30 Vt. 628 | Vt. | 1858
This is a bill in chancery brought to foreclose a mortgage. The bill was taken as confessed, and referred to a master, to ascertain the amount due, and the questions now before this court arise on the report of the master. It appeared from the report, that in 1851, the defendant appled to James T. Thurstons to negotiate for him a loan of four thousand dollars, and agreed with Thurston, to give him a commission of three hundred dollars, for effecting it. Thurston made the loan for the defendant of the orator, took from the money the three hundred dollars, took one hundred dollars of it himself, paid two hundred dollars back to the orator, and paid the balance, being thirty-seven hundred dollars, to the defendant, who gave the orator his note for four thousand dollars, secured by mortgage.
It is now insisted on the part of the defendant, that the receipt of the two hundred dollars by the orator, from Thurston, was usurious, and that this sum should now be applied as a payment upon the note;
On the part of the orator, it is said that the defendant was dealing with Thurston alone, in this transaction, and that as between them, it was legal, and that there is no privity between the defendant and the orator.
There can be no question but what the defendant might employ Thurston to negotiate the loan for him, and pay him a commission for his services, and if this transaction is really of that character, the defendant’s claim is clearly without foundation ; but we think it is asking quite too much of the court, to believe that the defendant agreed to pay Thurston three hundred dollars, simply as a compensation for his services in transacting this business. The disposition which Thurston made of the money, we think indicates very clearly the purpose for which it was to be allowed, and all the facts stated in the report show that this sum was agreed to be allowed to him nominally as a compensation for services, but really, to enable him to accomplish the object of borrowing the money, by paying to the party loaning it an extra compensation for its use; in other words, that it is a simple and transparent device to evade the operation of the statute against usury; indeed, the report furnishes no other fact that satisfactorily accounts for the intervention of a third party.
But to look at this case in a different light, we are asked to decree that the defendant, Goodrich, shall pay the orator two hundred dollars, which he never received, which the orator never parted with, but which he retained in direct violation of the statute.
To do this, we think, would be clearly inequitable, and we are of the opinion that this sum of two hundred dollars, together with the other three items of money received by the orator, and which the master finds have not been accounted for, ought to be deducted from the orator’s claim, unless the defendant, by the arrangement entered into on the 21st of February, 1855, and the letter he thereupon wrote to Thurston,, has debarred himself from now insisting on their application.
It appears from the report, that prior to the 21st of February, the orator had commenced a suit on the note; that on said day, the orator and the defendant entered into an arrangement by which the defendant paid fifteen hundred dollars, that was applied on the note, together with eighty-one dollars and twenty-five cents, which was not applied, and the orator stopped the suit, and gave a further extension of the time of payment. It does not appear that the orator had attached property on his suit, or had obtained any right or advantage thereby, so that, on his part, it was only a waiver of his then present right to collect his note and give further time. In short, it was nothing more than an agreement on the part of the
In consideration of this transaction, the defendant wrote to Thurston, relinquishing and discharging all claims he might have against the orator, for extra interest.
We have already found, that at this time, the defendant had a legal and equitable claim on the orator, for the two hundred dollars and the other items referred to in the report, as for moneys usuriously paid. By the letter, the defendant discharges that claim, and at the same time assumes the liability to pay the legal rate of interest, and all this is done upon no other consideration than an agreement on the part of the orator, to forbear the collection of the original debt. This, instead of discharging an old usurious transaction, is the creation of a new one; it is the same in its legal effect as though this claim had been applied upon the debt, and then the defendant had paid the amount of it to the orator, for the further time granted.
We think, therefore, that this discharge was a nullity, and left the parties in precisely the same position, legally and equitably, that they occupied before the letter was written.
This result is, the decree of the chancellor is reversed, and the case is remanded, with instructions that the sum of two hundred dollars, together with the amount of the other items referred to in the master’s report, and the interest thereon, be deducted from the orator’s claim, and a decree made in favor of the orator, for the balance, and costs.