113 N.Y.S. 820 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The action is replevin to recover thirty-six bales of silk which it is claimed were held by defendant as security for a usurious loan. The plaintiff is the duly appointed, and qualified trustee in bankruptcy of Emil Scherr. In 1902, 1903 and 1904, Scherr was in the silk business under the name of Scherr Brothers. He manufactured ribbons and dress goods and also bought and sold raw silk. The manufacturing business was done in Philadelphia. He bought and sold raw silk in New York. In 1902 and 1903 he was short of ready money and through his agent, Peter Bush, of New York, applied to the defendant, who was a commission merchant residing in New York, and made the arrangements with Talcott in New¡ York as Scherr’s representative, with full power thereto conferred by Scherr. Bush was buying and selling silk for Scherr on commission and he arranged these loans as a favor to Scherr. The arrangement Scherr made through Bush with Talcott was that Scherr was to pay on these loans six per cent interest and a commission of from one-quarter to one-half per cent per month. This arrangement was made in New York city. Under this general arrangement, loans were thereafter made, some of which were paid and some of which were unpaid at the date of the bankruptcy of Scherr. As representing the unpaid loans, Talcott held five notes of Scherr at the time this suit was brought, aggregating in value $13,450. These notes were all renewals of previous notes, the originals of which had been discounted by Talcott and interest and commissions paid in advance thereon under and in accordance with the arrangement agreed upon. The method of making these loans was in every instance substantially the same. Scherr signed and indorsed blank papers and sent them to Bush in New York. Bush filled them in as notes dated in Philadelphia payable to Scherr at a bank in Philadelphia and indorsed by Scherr. Bush then delivered them so made out to Talcott who thereupon gave his check to
Talcott claims in his answer that the alleged commissions were for caring for the goods, facilitating and arranging for substitutions, and for attending to and arranging appraisals, but it appears that the goods were stored in a warehouse and that Scherr himself paid the warehouse and insurance charges without the intervention of Talcott. The sole claim of right to these so-called commissions, as testified to by the defendant himself, was that Scherr had the right to substitute other goods for those held as collateral security, and that if he availed himself of that privilege, then defendant had to have a silk man examine the substituted goods “ that the value was there, and quality,” etc.
There is no evidence that any such examinations were made or anything paid by Talcott therefor. It appears that the alleged commissions were a fixed percentage of one-quarter or one-half per cent a month for the amount loaned, and either deducted from the
The learned trial court did not pass upon the question whether the payments of these sums of money in advance, as shown by the evidence, constituted a usurious transaction or not, but directed a verdict for the defendant upon the ground that as the notes were dated in Philadelphia and there made payable, the contract was a Pennsylvania and not a New York contract, and, therefore, that the laws of New York against usury did not apply.
In Union National Bank v. Chapman (169 N. Y. 538) the Court of Appeals laid down the following rules: “ 1. All matters bearing upon the execution, the interpretation and the validity of contracts, including the capacity of the parties to contract, are determined by the law of the place where the contract is made. 2. All matters connected with its performance, including presentation, notice, demand, etc., are regulated by the law of the place where the contract, by its terms, is to be performed. 3. Alt matters respecting the remedy to be pursued, including the bringing of suits and the service of process, depend upon the law of the place where the action is brought.”
As the solution of the question presented by this record is • the interpretation and validity of the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant, it is to be determined by the law of the place where the contract was made. Is that to be determined by the date of the note and place of payment therein provided, one of the incidents of the transaction, or is the entire transaction to be examined % This is not an action upon the notes. It is an action by the trustee in bankruptcy to recover possession of specific bales of silk, which concededly were the property of the bankrupt, and as his property in storage in a warehouse in the city of Mew York, upon which he paid the storage and insurance charges, claimed by the defendant as collateral to secure loans of money evidenced by promissory notes which he had in his possession. The application for the loan was made by the borrower’s agent to the defendant in the city of Mew York ; the agreement entered into upon such request was made in the city of New York; the notes, though made payable, for the convenience of the borrower, at a bank in Philadelphia, were delivered to the defendant by the borrower’s agent in thé city of Mew
The contract was for the loan of money upon the security of warehoused merchandise. The minds of the parties upon that contract met in the city of New York, where the agreement to loan upon such security was made. That the court is to look into the whole transaction in its determination of the question is illustrated by the following cases: Union National Bank v. Chapman (supra) was an action upon a note made in Alabama, payable at the Union National Bank, Chicago, 111. The facts found were that Mrs. Chapman signed the note at the request of her husband as surety for flip firm, and that while it was the intention of the firm that the note should be negotiated and discounted in the State of Illinois, she did not know of such intention except from what appeared on the face of the note; that she signed the note for the purpose of raising money for the firm to enable it to continue its work upon its contract in Alabama; that after the note was executed it was delivered to the payee named therein, who took it to the plaintiff’s bank in Chicago, indorsed it and delivered it to the bank where it was discounted. The defense interposed by Mrs. Chapman was that she had no capacity to make the contract in question under section 2349 of the Code of the State of Alabama,
In Tilden v. Blair (21 Wall. 241) where a draft drawn in Chicago was drawn by one Pelton on Tilden & Co., residing at Lebanon, N. Y., and was by them accepted in New York and made payable at a bank in New York, and then sent by them to Pelton in Chicago and there discounted for the benefit of Pelton, the Supreme Court of the United States held that it was an Illinois and not a New York contract. “It is * * * quite immaterial under the facts of this case that the defendants resided in New York, and that they there wrote their acceptance upon the draft. In legal effect they accepted the draft in Chicago when by their authority the drawer negotiated it' and thus caused effect to be given to their undertaking. Nor is the law of the contract changed by the fact that the acceptance was made payable in New York. The place of payment was doubtless designated for the convenience of the acceptors, or to facilitate the negotiation of the draft. But it is a controlling fact that before the acceptance had any operation, before the instrument became a bill, the defendants sent it to Illinois for the purpose of having it negotiated in that State. * * * What more cogent evidence could there be that it was intended to create an Illinois bill ? ”
So in the case at bar it would seem that it was quite immaterial that Sell err resided in Philadelphia, signed the note there and made it payable for his convenience at a bank there. It did not become a note until it was presented for discount in New York where the money was advanced thereon and where it had been sent by Schorr for the purpose of being discounted.
In Wayne County Savings Bank v. Low (81 N. Y. 566), where a note was actually written in Pennsylvania but was signed by the defendant in New York and there mailed by him to the plaintiff in
In Staples v. Nott (128 N. Y. 403) the note in suit was a renewal note of one held in Washington, D. 0. The maker went to Washington and prevailed upon plaintiff to agree to take a new note for his debt. This note was then drawn, dated Washington D. 0., and payable at a bank in Watertown., N. Y., by the plaintiff and handed to the maker for execution who took it to his home in Syracuse where his and the appellant’s signatures were affixed as makers and indorsers respectively. In holding the transaction to be a Washington contract the court said : “For the affixing of the signatures to the note by the maker and the indorser, however important as acts, was yet, but a detail in the performance and execution of the contract which had been agreed upon with the plaintiff. But naming a New York bank as the place where the maker would provide for the payment of the note did not characterize the contract in one way or the other. That arrangement was one simply
The rule deducible from all these cases is that7the whole transaction will be' looked into to ascertain where the real contract, the meeting of the minds, simply evidenced by the "instrument, took place. When that is ascertained neither the date of the instrument, where signed, or where "payable, is controlling. In the cases cited the instruments though signed and Anade payable in Hew York were held not to he Hew York, contracts because the agreement which they evidenced took place elsewhere. The converse must be true. As in the case at bar the agreement to loan money and to deposit goods as collateral security took place in Hew York, the contract was a Hew York contract though the notes evidencing that transaction were signed and made payable in Pennsylvania.
It follows, therefore, that the verdict having been directed for the defendant upon the ground that the contract was a Pennsylvania contract, the judgment entered- thereon should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Patteeson, P. J., Ingraham, McLaughlin and Houghton, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.
See Code of 1886.— [Rep. '