178 Misc. 263 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1942
This is an action to recover the sum of $292.50, with interest. This sum is asserted to be the balance due on a loan made by the plaintiff to the defendant on August 22, 1940, io amount of $300, The plaintiff is a lender licensed to do business pursuant to article 9 of the Banking Law.
Part of the defense in this case is predicated upon the asserted failure of the plaintiff to comply with the provisions of section 353 of the Banking Law. The defendant contends that the statement delivered to him at the time the loan was made did not show the nature of the security, as required by that statute. In addition, he charges the plaintiff with an act prohibited by the same statute: the taking of a power of attorney from him. These questions present problems of which there is a scarcity of judicial authority.
The security for the loan in the instant case was a wage assignment. The statement delivered to the defendant by the plaintiff
The wage assignment executed by the defendant as security for the loan herein contained the following: “ I give and grant unto the said assignee full power and authority to demand and receive and receipt for the same or any part thereof in my name.” The defendant asserts this constituted the taking from him of a power of attorney within the meaning of the prohibition of the statute. The grant of authority quoted above was not a necessary component part of the wage assignment, but rather was it a means of effectuating its purpose. Since it was not of the essence of the assignment, although included on the face thereof, it must be examined and viewed by itself in determining its nature. It is my belief that the language in issue created an instrument, by which the plaintiff was authorized by the defendant to act as his agent or attorney, within the limitations contained therein. In my opinion, that instrument was a power of attorney. That which has been identified and referred to as an assignment of wages was an assignment and a power of attorney, both instruments bearing a relation to the same subject-matter, part of the wages of the defendant McNeilage. • The lender has brought itself within the purview of an act prohibited by the statute,