Colton v. Dunham & Wadsworth

2 Paige Ch. 267 | New York Court of Chancery | 1830

The Chancellor.

It is admitted by the coúnsel for both parties that there must be a reference to state the accounts ■ between them ; but the court is at this time called upon to • decide certain questions" arising out- of the pleadings and proofs, by way of special directions to the master, settling the principles on which the accounts are to be stated. On the part" of the. complainant it is insisted, l.:Thát the agree-' ■ment to pay 20 per centum on the advances was illegal and usurious ; and that if it was not usurious, it was unconscientious and oppressive, and ought not to be enforced ; 2. That'the defendants are not entitled both to commissions and interest on their advances, except as to the articles actually purchased by themselves; 3 That they are entitled to no commissions on the- money loaned of the insurance company, except the two and a Half per cent, for procuring and guarantying payment of that loan ; 4. That they had no ' right to average the weight of the 558 ox hides. shipped on account of the respondentia bond, with those sent to the defendants on account of their advances ; and 5. That they. are not entitled to a commission for guarantying payment on the sale of the complainant’s hides and hair. The reverse of these propositions is contended for on the other side ; and the defendants also insist that the millerea of Rio Grande is only equal in value to a Spanish milled dollar, and that the hides and horns purchased for them in payment of their advances should have been charged at that rate only.- . .

In relation to the first, question,’ it is evident the agreement between the parties was in fact nothing but a loan or advance of money, to be repaid by the complainant on his arrival at Rio Grande, together with a premium of 20 per .cent-um on the loan! The English as well as the American reports are filled with cases arising out of the various devices and expedients which have been adopted to evade the provisions of the statutes which limit the rate of interest to be received on the loan or forbearance of money. But on examination it will be found there is a uniform and settled principle .running through, all these cases, with scarcely any ex- ■ ceptions. Wherever by the agreement of the parties a premium or profit beyond the legal rate ■ of interest, for a loan *273or advance of money, is either directly or indirectly secured to the lender, it is a violation of the statute unless the loan or advance is attended with some contingent circumstance by which the principal is put in evident hazard. A contingency merely nominal, attended with little or no hazard to the principal of the money loaned or advanced, cannot alter the legal effect of the transaction. And the risk of loss by the death or insolvency of the borrower is not such a contingency or hazard as will take the case out of the operation of the statute. That is the ordinary risk which every man runs who lends money on personal security only ; and if the contingency of the borrower’s dying insolvent was to be deemed a hazard of the principal, or money lent, the statute of usury would be a d ad letter. Where there is a negotiation for a loan or advance of money, and the borrower agrees to return the amount advanced at all events, it is a contract of lending within the spirit and meaning of the statute. And whatever shape or disguise the transaction may assume, if a profit beyond the legal rate of interest is intended to be made out of the necessities or improvidence of the borrower, or otherwise, the contract is usurious. In the case under consideration it was never the intention of either party that the defendants should have an interest in the cargo put on board the complainant’s brig. If the goods had been lost on their passage to South America, he must have born the whole loss, and would have been liable to the defendants to the same extent as if the goods arrived in safety and a large profit was realized thereon. The investing of the amount in hides and horns at Rio Grande on their account, instead of remitting the money from that place, was never considered as a hazard on the part of the defendants. It was done for their benefit, and because they expected to realize a further profit out of the proceeds of that investment. If they sustained any loss in this case, it was one of those mercantile hazards which frequently occur; but it is evident fiom their letter of the 14th of March, 1825, they they expected to realize a handsome profit upon the cargo shipped on board of the Conveyance, in addition to their commissions and the 20 per cent, advance upon the loan to Colton. The account in *274this case must be stated by allowing to the defendants only legal interest on the amount of their advance, from the 27th of January, 1825, to the time when the same was paid or invested for them at Rio Grande. And if the complainant does not produce the original bills of parcels, showing when the investment was made, the interest must be cast up to the 23d of October, when the hides, &c. were shipped on board the defendant’s vessel.

The defendants are not entitled to commissions for paying over the money borrowed of the insurance company, to the complainant or on his orders. The commission of two and a half per cent for effecting the loan, and becoming security for the ré-payment thereof, is admitted to be correct; and that is all to which they were legally entitled. I presume that question was settled between the parties at the time the receipt or agreement of the 27th of January, 1825, was given. The balance of the account, as stated on the 28th of January, is $3982,33, and the complainant’s .receipt is for the same sum, less $75, which is just the amount of the illegal commissions, included in that account, on the disbursement or payment of the money loaned on respondentia. That receipt must be considered as the liquidated amount of the defendant’s advances and legal commissions up to and including the 28th of January; to which must be added the $72,75 afterwards paid by the. defendants, as mentioned in their letter of the 14th March. I presume the error in that letter arose from their neglect to correct the account, by expunging therefrom the illegal commission so as to make it agree with the receipt given on the settlement thereof; and from that letter the error was transcribed into the complainant’s account transmitted to them from Rio Grande.

As the complainant has produced no bills of parcels, showing the particular persons from whom the hides shipped for the defendants were purchased, or the times when, or the prices for which they were brought, and as his letters show that he had not purchased any hides previous to the arrival of the conveyance, the defendants’ account of sales, averaging the hides, must be considered by the master as correct, unless the complainant produces the original bills of parcels *275sh owing the separate purchase of the hides shipped for the defendants and the original bill of the 558 hides, or produces other sufficient and legal evidence before the master showing such purchases, and the persons from whom, and the prices at which they were made.

The defendants are not entitled to a commission on the sale of the complainant’s hair and horse hides, as a guarantee commission. They were under no legal obligation to guarantee the payment by the purchasers, and there was no agreement that they should be responsible therefor. That claim must therefore be dissallowed. But from the facts in the case, the defendants are clearly entitled to the commission for selling the hides as well as the hair.

The only remaining question is as to the valuation of the millerea at $1,25. As I understand the case, 800 reas are a dollar, and the millerea is 1000 reas. But there is no coin or circulating medium of the country which answers to either the rea or the millerea; and that the actual value of the Spanish milled dollar, especially when restamped, was nearly equal to the nominal amount of a millerea. The advance of the defendants was to be repaid to them at Rio Grande in specie, or in something else which was a legal tender according to the laws of that country. If a Spanish milled dollar, and the other circulating medium there in the same proportion, would be received in payment of 900 or 1000 reas on the purchase of hides and horns, the complainant as a faithful agent was bound to purchase and pay for them at that rate. He cannot be permitted to make a speculation at the expense of the defendants, by paying them in a fictitious or depreciated currency. He can only be allowed so much as he actually paid for the property, in the circulating medium of the country which would have been a legal tender in the payment of his debt to the defendants. The master must ascertain the cost of the hides, &c. on that principle, and state the accounts accordingly. He is to have the usual power to examine the parties on oath, and to compel the production of books and papers. The question of costs and all further directions are reserved until the coming in of the report.

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