53 Minn. 350 | Minn. | 1893
The court finds that in March, IS89, plaintiff Holmes executed to one Gonska a promissory note for $350, payable four months after date, with interest at 8 per cent, per- annum, and, to secure the same, executed a mortgage upon certain real property; that this note and mortgage were usurious; that in December, 1890, Gonska foreclosed the mortgage by advertisement, and bid in the property for $450, and received the usual sheriff’s certifipate, which was put on record; that in September, 1891, Gonska executed to defendant an assignment of this certificate, and a conveyance of his interest in the premises, for which defendant then paid him $425; that at the time of receiving this assignment and deed, and paying the consideration therefor, the defendant had no notice or knowledge that the note and mortgage referred to were usurious, but bought and paid the consideration in good faith; that in March,
All of these findings are, in our opinion, amply sustained by the evidence.
Plaintiffs bring this action to have both sales set aside and de. lared void, on the ground that both mortgages were usurious and void. Defendant, on the other hand, claims to be the owner of the premises, and asks that it be so decreed, and that plaintiffs be adjudged to have no interest therein. Of course, if defendant has a good title under either sale, it must prevail. In our opinion, its title is good under both.
Taking up, first, the title under the Gonska mortgage, it cannot be questioned but that, if defendant itself had purchased at the foreclosure sale, it would have been protected as an innocent purchaser of the property, notwithstanding the usurious character of the mortgage on which it was being sold. Jordan v. Humphrey, 31 Minn. 495, (18 N. W. Rep. 450.)
And it can make no difference whether defendant bought at the sale, or subsequently from Gonska, who did buy at the sale. After the sale, and during the time for redemption, Gonska had a conveyable interest in the land. Lindley v. Crombie, 31 Minn. 232, (17 N. W. Rep. 372.) It was this interest in the land, and not the note and mortgage, which defendant bought from Gonska.
The same courts hold, as do all courts, that, if a party buys of the payee an accommodation note for its face, he can recover on it, and that the fact that the maker received no consideration will be no' defense; also, that after paper has had an inception, and has become-live business paper, a person may buy at any discbunt he can get it for, without rendering the transaction usurious. We confess that these distinctions are altogether too refined to commend themselves to our judgment. The doctrine of the New York courts virtually converts the purchase of a' note into what the purchaser never intended or supposed it to be, viz. a loan of money, without which there can be no such thing as usury. Undoubtedly, if defendant had purchased this note kuoioing that it was accommodation paper, and hence had no vitality while still in the hands of the payee, the-transaction would have amounted to a loan of money, upon the promise of the maker, Holmes, to pay back a sum .that exceeded: the rate of interest which defendant might legally exact, and hence-would have been usurious. Or, to state the proposition generally,, if no party, prior to the purchase, could have brought an action on' the note, and the purchaser knew that fact when he bought it, then: he must be taken to have loaned the money to the maker.
Bui; the better rule, and the one as we think most consonant with! reason and justice, is that if the holder, at the time he bought the paper, did not know that it was not already a valid subsisting security in the hands of the payee, there can be no intention of lending money, which is of the very essence of usury, and he may
We think the question is already covered by the decision of this court in Jackson v. Travis, 42 Minn. 438, (44 N. W. Rep. 316,) which is not distinguishable in principle from the present case; and in this view of the .law we are not without the support of authority elsewhere. See Daniel, Neg. Inst. § 752, and cases cited.
Judgment affirmed.
(Opinion published 65 N. W. Hep. 555.)