10 Paige Ch. 583 | New York Court of Chancery | 1844
Taking the allegations in this bill to be true, and for the purpose of deciding the questions arising upon this demurrer they must be presumed to be so, as they are sworn to upon the information and belief of the com
This being a general demurrer to the whole bill, if the complainant was entitled to any relief whatever, either as to the original bond and mortgage or as to his covenant to pay the $2700 and interest from the 18th of October, 1837, the demurrer should have been overruled.
As a general rule, it is perfectly well settled that the court of chancery will not lend its aid to enforce a penalty or forfeiture, but will leave the complainant to his defence or remedy at law. And in the case of Mason v. Gardiner, (4 Bro. C. C. 436,) the court allowed a demurrer to a bill to have usurious securities delivered up and cancelled, because the complainant, in such bill, had not offered to pay the amount justly due. The same principle was acted on by this court in the case of Fanning v. Dunham, (5 John. Ch. Rep. 122 ;) although the appropriate relief was given in that case, upon pleadings and proofs, as though the usual offer, to pay what was equitably due, had been contained in the bill. In this case, therefore, if the rule of this court was unchanged by the revised statutes, or by the act of May, 1837, to prevent usury, the complainant should have been permitted to amend his bill by inserting therein a formal offer to pay the balance which is justly due, for principal and legal interest on the $1700 actually loaned, after deducting therefrom the several sums which have been received from the original mortgagor, or from the complainant, on account
The conclusion at which I have arrived, however, is that under the provisions of the revised statutes, as well as under the act of May, 1837, the complainant is not bound to make such an offer in his bill, where, as in this case, he asks for no discovery of the usury, but merely seeks relief upon such testimony as he may himself produce to establish the alleged usury ; and that the word borrower, as used in the eighth section of the title of the revised statutes relative to the interest of money, (1 R. S. 773,) and in the fourth section.of the act to prevent usury, (Laws of 1837, .p. 487,) is not to be restricted to the individual to whom the original loan was made. To understand the sense in which the word borrower was used by the legislature, it may be necessary to refer to this eighth section of the revised statutes as it was originally reported by the revisers, in connection with other provisions reported by them. On referring to the original report of chapter four of the second part of the revised statutes, by the revisers, it will be seen that they proposed,merely to avoid the bonds, notes, or other securities, given for the loan or forbearance of money, See. except negotiable notes and bills in the hands of bona fide holders for value ; but to allow the lender of-the money, or the assignee of a security given for the same, to recover back the money actually loaned, without any interest thereon. To carry out the principle of depriving the lender of any interest upon the amount loaned-upon the usurious contract, but to give him back his money without interest, the revisers reported a section in these words : “ Whenever the borrower of any money, goods, or things in action shall file a bill in chancery for a discovery of the money, goods, or things in action taken or received in violation of either of the foregoing provisions, it shall not be necessary for him to pay any interest whatever on the sum or thing loaned, but shall deposit with the register or clerk of such court only the principal sum admitted by him to have been loaned.” But this new prin
It is true, the word “ borrower” alone is found in this section. And if the statute is to be construed literally, by restraining the term borrower to the particular individual to whom the loan is actually made, the remedy which the legislature intended to give to a complainant, who comes into this court for relief against a usurious security, will benefit neither the surety nor the grantee or heirs or devisees or personal representatives of the borrower. It is impossible to believe, however, that such could "have been the intention of the legislature. And I have no doubt that this new principle, declared by the legislature in the last clause of this section, should be extended to a complainant claiming under and in privity with the original borrower, as well as to the borrower himself. A remedial act is to be construed liberally to carry into effect the intention of the legislature; and it may be extended by construction to other cases within the same mischief though not within the words of the statute. Thus the statute of 9th Richard 2d, chapter 3, which gave a writ of error to the reversioner, upon a recovery against the tenant for life,
The view I have taken of the provision of the revised statutes on this subject, renders it unnecessary for me to consider whether the act of May, 1837, to prevent usury, applies to the case. It will therefore be sufficient to say, in reference to that question, that the third section of that act appears to have been intended to reach cases arising under the original provisions of the revised statutes, as well as those which should thereafter arise under the substituted provisions contained in the statute of 1837. And the guaranty, which was given by the complainant in the fall of 1837, and which was itself void for usury, was clearly a case arising under that act. That guaranty, which contained a covenant to give a mortgage upon the premises, to secure the payment of the whole $2700, was a cloud upon the complainant’s title, and impaired the value of his property. He therefore has a right, under the fifth section of the act of 1837, to have that guaranty delivered up and cancelled.
A party who purchases the mere equity of redemption in mortgaged premises, and who agrees to take the premises subject to the lien of the mortgage, cannot set up a defence against such mortgage, on the ground of usury, which his grantor never intended to insist upon. Nor can a mere stranger set up such a defence. But it is well settled, in this state at least, that the heir, or devisee of the mortgagor, or the grantee of premises which are subject to the apparent lien only of a usurious mortgage, being in privity with the mortgagor, may set up any defence which the mortgagor himself could have done. (Jackson v. Domin
The decision of the vice chancellor allowing the demurrer to the complainant’s bill, was therefore erroneous, and must be reversed, with costs to abide the event of this suit. And the demurrer must be overruled with costs to be paid by the defendants. The defendants must pay such costs, and put in their answer within forty days after service of the decretal order to be entered upon this appeal; or the complainant’s bill may be taken as confessed against them.
But see Post v. The Bank of Utica, decided by the court for the correction of errors, December, 1844.