Seymour v. Marvin

11 Barb. 80, 1851 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 43
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 11 Barb. 80 (Seymour v. Marvin) 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
Seymour v. Marvin, 11 Barb. 80, 1851 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 43 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1851).

Opinion

By the Court,

Gridley, J.

By the decretal order of reference entered in this cause it was adjudged and decreed that the several accounts current mentioned in the pleadings should be deemed to be prima facie evidence that the items ther.eof, and the charges and discharges, were correct and just. And also that the defendants should be at liberty to falsify and surcharge the said account only in respect to the errors and omissions [82]*82alledged in their answer; and to prove and insist that the contracts and agreements under which the advances of money were made by the several firms, represented by the plaintiffs, were usurious and void ; and that the said advances were nor properly allowable in the accounts between the said parties, for that reason.

In stating the accounts the referee disallowed items in the plaintiffs’ account, which accrued between February 18, 1840, and the 1st of August in that year, found in schedule A., -on pages 184 and 165 of the case, amounting in the aggregate to $8574,66, on the ground of usury.

It appears that Seymour & Wood, the predecessors of the plaintiffs, were commission merchants in Albany, and that the defendants were co-partners, doing business at Oswego; and were dealers in wool, sheep-skins and pelts. And that prior to the 18th day of February, 1840, they had been accustomed to consign wool and skins to the firm of .which the plaintiffs are the successors, to be sold on their account. On that day an agreement was made by the parties, which was held by the referee to be usurious ; in consequence of which the plaintiffs have been adjudged to be incapable of recovering any of the advances made under it. The proposition of the plaintiffs which the defendants alledge was accepted by them and constituted the agreement in question, is in the following words and figures, viz.:

Terms. First. On condition we have the selling of all your wool and skins, we will do it at a commission of 5 per cent, including all charges, except such as we pay out. Second. We will advance, or accept, on two-thirds the value of property put into our hands. Third. We will now advance $2000 in cash for 90 days at 5 per cent commissions. Fourth. Ho draft to be made on property short of, (one at 8 mos. and 8 at 4 mos. the last falling due the first of August,) $6000 in all. Fifth. When your drafts fall due (if not put in funds) we are at liberty to sell the property at the market price to meet the same; or if we advance the money to pay the same, charge 5 per cent on such advances. Feb. 18, 1840. S. &, Wood.”

[83]*83It is a fail* presumption, from the evidence, that this proposition was the result of a negotiation with the defendants as to the terms on which the plaintiffs would receive and sell their wool and skins, and make advances and acceptances on the wool and skins sent forward for sale. It is very clear that this two thousand dollars was not an ordinary loan. It was an “ advance” on the faith of goods to be sent thereafter, and to be paid by a reimbursement out of the proceeds of sales. It was not a loan to be repaid in cash; but it iras an advance as part of an entire agreement by which the plaintiffs were to have the selling of all the defendants’ wool and skins, at a commission of five per cent. It is not called a loan, in the agreement. It was not contemplated that it was to be repaid in money, but it was to be satisfied out of the proceeds of the sales. In truth it has not been insisted, on the argument, that it is to be distinguished from the advances made, or acceptances before the receipt of the proceeds of sales.

I. Now we think that, upon the evidence before us, usury can not be predicated of these advances. It clearly is not usury per se. The transaction is not a loan to be repaid in cash, like an ordinary loan. It is an advance made in the course of a legitimate commission business, where extra charges, on money advanced, are sanctioned by law. Nevertheless it may be a cover and disguise, under the name and pretense of such advances, to get more than seven per cent for a loan of money. In other words, if this was a fair and bona fide transaction in the commission business, then usury can not be predicated of it; but if it was a disguised loan under the cover and in the name of commissions, then it is usurious. This doctrine will be found to be thus settled in Trotter & Douglass v. Curtiss, (19 John. Rep. 161,) in Nourse v. Prime, (7 John. Ch. Rep. 77, 8, 9;) Kitchen v. Barber, (4 Hill, 227 to 236;) The Dry Dock Bank v. The Am. Life Ins. & Trust Co. (3 Comst. Rep. 355 to 359.) It is like the case of a loan of money with the sale of goods, where, on the face of the transaction, it may be fair and bona fide; but where it may be shown to be a disguised loan, by extrinsic evidence. For example, A. may loan to B. $1000 and [84]*84sell him a horse at $500, and take a security for $1500. How B. may assail this transaction, and show the horse to he worth only $100, and that he was imposed on him at the advanced price, as a condition of the loan. So in the case under consideration, before we can pronounce these advances to be usurious we must have some evidence showing that the commissions are exorbitant and unusual. But it is insisted that such evidence exists in this case.

(1.) In Trotter & Douglass v. Curtiss, the plaintiffs charged a commission of two and a half per cent, on the amount of money advanced to meet drafts, where the defendants failed to send produce in time, and interest on the items charged in their account, from the time they became due. But it was proved that the general usage was in accordance with this charge. Chief Justice Spencer, in delivering his opinion, says that there is no pretense for saying that the commission charged by the plaintiff for accepting and paying the defendants’ drafts when the defendant had not funds in their hands, was usurious. He puts his decision on the ground that the commission business was lawful; and that it was only where an exorbitant charge was naade under the color of commissions, showing that the party intended, under that device, to get more than seven per cent for the use of his money, that the claim of usury could be supported. This was precisely like the case at har, except that in the latter there is no proof of usage, and the commission was five per cent instead of two and a half, a distinction which I shall consider under another head. In Nourse v. Prime, (7 John. Ch. Rep. 77, 78,) Chancellor Kent held that half per cent commissions, agreed to by the parties, charged by stock brokers, was not usurious, though there was no evidence of usage. In Suydam v. Westfall, (4 Hill, 214, 224,) a majority of the court expressly approved of the case of Trotter & Douglass v. Curtiss, as an authority, and held a similar agreement free from usury. In Suydam v. Bartle, (10 Paige, 97,) there was no evidence of usage, and the chancellor says that if it were provided in the agreement that an advance should be made, it. would still be a question of fact whether the two and. a half per cent was intend[85]*85ed as a mere shift to cover an usurious premium on such advances as a compensation for the trouble and expense.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Barb. 80, 1851 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seymour-v-marvin-nysupct-1851.