Walz v. Muir

218 A.D. 495, 218 N.Y.S. 529, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5965
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 3, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 218 A.D. 495 (Walz v. Muir) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walz v. Muir, 218 A.D. 495, 218 N.Y.S. 529, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5965 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Burr, J.

Plaintiff brings this action for money had and received to recover the sum of $2,450.27 from the defendants and alleges in his complaint that on or about May 14, 1919, defendants and plaintiff entered into a contract whereby it was mutually agreed that the defendants should purchase for the account of the plaintiff United States Victory four and three-fourths per cent notes of 1923, of the par value of $50,000 and would advance and loan to the plaintiff the purchase price of the same, on the same terms and at the same rates of interest as charged by the New York Trust Company, to wit, interest at the rate of four and three-quarters per cent per annum, for a period of ninety days, with the privilege in the 'plaintiff to renew the same for a further period of ninety days at the same rate, and interest thereafter to be at the rate of six per cent per annum, with no commissions, brokerage or other charges whatsoever; the plaintiff meanwhile, and until the loan was paid, .pledging as collateral the bonds so purchased, together with other additional Liberty bonds of the aggregate par value of $10,000.

That thereafter, and on or about December 2, 1920, the said loan was collected by the defendants, and the sum of $54,935.93 received by them thereupon.

That after payment of said loan, together with all interest accruing to the defendants under the said contract, there remained in the hands of the defendants a balance of $2,450.27 belonging to this plaintiff, payment of which plaintiff has demanded of the defendants, but no part thereof has been paid.

That the thus reserving, taking and receiving from plaintiff the said sum of $2,450.27 in excess of the amount agreed as aforesaid, was in direct violation and breach of the contract between the plaintiff and defendants set forth above, and the plaintiff was [497]*497damaged thereby in the said sum of $2,450.27, payment of which the plaintiff has demanded of the defendants, but no part thereof has been paid.

That plaintiff has duly performed all the terms, conditions and promises of said contract on his part.

The defendants by their answer admit that on or about May 14, 1919, the defendants and the plaintiff entered into a contract whereby it was mutually agreed that the defendants should purchase for the account of the plaintiff United States Victory four and three-fourths per cent notes of 1923 of the par value of $50,000 and would advance and loan to the plaintiff the purchase price of the same and charge interest on said loan at the rate of four and three-' fourths per cent per annum for a period of ninety days, with the privilege to the plaintiff to renew the same for a period of ninety days at the same rate, and that the plaintiff meanwhile, and until the loan was paid, pledged as collateral security the bonds so purchased, together with other additional Liberty bonds of the aggregate par value of $10,000. They deny the other allegations of the complaint and set up as a separate and distinct defense that on or about the 2d day of December, 1920, an account was stated between the parties wherein and whereby it was found that the plaintiff was indebted to defendants by reason of said loan in the sum of $54,935.93; that plaintiff paid said sum and received back the collateral pledged and thus settled and adjusted all matters in controversy between plaintiff and defendants.

The agreement claimed by plaintiff was clearly established by the evidence. No witness was called by defendants to contradict the testimony as to the making of the agreement, and likewise no witness was called to contradict the testimony that protests were made against the overcharge and against the failure of defendants to live up to the terms of the agreement prior to the transfer of the account in December, 1920.

The court charged the jury: If you resolve the facts in favor of the plaintiff and shall find that the contract was made as claimed by him, then you may find a verdict in his favor for the sum of $2,422.72, that being the amount of interest the plaintiff claims was charged him in excess of the six per cent after the expiration of the one hundred and eighty days, in addition to $642 interest on that sum; or $3,064.72.”

The jury passed on the evidence and found a verdict for the plaintiff for that amount. Thereupon the court set aside the verdict on defendants’ motion over plaintiff’s exception and directed a verdict for defendants and denied plaintiff’s motion for a new [498]*498trial, to which the plaintiff duly excepted. The evidence as to the making of the agreement stands uncontradicted and was amply sufficient to justify a finding by the jury that the agreement as claimed by plaintiff was made.

Defendants to support their defense of an account stated introduced in evidence certain accounts purporting to show plaintiff’s account at various intervals from 1919 to September, 1920. They do not contain all the items of the account and are not the same in items or balance as defendants’ final statement of December, 1920, which shows the whole account. Defendants endeavored to show that these accounts were received by plaintiff. In view of the plaintiff’s denial that he had ever seen any statements showing an overcharge of interest before he received the final statement of December 2, 1920, and the failure of defendants to offer any evidence of mailing or any other evidence to show that said statements were actually sent by defendants and received by plaintiff, it was a question for the jury to determine, and the court so charged.

The statements of account were produced in court from the files of plaintiff’s former attorney, who died before the trial, and, although there was some evidence that plaintiff turned over certain papers to his attorney, there was no evidence that any of these accounts were among the papers so turned over. These statements of account were shown to plaintiff by defendants’ counsel, and, after examining them, plaintiff testified he could not identify them as papers he had ever received. They were not produced as statements received by plaintiff, but merely as papers from the files of plaintiff’s former attorney. The plaintiff’s address as given in the subscription form appears to be % Herkins, 61 Broadway, which is the defendants’ address. It is also in evidence that Herkins resigned from defendants’ firm in October, 1919. Certainly the evidence permitted of conflicting inferences and the jury might properly find that these statements of account were not received by plaintiff. Their verdict for plaintiff indicated that they so found.

If the agreement was made between the parties for six per cent interest as claimed and proved by plaintiff, defendants could not change that rate of interest at will by sending statements to plaintiff containing excess interest charges. Nor would the receipt of such statements obligate plaintiff to protest said excess interest charges. No consideration for any interest charges in excess of the six per cent agreed upon was shown by defendants. The charge of twelve per cent interest was clearly an overcharge directly contrary to the terms of the agreement and, therefore, improper and illegal.

Where there is an express contract for the payment of interest, [499]*499the law will not imply from an account rendered another and wholly different agreement for the same purpose.

As was said by Allen, J., in Young v. Hill (67 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
218 A.D. 495, 218 N.Y.S. 529, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walz-v-muir-nyappdiv-1926.