affected mortgagors, initial commitment agreements were either issued and executory prior to December 8, 1978, or a completed application had been filed within a 120-day period prior to that date. As to all of the mortgagors, however, whose initial commitments were for terms of approximately one year (tied to the estimated date of closing of title) each of these commitments expired before the loans were consummated because of construction delays which plagued the sponsor-developer of The Greens. Concededly, the bank had no responsibility for the delays. Consequently, as the uncontroverted documentary evidence submitted upon this motion discloses, the mortgage loans of the plaintiffs and of the additional mortgagors joined as defendants, were consummated pursuant to various types of extension agreements or completely new com[64]*64mitment agreements between the bank and the borrowers, at rates between 10 and 11%, the maximum legal rate in force in New York at the time of each loan closing.

Contending that the bank was legally proscribed from closing the mortgage loans at rates in excess of 8V2% per year, notwithstanding the expiration of the commitments, the plaintiffs and the additional mortgagors argue that the mortgage transactions are usurious under former subdivision 10 of section 14-a of the Banking Law entitling them to the imposition of the draconian penalties found in section 5-511 of the General Obligations Law which (in the case of a savings bank such as the defendant herein) require a forfeiture of all interest payable during the 30-year mortgage loan term, plus a penalty equal to twice the interest already paid under the mortgage loan, a forfeiture herein of an aggregate of approximately nine million in interest over the term of the mortgages, plus a further penalty of approximately $600,000.

Relying solely on a strict reading of the statute (Banking Law, § 14-a, former subd 10), which was enacted shortly after the original commitments herein, the plaintiffs and the additional parties contend that, notwithstanding the expiration of their mortgage loan commitments caused by an inability to timely close, they enjoyed an “indefinite” and “indefeasible” right to mortgage loans at an interest rate of 8.5%. They urge that a perpetual, noncancelable right to mortgage loans at an interest rate of 8.5% was created that survived the expiration of their commitments. They argue that because they originally obtained commitments prior to December 8, 1978 or applied for commitments within 120 days prior to that date, the bank was forever bound to fund their mortgage loans at that rate.

The intent of the Legislature is the primary object sought in the interpretation of statutes (Rankin v Shanker, 23 NY2d 111), and whenever such intention is apparent it must be followed in construing the statute (Matter of River Brand Rice Mills v LaTrobe Brewing Co., 305 NY 36) in order to promote the spirit, purpose and objects to be accomplished (Matter of Martinez v Ficano, 28 AD2d 215).

Let us look at the legislative intendment of the statute. An extraordinary session of the New York State Senate [65]*65was called on December 7, 1978. In a message of necessity to the Senate, the Governor recommended that the Banking Law be amended to prescribe a gradual increase in the allowable rates of interest charged by lending institutions on residential mortgage loans in order to improve the availability of mortgage money (transcript of Senate debate, Dec. 7, 1978, p 1). At that time the prime rate was approximately 20% while the maximum mortgage rate was 8.5%. Families wishing to purchase homes were summarily rejected by lending institutions which literally could not afford to extend mortgage loans at the current rate.

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Related

Nagin v. Long Island Savings Bank
99 A.D.2d 827 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
114 Misc. 2d 61, 450 N.Y.S.2d 725, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nagin-v-long-island-savings-bank-nysupct-1982.