Schroeppel v. Corning

5 Denio 236
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 5 Denio 236 (Schroeppel v. Corning) 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
Schroeppel v. Corning, 5 Denio 236 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1848).

Opinion

Beardsley, Ch. J.

Without looking at the cloud of points made in this case, there is one objection which seems to me entirely fatal to the action. The usurious contract, if such was the true character of the agreement between these parties, was made on or shortly previous to the tenth of July, 1837. By that agreement the defendant, among other things, was to advance to the plaintiff, by way of loan or payment, the sum of $7,500, the plaintiff, on. his part, agreeing to assign and deliver to the defendant, as his own property, or by way of security for the amount to be paid by the plaintiff, the bonds and mortgages for which this action was brought. This agreement was fully consummated on said tenth of July, the money being then advanced and the securities assigned and delivered as agreed between the parties; but the present action was not commenced until October term, 1844, more than seven years after the bargain had been executed in the manner stated,. [240]*240Now, conceding, as the plaintiff insists, that this transaction was usurious, so that the • defendant thereby acquired no right whatever to these .securities, still if what the defendant did at the consummation of the agreement, amounted to a conversion of them, the statute of limitations would seem to present an insuperable obstacle to a recovery in this case.

A conversion of property is an act of malfeasance, not of mere nonfeasance; a positive wrong and not the mere omission of what was right. The manner in which possession of the property was acquired by the defendant in an action of trover, may be material with regard to the evidence of a conversion, for if the possession was rightful, some tortious use or disposition of the property, or a demand and refusal to deliver it, must be shown. But if possession was acquired wrongfully, that is always sufficient without a demand and refusal, or other evidence of a conversion. A wrongful taking or assumption of a right to control or dispose of property, constitutes a conversion. Indeed, any wrongful act which negatives or is inconsistent with the plaintiff’s right, is per se a conversion. It is not necessary that the defendant should have made use of the property in any way. Does he exercise a dominion over it in exclusion, or in defiance of the plaintiff’s right? If he does, that is in law a conversion, be it for his own or another person’s use." (Bristol v. Burt, 7 John. 254; Fouldes v. Willoughby, 8 M. & W. 540 ; 1 Ch. Pl. ed. of 1837, p. 176; 2 Stark. Ev. part 2, ed. of 1842, p. 1155 ; 2 Leigh's N. P. 1477.)

The contract upon which these securities were received by the defendant being usurious, was wholly void, and he thereby acquired no right to them. (1 R. S. 772, § 5.) Nor was his possession, although by manual delivery from the plaintiff, a rightful possession. On the contrary, it was not only acquired in violation of positive law, but, as respects the plaintiff, was compulsory and oppressive. The law regards whatever is done to obtain money on usurious terms, not as a voluntary act, but as the direct result of constraint and violence on the part of the usurer. The borrower on such terms is the slave of the lender; nay more, a slave in chains, and utterly incapable of resistance. [241]*241As to the usurer, every thing is held to be oppressive-and tyran. nical, to which an unresisting and passive submission is yielded;! by his victim. It is on this principle alone that the law gives* redress to one who submits to usurious exactions He is not. looked upon as a free agent, nor as a violator of the law; and J to such a case the maxims, volenti non Jit injuria, and, in pari delicto potior est conditio defendentis, have no application.

“ The law,” says Chief Justice Spencer, (Wheaton v. Hibbard, 20 John. 293,) considers the borrower rather as a victim than an aggressor. • The statute prohibits usury, in order to protect needy and necessitous persons from the oppression of usurers, . who are eager to take advantage of the distresses of others, and who violate the law only to complete their ruin. In such a case the maxim of potior est conditio defendentis has never been applied.” “ It would be absurd,” says the late Mr. Justice Story, “to apply the maxim volenti non fit injuria, to the case of a man who from mere necessity pays more than the other can in justice demand, and who has been significatrtly called the slave of the lender. He can in no just sense be said to pay voluntarily. And as to being particeps criminis, he stands in vinculis, and is compelled to submit to the terms which oppression and his necessities impose on him.” (1 Story’s Eq. Juris. 3d ed. § 302; see also Clarke v. Shee, Cowp. 197 ; Holman v. Johnson, id. 341; Browning v. Morris, id. 790; Smith v. Bromley, Doug. 696, note; Bosanquet v. Dashwood, Cas. Temp. Talb. 39; Cowen & Hill’s Notes to 1 Phil. Ev. p. 1447.) These rules and principles are salutary and well settled. It is manifest, therefore, that the securities in question were not delivered to the defendant voluntarily, but were acquired by compulsion and wrong. They were exacted by the defendant for his own use and as his own property, and were held in exclusion and defiance of the plaintiff. In reason and sound sense, sustained by all the authorities on the subject, these acts must be held to constitute an actual conversion of the property. The plaintiff, therefore, might have brought suit on the very day when the securities reached the defendant’s [242]*242hands; but having- waited' more than six years from that time; the statute of limitations-is a bar to a-recovery.

It was urged;.on the argument, that the defendant- acquired', a rightful possession1'of these-securities; as they passed'directly-into his hands by delivery, from the plaintiff himself and therefore that no action would lie. until demand and refusal to re-

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store the property, or something- amounting to an-actual conversion had taken place. The remarks made by Chief Justice Nelson; in deciding the case of Boughton v. Bruce, (20 Wend. 235,) were referred to as authority on this point, and it must be admitted-, that they afford some countenance to the argument. But that' was an action of replevin in the detinet, not trover, as this is. There, may be a difference on this point, between these actions, as there is-in some respects between trespass and trover. But- whether this be so or not, the remarks made in that case cannot be taken as controlling in an action of trover.

Tregoning v. Attenborough, (7 Bing. 97,) was an action of trover for goods deposited.to secure a usurious loan. It does not appear from, the report of. the case that any demand had been made, nor was the objection taken ; the only point left"to the jury was whether, the . goods- had been deposited on a contract-to pay more than.the legal rate ofinterest for money adnanced, which the jury found- was the fact, and the plaintiff had a verdict. This was-in the court of common.pleas, and a-subsequent case of the-same character-in the king’s bench was disposed of in the same way, no objection being- taken that a demand of. the property had. not been- made; (Hargreaves v. Hutchinson, 2 Adol. & Ellis, 12.)

At common law.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Denio 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schroeppel-v-corning-nysupct-1848.