38 N.Y.S. 503 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
. This is an action brought to recover the amount of two promissory notes which had their inception under the following circum-. stances, viz..:'
Upon the 19th day of August, 1893, the defendant applied to one David J. Cushman, who, it appears, is the nominal agent of his wife,. S. J. Cushman, for the loan of fifty dollars, and asked what lie would charge for the use of that sum for three months, and, as the defendant testifies, the answer was ten dollars.. The defendant demurred somewhat to this charge as excessive, but his necessities seem to have been such that he was forced to yield to, the demand of the agent, and a note was thereupon drawn up and signed by the defendant for the sum of sixty dollars. This note was made payable to the order of S. J. Cushman, on or-before November twentieth, at the Union Bank, and, was subsequently indorsed by the payee. There was a sharp conflict between the evidence of the defendant and that of D. J, Cushman as to what occurred at the time the note was executed, the former insisting that he was applying for, and that he actually received, a loan of money, whileCushman testified v?i,th equal insistance that he declined to make a loan, but offered to. sell his wife’s credit for a specified consideration. Without dwelling upon this feature of the case, which is almost invariably present in transactions of this character, it is perhaps sufficient to say .that whatever may have been the actual relation of Cushman or his .wife to the transaction, the former seems to have been careful to obtain from thei defendant the customary affidavit and -chattel mortgage, containing recitals which upon- their face appear to corroborate hi’s version of the agreement between the parties. It also appears that this, note was executed on Saturday afternoon, at. which time, the bank at which it was made payable was closed, and the defendant being in immediate need of money Cushman advanced him the sum of twenty-five dollars, which he says was in the nature .of a tempo
The defense to these notes is that they are void for usury, and the only question in the case is whether the evidence is such that a jury might be permitted to infer therefrom either that the notes had-their inception prior to the time they came into the plaintiff’s possession or that the transaction which resulted in their execution was a mere cover for usury' to enable the indorser to obtain more than the legal rate of interest. It is undoubtedly well settled that the payment of a sum of money in excess of the legal rate of interest to an accommodation indorser, as a compensation for the loan of his credit, does not taint the note with Usury in the hands of one to whom the maker subsequently negotiated it for value, inasmuch as it cannot be said that such a note ever had any legal inception in the hands of the accommodation indorser (Van Duzer v. Howe, 21 N. Y. 531; Chatham Bank v. Betts, 37 id. 356; Commercial Bank v. Cameron, 79 Hun, 63); and if the evidence in this case were capable of no other construction than the one contended for by the plaintiff the trial court would have been fully justified in withholding it from the
Briefly epitomizing, therefore, the case which is here presented, we are of the opinion that it should have been left to the jury to say whether or not the transaction attending the giving of these notes was a mere cover for usury, of which the plaintiff either had actual knowledge or ample means of informing itself before discounting the same, and, this being the case, the judgment of the County Court should be affirmed,
All' concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.