On July 1, 1970 the plaintiff’s testator, Emanuel Choper, an attorney, loaned $13,410.67 to the defendants, Samuel and Pearl Arnow. On this same date the defendants executed a promissory note by which they agreed to pay back that sum "one year after date * * * with interest at 1Vi% per annum, compunded [sic] quarterly.” When the note fell due, the defendants refused to pay either principal or interest and the plaintiff, Choper’s executor, commenced this action. The question is whether the note is usurious.
At the time the note was executed, the maximum rate of interest was fixed at "7.50 per cent per annum” (see General Obligations Law, § 5-501, subds 1, 2; 3 NYCRR 4.1). Thus if the note did not require that the interest be compounded quarterly, it would not violate the usury statute. However if the interest is compounded quarterly, as the note provides, the effective annual rate would be 7.72%.
Special Term found the note usurious and granted defend
It is true that the compounding of interest is not, by itself, usurious (Stewart v Petree,
Generally the courts will enforce such an agreement when it is made after simple interest has accrued (Stewart v Petree, supra; Newburger-Morris Co. v Talcott,
This rule however has no application to the facts of this case. Although this note provided that interest should be compounded quarterly, there was no provision that the loan be repaid or that interest be paid in quarterly installments. According to the terms of the instrument, no payment was due until "one year from date” of execution. This, in other
Indeed if we were to hold otherwise, by only invalidating the compounding clause, we would be recognizing a convenient hedging device for avoiding the more severe penalties of the usury statute. If the penalty for making a usurious agreement is loss of principal and interest it should not matter whether the illegal rate is boldly stated or indirectly arrived at by periodically compounding a legal rate.
Finally we note, as the Appellate Division did, that the usury defense must be established by "clear evidence as to all the elements essential thereto” (Grannis v Stevens,
However there is no need to employ the presumption here, since the terms of the loan are not in dispute, both sides acknowledging that the note evidences the complete agreement between the parties. Thus the note itself establishes, on its face, clear evidence of usury.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the order of Special Term reinstated.
Chief Judge Breitel and Judges Jasen, Gabrielli, Jones and Fuchsberg concur; Judge Cooke taking no part.
Order reversed, without costs, and order of Supreme Court, Albany County, reinstated.
Notes
. This figure is based on the traditional rather than the present-value method of computation (see Band Realty Co. v North Brewster, Inc.,
. The Legislature has provided a "less severe penalty” for banks, which only risk losing interest — unless interest has been paid, in which case the debtor can recover twice the amount paid (General Obligations Law, § 5-511, subd 1 and Practice Commentary, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 23A, p 234).
