Whitehead v. Heidenheimer

57 A.D. 590, 68 N.Y.S. 704
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 57 A.D. 590 (Whitehead v. Heidenheimer) 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
Whitehead v. Heidenheimer, 57 A.D. 590, 68 N.Y.S. 704 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinions

Rumsey, J.:

The action was brought by Louis Heidenheimer in his lifetime against Charles and Louis Heidenheimer to recover upon eighteen drafts drawn by parties transacting business under the firm name of 'Wilhelm Heidenheimer upon the firm of C. & L. Heidenheimer and accepted by them, of which drafts the plaintiff claimed to be the holder for value. One defense was that all the drafts were void for usury. As to thirteen of the drafts, it was claimed that they were drawn by Wilhelm Heidenheimer upon the firm of C. & L. Heidenheimer and accepted by the drawees for the [592]*592accommodation of the drawers, and that this fact was known to Louis Heidenheimer. ' It was alleged that as to those drafts, Louis Heidenheimer had in his hands securitiés put there by the drawers of the drafts to secure their payment, that he released those securities at the request of the drawers, and for that reason-the accommodation acceptors were discharged.

After the case was at issue, Louis Heidenheimer died, and the action was continued in the name of the present plaintiffs, who were appointed ancillary executors under his will. The court, at the close of the evidence, Ordered a verdict- for the plaintiffs for the full amount of the'drafts, and directed the exceptions to-be heard in the first instance in this court. '

The drawers of the drafts were doing business in Nuremberg, Germany, under the firm name of Wilhelm Heidenheimer. The original plaintiff lived at Frankfort, Germany. The defendants lived in the city of New York, and did business there under the firm name of C. & L. Heidenheimer. There was no dispute that each one of the drafts was drawn in Nuremberg to the order of Louis Heidenheimer and was addressed to the firm of O. & LHeidenheimer in the city of .New York. They were sent by the drawers to Louis Heidenheimer, who remitted to them a certain sum of money on each draft, and he then sent the drafts to 0. & L. Heidenheimer, by whom they were accepted and returned to him. It is not disputed that the amount deducted by Louis Heidenheimer upon each draft was more-than the legal rate of interest either in Germany or in New York, and it was insisted that because of that usurious discount the' drafts were void both by the law of Germany and by the law of New York.'. Whether they were void for usury is the first question -presented upon this motion.

There can be no doubt that when these drafts were drawn it was intended that they should he sent directly to the payee named in them; that whatever money was advanced on the faith of them should be advanced in Germany; that the payee was to forward them to the drawees, and they, after acceptance, were to return ■them to him. It appeared, however, that the drafts were accepted at the place of business of the acceptors in New York and were payable there, and because of that fact it is claimed by the defendants that the drafts are New York drafts, and that, as they were negotiated at [593]*593a rate of interest which would be usurious under the laws of Hew York, they are void in this jurisdiction, and, therefore, the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover upon them.

We do not deem it necessary to enter upon a prolonged discussion of the question of the place whose law applies as to the validity of a contract. It is difficult, if not impossible, to reconcile all the cases on that question to be found in the books. In view, however, of the undisputed facts, that it was understood by the parties that these drafts should be negotiated in Germany; that they were drawn for that purpose; that the money was actually advanced upon them there, we think that as to their validity the law of Germany controls and not the law of Hew York,.although by their terms they were j>ayable in this State. The case is precisely within the rule laid down in the case of Tilden v. Blair (21 Wall. 241). That case seems to have been accepted as settling what law governs negotiable paper made and intended to be used as this paper was. The cases on this subject will be found in volume 8 of Hotes on United States Reports (Rose) at page 416, where the annotator has collected the various cases in which Tilden v. Blair has been considered. It is quite true that the cases of Jewell v. Wright (30 N. Y. 259) and Dickinson v. Edwards (77 id. 573) seem to be adverse to the proposition laid down in Tilden v. Blair, but the later cases of Wayne County Savings Bank v. Low (81 N. Y. 566) and Sheldon v. Haxtun (91 id. 124) have followed it. We do not think it necessary to attempt to reconcile the cases, but simply to say that in our judgment Tilden v. Blair and those cases which follow it must be applied to the case at bar.

The contracts then were German contracts. But the defendants claim that even if the contracts are to be governed by the law of Germany, yet they are usurious under that law. The plaintiffs insist, however, that the transaction was not a loan of money to Wilhelm Heidenheimer by the payee of the drafts, but was a purchase by him of drafts drawn against funds of Wilhelm Heidenheimer in the hands of the drawees, and that, therefore, it was a mere purchase of negotiable paper already having an inception, and whatever might be the price paid for them, there could be no usury. To that the defendants reply that as to five of these drafts the [594]*594•transaction was undoubtedly a loan of money to C. & L. Heidenheimer upon the faith of .them; that the excessive interest was deducted in Germany at the time of the loan, and that, therefore, as to those drafts, if the law of Germany, applies, they were undoubtedly usurious.

As to the other thirteen drafts, there is no dispute that the money was paid directly to Wilhelm Heidenheimer by the plaintiff,-and .that. the drafts were sent by him to the firm of -C. & L. Heidenheimer .for acceptance. It was held by the learned justice in the court below that those drafts were accommodation paper, and the ■ case was decided by him upon that theory. Although that is disputed by the plaintiffs, yet we: are satisfied that the evidence was sufficient, either to warrant that conclusion as a necessary inference or, at least,- to require the question of fact to be submitted to the jury. Upon that point it is necessary only to call attention to the evidence of Edmond Heidenheimer, one of the firm of Wilhelm Heidenheimer, who . was sworn as a witness on behalf of the plaintiffs. He testifies that the transaction between his firm and Louis Heidenheimer, who was his uncle, began by his uncle giving credit to a firm in Hew York of 100,000 marks. That credit terminated in 1888. The firm of Wilhelm-Heidenheimer then applied for that credit of 100,000 marks, and after some negotiation the credit was transferred to that firm. He says that the loans of this 100,000 marks made to the firm of Wilhelm Heidenheimer were represented by drafts drawn by Wilhelm Heidenheimer on the Hew York firm, and that money went to -the firm of Wilhelm Heidenheimer; and he says, further, that the firm of Wilhelm Heidenheimer had and retained the benefit of all these thirteen drafts, and that 0. & L. Heidenheimer had no part of it. That testimony is positive and direct on that subject. It was given by a person who was sworn oh -the part of the plaintiff, and who, so far as appears, had no interest ■ ■in the transaction, and certainly his testimony tending to make him a principal debtor was contrary to his interest. .

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Bluebook (online)
57 A.D. 590, 68 N.Y.S. 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehead-v-heidenheimer-nyappdiv-1901.