1 N.Y. St. Rep. 473 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1886
The judgment was recovered for the amount of moneys loaned at different times by the plaintiff to the
But one construction can be given to this evidence, and that is, that the plaintiff declined to enter into any stipulation or accept any obligation whatever from the defendant for the payment of more than the legal rate of interest. Whether he should make him donations or gratuities was left entirely to his own option. No agreement or understanding that he should do so was in any manner imposed upon him, and no obligation or agreement was made under which the plaintiff could claim more than the lawful rate of interest.
To make a loan of money usurious there must be, within the very language of the statute, an agreement, either expressed or implied, to pay more than the legal rate of interest, such an agreement as might be enforced by the creditor if it were not unlawful under the prohibition of the statute. There was no such agreement between these parties. If the statute was entirely out of the way, the plaintiff could enforce against the defendant no obligation to pay more than six per cent for the loan and forbearance of the money. The loans, therefore, were not usurious within the authorities relating to this subject. Home Ins. Co. v. Dunham, 33 Hun., 415; Clark v. Sheehan, 47 N. Y., 188.
The certificates delivered to the plaintiff by the defendant were no doubt intended by him to be additional payments for the use of the money beyond the legal rate of interest, but they were not accepted as such. And if they had been, as no agreement existed obligating him to make such payments, they would not have invalidated the loans themselves or deprived the plaintiff of his legal right to recover the money by an action at law. What he would be obligated to do, and all that could be required from him, would be
That was done in the adjustment of the affairs of the parties by the referee, and it was all that the defendant could legally require in the case.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
I concur, Brady, J.