41 N.H. 443 | N.H. | 1860
In this case the defendant pleaded usury, and prayed a deduction of three times the amount of the unlawful interest from the sum lawfully due. The plaintiff, in his replication, denied the usury, and verified the denial by his oath ; and, in accordance with the provisions of the statute, the court decided that the deduction should not be made. The question of usury was then directly in issue between the parties, and that question was decided on its merits. It is true that the mode of trial is peculiar, and that the defendant had no opportunity to adduce evidence ; but he nevertheless elected this mode of proceeding, took his chance, and arrived at a decision, and we think he is bound by it; otherwise there would be no equality of right between them, for if the plaintiff had failed to verify a denial in the mode prescribed, the deduction must have been made, and the plaintiff could not have availed himself of any other mode of trial. The decision, then, being adverse to the defendant in the mode of trial he chose to select, it is right he should be bound by it. Had the issue been found by the jury, there could have been no question, although the object would have been different in the two cases, — in one to obtain a deduction of three times the unlawful interest, and in the other the deduction of the unlawful interest alone; still, the fact of usury, and to the same extent, was the question involved in both inquiries, and the difference is rather in the judgment to be rendered. Betts v. Starr, 5 Conn. 550, was
A decree in equity, where the complainant seeks discovery from the defendant, is equally conclusive as a judgment at law, although the plaintiff is often obliged to submit to such answer as the respondent sees fit to make; as in Bigelow v. Winsor, 1 Gray 299; Hopkins v. Lee, 6 Wheat. 109; Hall v. Dodge, 38 N. H. 351. In such cases the plaintiff seeks that mode of trial to avail himself of the respond
Upon these principles there must be
Judgment for the plaintiff.