55 Mo. App. 656 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
Plaintiff brought this suit by attachment and levied upon a lot of personal property as being the property of defendant. The interpleader herein claimed the property under a chattel mortgage •executed prior to the levy of the attachment. On a trial before the court without a jury, between the inter-pleader and the plaintiff, the interpleader was successful, and plaintiff brings the case here.
It was admitted that interpleader, as mortgagee, had exacted usurious interest which was included in the mortgage. The court gave the following declarations of law, to which plaintiff excepted:
“1. The court finds as a matter of law that, although it is admitted that the mortgage to T. W. Cunningham, interpleader, contains usury and would be illegal and invalid as between the parties, yet the defense of usury is a personal right and cannot be taken advantage of by the plaintiff in this action, The American Rubber Company.
“2. The court finds, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff in this action, The American Rubber Company, not being a party to the mortgage in which the inter-pleader claims the goods therein described, although it is admitted that said mortgage contains usury, yet an attaching creditor, as is the plaintiff, under, the law, is not permitted to make the defense of usury against •said mortgage, as said mortgage is valid, except as to the parties thereto.”
There is no doubt of the correctness of the court’s position in declaring that the defense of usury is the personal privilege of the debtor, which he may waive, and that it is not available to third parties. But, while this is the general rule, there áre certain exceptions or qualifications to it which are recognized by the law. One who is privy in representation, as the executor, or in blood, as the heir, may invoke the plea of usury. These instances are readily recognized as exceptions. They are, however, not the only exceptions. The privy in estate is another. Thus the vendee of the mortgagor (if he has not contracted or accepted his conveyance in recognition of the mortgage) may set up usury against the mortgagee. Jones on Mortgages, secs. 644, 1493; Sands v. Church, 2 Selden, 347; Maher v. Lanfrom, 86 Ill. 513; Bank v. Bank, 123 Ill. 510; Loyd v. Scott, 4 Peters, 205, 230; Green v. Kemp, 13 Mass. 575; Jackson v. Dominick, 14 Johns. 435; Merchants’ Exchange Bank v. Com. Warehouse, 49 N. Y. 642; Trumbo v. Blizzard, 6 Grill. & J. 18; Brolasky v. Miller, 1 Stock. 807; Pinnell v. Boyd, 33 N. J. Eq. 600. If this were not so; if it was beyond the power
A purchaser at. a sheriff’s sale is considered as such vendee with such privileges. Pinnell v. Boyd; Brolasky v. Miller, supra; Carow v. Kelly, 59 Barb. 239; Jones on Mortgages, secs. 644, 1493.
If a purchaser from the vendor, either by voluntary or involuntary sale, is considered in such legal privity with the vendor as to be permitted to set up usury against the mortgagee, it should logically follow that an attachment or execution creditor, who has seized the property and who is but beginning the process necessary to an ultimate conveyance of the mortgagor’s title to the property, ought to be allowed to show that Iris assailant’s pretended title is founded upon an invalid and illegal instrument when attacked by such instrument with the purpose of taking the property from him. We are not without direct authority on the question. Dix v. Van Wyck, 2 Hill, 522; Post v. Dart, 8 Paige, 639; Carow v. Kelley, supra; Brolasky v. Miller, supra; Bank v. Bell, 14 Ohio St. 200, 210; Banks v. McClellan, 24 Md. 83; Coulter v. Selby, 39 Pa. St. 361; Pope v. Solomons, 36 Ga. 541; Lilienthal v. Champion, 58 Ga. 158. It is decided in these cases that an execution creditor is considered, for this puspose, as standing in such legal privity with the mortgagor as to empower him to interpose usury to the destruction of the instrument which secures the usury. It is true that an execution creditor has been denied this right. See Bensley v. Hornier, 42 Wis. 631, and Lee v. Feamster, 21 W. Va. 108. But it is doubtful if such would be the decision, even in those jurisdictions in a case like the one at bar, under a statute like ours. I, therefore,
What effect any act of the mortgagor, taken before the attachment waiving the usury, would have on the question, is not involved here.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.