Smith v. . Cross

90 N.Y. 549, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 422
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 90 N.Y. 549 (Smith v. . Cross) 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
Smith v. . Cross, 90 N.Y. 549, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 422 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Earl, J.

This action was brought to foreclose a mortgage of $5,000, dated August 24, 1872, and the defense interposed by Moses H. Cross and Mary J. Cross was usury. The facts so far as now material are as follows : For several years prior to the date of the mortgage, Moses H. Cross and Samuel Wilson were engaged in business as partners, and as such partners they had for several years owned the real estate covered by the mortgage. At the date of' the mortgage Wilson executed a quit-claim deed of his interest in the real estate to Cross, and at the same time Cross executed to him the mortgage in question to secure the payment of $5,000, in five years from' the *552 date thereof. It was recited in the mortgage, that the money secured thereby was for the purchase-price of the premises described in the mortgage. On the 26th day of August, Gross and Wilson both signed a statement, in which Cross, the mortgagor, consented to the assignment of the mortgage by Wilson to Timothy Smith, and represented that it was a good and valid security, given for a good and valid consideration, not made for the purpose of raising money, and that there was no usury in, or defense, to the same; and in which Wilson represented that the mortgage was made for a good and valid consideration, and not for the purpose of raising money, and that there was no defense to the same. On the same day Wilson executed an assignment of the mortgage to Smith, in which he guaranteed the collection thereof and that there was no defense thereto. On the same day the bond and mortgage with the statement signed by Wilson and Cross, and the assignment, were delivered to Smith, and he paid Wilson therefor the sum of $4,500. Thereafter in the month of August, 1873, Smith died, leaving a last will and testament, in which the plaintiffs were named as executors. In August, 1875, the executors assigned the bond and mortgage to one McCartin, and he on the same day assigned the same to the plaintiffs.

Upon these facts, standing alonefit would not be disputed that the plaintiffs had a good title to the mortgage and that the defense of usury could not prevail. On the face of all these papers the mortgage had a legal, valid inception, and Smith could purchase the same at any discount which the mortgagee would consent to.

But facts are now to be stated upon which the defense of usury is based. The defendants claim, that at the date of the mortgage Cross and Wilson were pecuniarily embarrassed, and desired to borrow money, and that they applied to Smith to loan them $5,000, to be secured by a mortgage to be executed by them upon the firm real estate; that Smith required that one of the partners should deed the real estate to the other, and the grantee should give back to the grantor a mortgage for $5,000, and promised that then he would cash the mortgage *553 for the sum of $4,500, and that the deed, mortgage, written statement and assignment were all made and executed to carry out that scheme; and that the money was paid over in pursuance thereof by Smith to one of the members of the firm, and used and applied in payment of the firm debts.

If, by his deed, Wilson actually divested himself of all interest in the real estate, and vested the absolute title thereto in Cross, so that the sale was effectual between them, and if the mortgage was actually given to secure the purchase-money, so that Wilson could hold the mortgage against Cross, and enforce it against the real estate, then the mortgage had a valid inception, no matter what the motive for the execution of the deed and mortgage was. Smith had the right to insist that he would not loan the firm any money upon their mortgage, and that a sale should take place, and a mortgage thus be created which he could buy at any rate of discount the parties could agree upon. To illustrate: if A. applies to B. for the loan of money, B. may refuse to loan, and say to A. that he must procure a valid mortgage which he can buy at a discount, and he may suggest to A. that he might sell his real estate to C. and get a mortgage from C., and that he would then buy the mortgage at a discount. If A., in pursuance of the suggestion and scheme, actually sells his real estate to C. and takes a valid legal mortgage from C., that mortgage has a valid inception and is subject to sale and traffic like any other chose in action. If that was the transaction between Wilson and Cross then there was no usury in this mortgage, and the defense must fail on that ground.

But if the conveyance from Wilson to Cross was a mere form, and Cross, after the conveyance, still held the title to the property for the firm, the real estate actually still belonging to the firm, and if this mortgage was executed for the firm simply for the purpose of raising money, and all this was done at the instigation of Smith, or if this was all known by Smith to be the actual state of the facts, then it was in effect a loan to the firm upon the mortgage of the firm, the mortgage having no inception until it passed into the hands of Smith. Then it *554 was, in substance and effect, a lending of money upon the firm mortgage; and the mortgage, notwithstanding the written representations which were made, was subject to the defense of usury. If these were the facts, and if this is the view to be taken of the case (and it is the only view which will enable the defendants to interpose the defense of usury), then Wilson, after his formal conveyance to Cross, still, as a member of the-firm, retained some interest in the real estate. As said by Mr. Justice Johnson in De Wolf v. Johnson (10 Wheat. 385), “Usury is a mortal taint wherever it exists, and no subterfuge shall be permitted to conceal it from the eye of the law.”

There is another view of the facts of this case which it is possible to take. The facts may have been as last supposed, and yet Smith, relying upon the written statements of Cross and Wilson, may have believed that they were as- first supposed, and in that case Cross and Wilson, and all persons holding under them, would be estopped from alleging the usury.

In June, 1873, Cross and his wife conveyed the real estate to one Maltby by a deed containing covenants of warranty; but the deed was in fact intended to secure Maltby for certain liabilities for indorsements which he had assumed for Cross. Prior to'August 1, 1875, Cross had discharged those liabilities, so that Maltby had no further claim upon the deed, and simply held the title in trust for Cross, and on that day, at the request of Cross, he executed a deed, with full covenants of warranty, conveying the premises to Mrs. Cross free and clear from all incumbrances except the mortgage in question, which Mrs. Cross assumed and agreed to pay, as a part of the purchase-money. On the day before this case was tried, Wilson executed a quit-claim deed to Mrs. Cross of all his interest in the real estate.

Upon the trial to prove the usurious arrangement, the defendants called one Perkins, who testified that he knew Smith, and that in 1872 he was the book-keeper for Cross & Wilson; that some two or three weeks before the transfer of the mortgage to him, he, Smith, talked with the witness, and said the firm wanted to borrow some money; that they proposed to give a *555

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.Y. 549, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-cross-ny-1882.