24 Barb. 287 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
The defendant pleaded . usury, and the referee before whom the cause was tried was of opinion that there was such a variance between the usury alleged in the answer and that proved that he must disregard it. If he was wrong in this there was no need of any amendment, and the defendant’s mode of relief should have been an appeal from the judgment entered on the referee’s report. It must be assumed, on this motion, that the referee was right. The defendant moved to amend his answer, after the report was made by the referee, and judgment entered on the report. The court below allowed such amendment to be made, and the judgment to be opened for that purpose, on the defendant’s paying $87 as costs.
Catlin v. Gunter, (1 Kernan, 368.) holds that variances between the proof and the allegations are to be disregarded at the trial, as much in usury cases as in any others. But that decision was there stated to be contrary to what the law formerly, was, and to arise from the code, §§ 169,170, 171. Those sections relate to the course to be pursued at the trial when a variance is alleged, and not to the mode of proceeding after judgment, and when the defendant can only as a favor, ask for an amendment. Section 173 applies to the last case. It is that the court may, before or after judgment, in furtherance of justice and on such terms as may be proper, amend any pleading in certain cases, “ or when the amendment does not change substantially the claim or defense, by conforming the pleading or proceeding to the facts proved.” This section was intended mainly (if not solely) to allow amendments so as to sustain a judgment; not for the purpose of reversing it.
The case of Catlin v. Gunter acknowledges that the law had not, prior to the code, deemed it in furtherance of justice to allow a party to.defeat a recovery for the amount actually due, by the defense of usury, unless he made his allegations conform exactly to the proof, and changes that rule only as to trials. It also notices that in that ease the defendant was not applying for an indulgence as he is here. The same distinction was recognized, in effect, in Schermerhorn v. The American Trust and Banking Company, decided in the court of appeals, during the last year.
In Wager v. Stickle, (3 Paige, 408,) the chancellor, after showing that a default was satisfactorily accounted for, and that it was a matter of course to permit the defendants to make the defense on equitable terms, added, “ but as the order to take the bill as confessed is technically regular, they cannot be permitted to, insist on any grounds of defense which are in the nature of a penalty or forfeiture. They will not, therefore, be let in to a defense of usury, so as to deprive the complainant of the amount actually due, with legal interest thereon.” Here, too, the plaintiff is strictly regular, and the defendant asks a favor in the discretion of the court to give or refuse, but which, when granted in the exercise of that discretion, can be granted only “ in furtherance of justice, and on such terms as may be proper.” It would be clearly against all the ideas of justice as entertained by the chancellor, to allow this defense to a party asking a favor, on any other terms than such as are above stated.
The order should be modified, so that the motion be denied if, on the defendant consenting that judgment remain for the amount admitted to have been due, with interest thereon and costs, the plaintiff consents to modify the judgment accordingly. If the defendant does not consent, the motion to be denied absolutely. Neither party is to have costs on this appeal.
Mitchell, Roosevelt and Peabody, Justices.]
Rnglis v. Fwmiss, (3 Ab. Rep. 82.)