Saxe v. Womack

66 N.W. 269, 64 Minn. 162, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 7, 1896
DocketNos. 9661-(277)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 66 N.W. 269 (Saxe v. Womack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saxe v. Womack, 66 N.W. 269, 64 Minn. 162, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 84 (Mich. 1896).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

Action upon a promissory note secured by a mortgage. Defense, usury. The court below, trying the case without a jury, found against defendants, and from an order denying'a new trial they appeal.

Stated as briefly as possible, the controlling facts are these: Plaintiff, a nonresident, had made a few loans in the city of St. Paul, taking real-estate security. One Griggs collected interest and principal for him as it became due, remitting as collected. Through •the foreclosure of a mortgage given to secure the payment of one >of these loans, plaintiff, in 1893, became the owner of five unimproved and unproductive city lots, in which he had thus invested about $1,300. It had always been represented to him by Griggs and others that these lots were worth the amount invested. He [163]*163came to St. Paul in the summer of 1893, and then learned that because of the depression in values, and the stringency in money matters, the lots could not be sold for $1,300; but, from information received, he did believe that their fair market value was $1,000, and that a sale for that sum might be made. He was exceedingly anxious to dispose of them, that the proceeds might be invested so as to draw interest, and authorized Griggs to make a loan of money in connection with the sale at $1,300, if such a loan would induce and secure a purchaser. The court found that, because of the depression and stringency before mentioned, these lots could not have then been sold, nor could they have since been sold, for a sum exceeding $500, and that this was their fair market value, and that Griggs knew this, but concealed it from plaintiff. The court also found that at all times plaintiff believed that, by waiting for a revival in- business, the lots could be disposed of so that his investment would be made good. Thereafter defendants applied to Griggs to procure a loan for them of $5,000, to be secured by a mortgage upon certain real property; proposing to pay him what his services were reasonably worth, if he should succeed. Griggs submitted the application to plaintiff, and it was finally agreed that, although defendants did not want to buy the lots, and, upon personal inspection, thought the price too high, plaintiff should loan the $5,000, and defendants should purchase the lots at $1,300, and that for the total sum, $6,300, defendants should give their note bearing 7 per cent, interest, secured by the mortgage before mentioned. The defendants duly executed and delivered to Griggs two separate notes, each secured by a mortgage upon separate tracts of land, while plaintiff conveyed the lots by deed to defendant Pattie C. Womack. Plaintiff was then a married man, but concealed the fact from defendants, and his wife did not join in the deed. The action was upon one of these notes, and, as before stated, the trial court found that the transaction was not tainted with usury.

We are of the opinion that the order denying defendants’ motion for a new trial must be affirmed, and, for the purpose of disposing of the case, shall assume that Griggs’ knowledge of the market value of the lots, and that they could not be sold for more than $500, must be imputed to plaintiff. We therefore proceed upon the [164]*164assumption that because of the stringency of the money market, and the depression in real-estate values, the plaintiff had been informed that the lots could not be presently sold for a sum exceeding $500, although it was his belief that in time he could sell for enough to cover and make good all that he had invested. It is well to say here, because of the low rate of interest agreed upon, and the length of time given for payment of the $6,300, that a usurious contract could not have been founded on this feature of the transaction, if the market value of the lots had actually exceeded the sum of $865. In this case the burden rested, as it does in all cases of this character, upon the party asserting the transaction to have been usurious, to show it. It is not a necessary inference from the fact that plaintiff compelled defendants to purchase his property, or because his price was greater than the actual market value. Whether the purchase of property, in connection with a loan, as a part of the consideration and an inducement therefor, is in fact a cover for usury, must ordinarily be determined as a question of fact. Stein v. Swensen, 46 Minn. 360, 49 N. W. 55. And while it is true that proof of any great discrepancy between the actual value and the pretended purchase price of property frequently characterizes the nature of the transaction, and serves to establish it as nothing but a device to evade the usury law, the effect is not conclusive by any means. Lewis v. Willoughby, 43 Minn. 307, 45 N. W. 439.

The case of Bank of United States v. Waggener, 9 Pet. 378, is a leading case, and is specially in point here. The facts were that a loan of $5,000 was negotiated at full legal interest, on condition that the borrower should accept $1,100 of the amount in depreciated bank notes, at their par value, although their current value was only 60 or 70 per cent, of the par value. After laying down some general rules in respect to usurious contracts, the court said:2 “The case, then, resolves itself into this inquiry: Whether, upon the evidence, there was any corrupt agreement or device, or shift, to reserve or take usury ; and in this aspect of the case, the quo animo, as well as the acts of the parties, is most important. * * * Such an exchange is not per se illegal, though it may be so if it [165]*165is a mere shift or device to cover usury. * *' * Because an article is depreciated in the market, it does not follow that the owner is not entitled to demand or require a higher price for it before he consents to part with it.” “In our opinion, the instruction * * * ought not to have been given. It * * * puts the bar to the recovery * * * substantially upon the ground that the bank notes loaned were a known depreciated currency, * * * and were passed at their nominal amounts by the plaintiffs to the defendants.” This last remark was in reference to an instruction to the jury in the trial court, and a verdict for defendants was reversed because the instruction was erroneous. Another case in point is that of Thurston v. Cornell, 38 N. Y. 281, where it was said that no one questions but that the price of property sold in good faith may be included in the same security with money loaned, and also that the fact that the price was large, and more than it might have been sold for, does not necessarily condemn the transaction as usurious. See, also, Chase v. New York M. L. Co., 49 Minn. 111, 51 N. W. 816.

Now, let us examine the facts in this case. Plaintiff was not a dealer in real estate, but had a few thousand dollars loaned out in the city of St. Paul. He was a young man, just about to commence the practice of law at his place of residence in the East. He was in great need of the income which came from his loans as the annual interest, and, from the evidence, it quite clearly appears that his agent had not made the best of investments. His interest was not being paid when due, and the letters from Griggs to him show that the former was endeavoring to smooth matters over, and was concealing the fact that the loans made were not first-class. Through a foreclosure the lots in question became plaintiff’s property, and he realized that they would greatly increase the unpleasantness of his condition. He believed that in time the lots would prove a remunerative investment at what they cost, $1,300, although, attributing to him his agent’s knowledge, he knew that their present market value did not exceed $500.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 N.W. 269, 64 Minn. 162, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saxe-v-womack-minn-1896.