Thurston v. . Cornell

38 N.Y. 281, 7 Trans. App. 258
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 38 N.Y. 281 (Thurston v. . Cornell) 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
Thurston v. . Cornell, 38 N.Y. 281, 7 Trans. App. 258 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

Dwight, J.

The act forbidden by the statute as usury, and which vitiates all contracts into which it enters, is defined to be the reserving or taking of any greater sum or value than seven per cent, for the loan or forbearance of money. The rule is simple : its application, depending, as it does, upon the facts of each particular case, is sometimes involved in difficulty.

*260 In this case, there being a direct conflict between the evidence of the Plaintiff and that of the Defendant, Cornell, upon the material facts, and the jury having found in favor of the former, the facts must be taken to be as testified to by her. We have, then, in brief, the following case presented: The Defendant, Cornell, a stranger to the Plaintiff, procures himself to be introduced to her; finds her sick in bed; and proposes to borrow $400, offering satisfactory security; the Plaintiff has but about half the desired 'amount on hand, and when it is suggested that she has money due her in a neighboring village, she admits that she has, but says it is in good and safe hands, and that she does not wish to change it'; the Defendant urges his pressing necessities, appeals to her to save him from the loss of his property, which he says must ensue if he does not obtain the loan, and offers to compensate her for her trouble and expense if she will go to Waverley and collect in this money in order to loan it to him. She hesitates to undertake the task on account of her ill health, but finally consents to make the effort for five per cent, on the amount. She goes to Waverley three times, hiring a conveyance ea'ch time; sends a messenger twice; collects money from four different persons; is compelled to resort to borrowing to maleé up the full amount, and to apply to several persons before obtaining the loan ; and then finally completed the amount to be loaned to Cornell.

Her health having been injuriously affected by the travel and exertion involved in the business, which was more than she anticipated when she undertook it, she calls Cornell’s attention to that fact, and suggests she ought to have increased compensation. Cornell admits the justice of the claim, and consents to increase the compensation to six per cent. The money is paid him, less the compensation agreed upon ($21.50), and the note is taken for the full amount, with interest.

The Plaintiff testifies, under objection, that her intention in stipulating for this sum reserved was to get compensation for her trouble and expenses in running about and collecting and borrowing the money, and that she did not take it for the use or forbearance of the money loaned.

*261 The Court was asked, upon this evidence, to, direct a verdict for the Defendant, on the ground that, as matter of law,, the defenceof usury was. established, and the question is fairly presented- by the refusal of the Court so to direct a verdict, as also, by the charge, of the Court, aud the several refusals to charge, whether the, lender- of money may lawfully receive from the borrower a reasonable compensation, in excess of interest,, for services, and expenditures in procuring-t-he money to be.loaned, provided the services were performed and the expenditures incurred at the request of the-borrower, and upon his, express promise to pay therefor.

"Upon- this question there can be no doubt.. -The. compensation-thus received is distinct from that agreed to be paid for- tlie: loan or forbearance of the money. The latter is interest, and cannot, lawfully exceed seven per cent.; the former is a stipulated price for work, labor, and services done and performed,, and for money paid, laid out, and expended. As such it constitutes a distinct demand, which might he recovered* in a separate action if not included in, the security taken for the principal debt, Indeed, in this case, there is no doubt, it might have been recovered in. an action on the agreement, if the principal debt had not. been increased ; as if, for any-reason, the Defendant had declined to accept the loan after the money had been raised for him by the Plaintiff.

In Harger v. McCullough (2 Denio, 119), a creditor had made a journey at the. request of the debtor, and upon his promise to pay for the trouble and. expense. For the purpose of effecting a settlement of the claim, a bill of exchange was taken in liquidation of the demand, in which was included, besides the amount of the debt, the sum- agreed upon- for the expenses of the creditor’s journey. The defence of usury was interposed, to. an action on the bill. The Court),by Brorrson, Ch.J., said : “There was no usury. It (the sum added to the amount of the debt) was so. much money paid, laid out, and expended for the Defendant, upon request, and was as much a debt as the original demand. It might have been recovered had no. arrangement in relation to. the original debt beenma.de.”- The fact that an arrangement, ostensibly like-that in the present.case,,is often resorted to as adeyice to.cov.er the exac: *262 tian of usury, is no objection to the principle here announced. It is always a question- for the jury, whether the agreement was a lawful or an usurious one. It is a well-known practice of money-lenders to attempt to cover usurious transactions by selling property of nominal value to the borrower, and including a substantial price therefor in the security taken for the loan. The device fails, where it is seen to be such, but no one questions that the price of property sold in good faith may be included in the same security with money loaned.

It is simply a question for the jury whether the sale was boná fide, and the price agreed upon was the actual value of the property, or whether the transaction was a mere device for obtaining usurious interest. (Rose v. Dickson, 7 Johns. 196.) And the fact that the price of the property was large, and more than it might have been obtained for, does not necessarily condemn the transaction as usurious. The question is as to the intent of the parties. (Sizer v. Miller, 1 Hill, 227.) And this might be true cause if the sale of the property was insisted upon as a condition of making the loan. In the numerous cases where the owners of real estate in growing communities cut it up into lots, and offer to purchasers to loan them money to be expended in improvements, the sale of the lots is a condition of the loan; but even though the price thus obtained for the property is larger than it would have brought but for the loan accompanying it, yet, if the transaction be in good faith what is here described, it would be absurd to pronounce it usurious.

So, too, the hiring of services may be made the condition of a loan of money. As where a clerk or salesman, having some capital and seeking employment, makes it a condition of loaning his money that he shall be employed at certain wages. The contract would not be usurious unless it should be found that the price put upon the services was, in fact, intended as a cover for obtaining unlawful interest for the money loaned.

In all these cases we arrive at one result, viz., that the character of the transaction depends upon the intention of the parties, and that is a question for the jury. The rule applies to the case at bar, and *263 the instruction given to the jury was strictly correct.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.Y. 281, 7 Trans. App. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thurston-v-cornell-ny-1868.