28 Wis. 198 | Wis. | 1871
One Seymour Countryman made two promissory notes payable to the plaintiff, one for $150 and ten per cent, interest, payable sixty days after date, and tbe other for $200 and ten per cent, interest, payable in one year after date. These notes are dated October 3, 1866. Before they were-delivered to the plaintiff, the defendant, by endorsement on the notes of the same date, duly guarantied the payment thereof; and the notes and guaranties thereon were then delivered to the plaintiff. The notes were not paid at maturity, and the plaintiff brought two actions against the defendant, one on each guaranty. These facts appear from the complaints in such actions, which are in the usual form of complaints in like actions.
The defendant interposed answers setting up the defense of usury to both actions, and alleging that each of said notes was made and delivered to the plaintiff upon the corrupt and usurious agreement between the plaintiff and defendant that the latter should pay and the former receive interest at the rate of twelve per cent, per annum for the loan of the money expressed in the said note; and that, pursuant to such agreement, two per cent, hi addition to the interest reserved in the note was deducted and reserved out of the principal sum of money loaned by the plaintiff to the defendant, and the balance only paid by him to the defendant. Such balance is stated in one case to have been $149.50, and in the other $196.
These, answers seem to be drawn with all of the particularity which the rules of law require in pleading the defense of usury.
After the issues were joined therein, the two actions were consolidated by order of court, on the motion of the defendant, and were tried as one action.
After such consolidation, the defendant applied to the court for leave to ñle an amended answer to the two complaints, evi
I. It requires neither argument nor citation of authorities to demonstrate tbat these notes are usurious and void, and cannot be enforced against any party to them. Tbe parties to tbe transaction seem to have left nothing undone to fix beyond question their usurious character. A usurious contract was made before tbe notes were executed, and tbe notes were given in pursuance of sucb contract; and, as if to save all question, tbey were made payable directly to tbe plaintiff, who, so far as it appears, was tbe first bolder of them. And not only tbat, but tbe plaintiff knew tbat tbey were usurious, and in fact be contracted before tbey were given, tbat tbey should be usurious.
II. We are unable to discover tbe necessity or utility of tbe proposed amended answer. Tbe authorities cited by counsel for tbe defendant to sbow tbat it became necessary to put in new pleadings after tbe original actions were consolidated, do not sustain bis position; and we know of no rule of practice
Tbe court permitted tbe defendant to amend bis answer on terms. Tbe defendant refused to comply with tbe terms, and tbe action was tried on tbe original pleadings. We deem it unnecessary to decide whether such terms were lawfully imposed, or tbe reverse.
III. We do not think that there was any material variance between tbe allegations of tbe answer and tbe proofs on tbe trial, but that tbe usurious contract was proved substantially as it was alleged. Tbe fact that tbe defendant took a government bond from tbe plaintiff at tbe current premium, as so much money on account of tbe notes, is not, we apprehend, a variance from tbe averment that be received money therefor.
IY. It appears by tbe evidence that tbe defendant subsequently received back tbe horses wbicb be sold to Countryman, and for wbicb, in part, tbe notes in suit were given, but under what agreement or understanding does not appear. If be received them back in payment or part payment of such notes, I think to that extent be is liable to account to tbe plaintiff. I suppose tbe law to be that if Countryman has paid tbe notes or any part of them to tbe defendant, tbe plaintiff may recover of tbe defendant tbe sum so paid, not in an action on tbe notes, for they are void, but in an action for money bad and received. If such is tbe fact here, should tbe circuit court allow an amendment to tbe complaint to enable tbe plaintiff to obtain in this action tbe benefit of any payments on tbe notes made by Countryman to the defendant, and should tbe court allow such amendment without imposing very severe terms as a condition thereof, I think no valid exception could be taken thereto.
Tbe circuit judge directed a verdict for tbe plaintiff for tbe amount due upon tbe notes by their terms, and this appeal is
By the Court — So ordered.