256 Mass. 367 | Mass. | 1926
This is a suit in equity, brought in the Superior Court under G. L. c. 214, § 3, cl. 8, to establish a debt alleged to be owed and due the plaintiff by the defendant Albert Flower as the guarantor of the payment of $30,000 which was loaned by the plaintiff to one Viola H. P. Brown; and to reach and apply certain shares of stock in the defendant company, Albert Flower, Inc., alleged to be owned by the defendant Albert Flower, individually, and standing in his name or in the name of his wife, the defendant Mina Flower, or of both. A commissioner was appointed and the testimony is reported. The case was tried upon the merits before a judge of the Superior Court sitting in equity, and a decree entered for the defendants dismissing the bill with costs. The case comes before this court on the plaintiff’s appeal from the final decree.
In this opinion the plaintiff will hereinafter be called the lender and Viola H. P. Brown the borrower. The material facts charged in the bill, admitted by the answer, found by the judge, and supported by the reported testimony of witnesses, are in substance as follows: About June 4, 1921, the borrower contemplated entering into a purchase contract with one Mrs. Orvis of New York City, for the purchase of all the capital stock of the Equinox Company (a corporation organized under the laws of Vermont), amounting to two thousand shares, for the sum of $800,000, a part of which was to be paid in cash, a part out of the proceeds of a first mortgage bond issue to be placed upon the property of the corporation, and the balance by a second mortgage upon said property. As she needed $30,000 to carry out her intention, she offered one Niels F. Holch, an employee of the New York banking house of A. B. Leach and Company, a
Subsequently a written agreement, printed in the record, was drafted in New York in a form advised by the attorney for the lender. The written guaranty was made a part of the instrument of agreement and followed it. The written agreement was signed by the lender and borrower, and was guaranteed by the defendant Flower. Therein the lender agreed to give the borrower a certified check for $28,300 and pay Holch $1,700, “which is in payment of commissions to which the said Holch is entitled from the Borrower for his services in negotiating said loan, the receipt of which said Thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) is hereby acknowledged.” The written agreement does not stipulate the amount or the nature of the compensation which the lender would receive for making the loan. The sum to be lent ($30,000) was to be repaid within sixty days from the date of the agreement. No interest or other compensation by way of interest for the use of the money loaned was promised or provided for by the agreement, and no note was given. The loan, however, was to be secured by an order executed simultaneously with the execution of the agreement “upon the Bankers Trust Company directing it to pay to the Lendor Thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) out of all that part of the proceeds received by it from the sale of bonds of the Equinox Company, issued under the first mortgage dated May 1, 1921,” subject to certain conditions relating to the taking up of such bonds by the company.
It appears in evidence, and it is not disputed, that a side agreement was entered into between the lender and Holch before the loan agreement was drawn up, which provided that Holch was to pay over to the lender $1,450 out of the $1,700, as a recompense for lending the $30,000. This side agreement was carried out; the $1,700 check received by
No testimony of expert or of other witnesses was offered or received by the judge as to the law of New York State upon the subject of usury. The plaintiff offered and the judge received in evidence §§ 370, 371, 374, 379-381 of c. 20 of Consol. Laws of New York (1909) (the general business law), and thirty-two judicial decisions of the State of New York. At the same time the defendants offered and the judge received judicial decisions of the State of New York and decisions of the Federal Court, these decisions in the large part not being of courts of last resort. As the evidence upon the issue of the law of New York on the subject of usury was entirely documentary, this court on appeal receives the evidence and determines the fact and the inference of fact to be drawn therefrom in the same way the judge received it, without weight given to the conclusion of the judge who heard the case below. Harvey-Watts Co. v. Worcester Umbrella Co. 193 Mass. 138, 143. Hutchins v. Mead, 220 Mass. 348. Mansfield v. Wiles, 221 Mass. 75, 84.
Section 370, supra, reads: “The rate of interest upon the loan or forbearance of any money, goods or things in action, except as otherwise provided by law, shall be six dollars upon one hundred dollars, for one year, and at that rate, for a greater or less sum, or for a longer or shorter time.”
Section 371, supra, reads: “No person or corporation shall, directly or indirectly, take or receive in money, goods or things in action, or in any other way, any greater sum or greater value, for the loan or forbearance of any money, goods or things in action, than is above prescribed.”
Usury is defined to be an illegal profit required and received by a lender of a sum of money from the borrower. 4 Blackstone, 156. To constitute usury, in contemplation of law, the following essential elements must be present: “ (1) There must be a loan or forbearance; (2) the loan must be of money or something circulating as money; (3) it must be re-payable absolutely and at all events; (4) something must be exacted for the use of the money in excess of and in
Condit v. Baldwin, 21 N. Y. 219, is a decision to the effect that the exaction of a bonus by an agent for himself as the condition of making a loan, without the knowledge or authority of his principal, did not constitute usury in the principal. The court quoted with approval from the opinion of Justice Story in Bank of United States v. Waggener, 9 Pet. 378, 399, in which it was said: “ . . .to constitute usury within the prohibitions of the law there must be an intention knowingly to contract for or take usurious interest; for if neither party intend it, but act bona fide and innocently, the law will not infer a corrupt agreement.” The decision itself is not authority, however, for requiring intent on the part of the borrower.
In Guggenheimer v. Geiszler, 81 N. Y. 293, 296, the court said, speaking of the intent of the borrower: "There was no intent on the part of Geiszler to pay usury; no expectation on his part that Seiter should have usury. And I am not able to perceive how, in the absence of such intent, there
In Morton v. Thurber, 85 N. Y. 550, 556, the lender exacted legal interest and a further sum which he falsely represented to be for expenses incurred in securing the money. The borrower did not know that the representation was false. The court, citing the Guggenheimer case, supra, said: “To constitute usury it must be shown that the additional interest is paid or retained in pursuancé of a mutual agreement between the parties.”
Williston on Contracts, § 1698, recognizes the effect of the Thurber case by stating, after setting forth the principle for which it stands: “In New York at least such a mistake of fact on the part of the borrower prevents the transaction from being usurious though the lender had a corrupt purpose, and what was actually bargained far exceeds what the law permits. But generally it is held that so far as intent is important, it is only that of the lender which is determinative.”
In Brown v. Robinson, 224 N. Y. 301, decided in 1918, the doctrine of Guggenheimer and Thurber cases, supra, was upheld. The court cited them and said: “The intent to take usurious interest requires such purpose on the part of the borrower as well as upon the part of the lender.”
The court also affirmed, citing Matthews v. Coe, 70 N. Y. 239, and White v. Benjamin, 138 N. Y. 623, 624, a long line of cases by stating: “And before holding that a person has been guilty of such an offense it should have been clearly and decisively proved and found and not have been left to inference and implication.”
In Fellows v. Longyor, 91 N. Y. 324, 329, the court said: “By the contract of loan, the real lenders were not to receive anything in excess of legal interest.”
In Philips v. Mackellar, 92 N. Y. 34, 37, the evidence showed that the borrower neither contemplated to pay illegal
Matter of Consalus, 95 N. Y. 340, 344, the court said: “Whatever usurious agreement was made subsequently to the original loan cannot affect it, but simply avoids the notes which were subsequently given.”
In Baldwin v. Doying, 114 N. Y. 452, 457, the court said: “The burden of proof was upon the defendants to show the usurious exaction by the party discounting the note .... That result was not' accomplished by proof of payment of a sum of money exceeding the legal rate of interest to a party undertaking, for a consideration, to procure the note to be discounted.”
In White v. Benjamin, 138 N. Y. 623, 625, the court said: “There is some evidence from which it could be inferred that the defendant [borrower] at various times paid to Mr. White [lender] more than the legal rate of interest; but it does not appear that such payments were made in pursuance of a usurious agreement. It is fairly inferable from all the evidence that the payments were voluntarily made by the defendant and not in pursuance of any exaction made by Mr. White at the time of the loan of money.”
Rosenstein v. Fox, 150 N. Y. 354, is another New York case holding that to constitute usury it must be shown that the additional interest was paid as a result of an usurious agreement between the parties at the time the loan was made. It is cited together with Hartley v. Eagle Ins. Co. 222 N. Y. 178, by Williston on Contracts, § 1698, for the proposition that “in some jurisdictions, however, it seems that a wilful purpose to transgress the law is essential.”
New York decisions and dicta which have some tendency to support the result reached by the lower court:
In Byrnes v. Labagh, 4 N. Y. St. Rep. 522, relied on by.
In Bliven v. Lydecker, 130 N. Y. 102, cited by the defendant, the borrower agreed to pay the intermediate party, the agent of the lender, $400 to secure a loan. A memorandum was drawn up which revealed that in return for a $4,000 mortgage the borrower had received $3,600, on which he was paying the legal rate of interest. This memorandum was drawn up by the agent of the lender and the borrower. The lender was not present when the usurious agreement was made by the agent [her husband] or during any of the negotiations that resulted in the execution of the mortgage. The court said: “But where, as in this case, an agent authorized to lend, but not to take usury, lends the money of his principal at a usurious rate and both the sum lent and the usury exacted are secured by the same instrument, which the principal, knowing that it is for a larger amount than the sum loaned, without explanation, accepts and has the benefit of, she adopts, ratifies and is bound by the act of hsr agent the same as if it had been done by herself.”
In Quackenbos v. Sayer, 62 N. Y. 344, the court said: “The
In Hall v. Eagle Ins. Co. 151 App. Div. (N. Y.) 815, 826, affirmed without opinion in 211 N. Y. 507, the court said: “It was early recognized by the courts that if the form of the contract were to be controlling, the statute against usury would be substantially unenforciBle, and thus it was made the duty of the court in each case presented to examine into the substance of the transaction between the parties and determine whether the intent which pervaded it was one which violated the statute.”
In Hartley v. Eagle Ins. Co. 222 N. Y. 178, 185, 187, the court said: “The question in each case is, and necessarily must be, whether the agreement be fair and reasonable, or a mere device to evade the usury statutes .... So here the question is did the parties intend to evade the usury statutes of the State, or was the interest payable so large that, in view of all the circumstances, an intent to provide for the payment of interest beyond the legal rate will necessarily be imputed to them? ”
We are of opinion that, on the New York decisions which govern this court’s interpretation of the New York statute (Auld v. Caunt, 216 Mass. page 384), the intent of the borrower as well as the intent of the lender is a necessary element of the defence of usury; and also that the person offering the defence must make out his case by clear and decisive proof and not by resorting to inference and implication. It seems absurd to say that, if the borrower intended to pay illegal interest, he has a defence but that without such intent he has no defence. An explanation of this may be that the courts have hesitated before finding that the defence was established due to the fact that the usury statute prohibits the lender from recovering even the amount of the loan. On the evidence presented at the trial of this case, in the opinion
The defendant contends that the case is a proper one for the application of the doctrine that a person must come into equity with clean hands. The defendant’s argument is that if the borrower knew of the side agreement she would have a defence, and therefore the lender is guilty of fraud in concealing this knowledge. The fallacy of the argument is obvious. It is clear that unless the lender has a duty to disclose the effect of the concealment is immaterial. It does not seem possible to work out such a duty on the part of the
The broker received as a commission an amount of money in 'excess of that which he is entitled to under the general business laws of New York, supra, which are in part as follows:
Section 374. “Corporations prohibited from interposing defense of usury. No corporation shall hereafter interpose the defense of usury in any action. The term corporation, as used in this section, shall be construed to include all associations, and joint-stock companies having any of the powers and privileges of corporations not possessed by individuals or partnerships.”
Section 379. “Interest permitted on advances on collateral security. In any case hereafter in which advances of money, repayable on demand, to an amount not less than five thousand dollars, are made upon warehouse receipts, bills of lading, certificates of stock, certificates of deposit, bills of exchange, bonds or other negotiable instruments pledged as collateral security for such repayment, it shall be lawful to receive or to contract to receive and collect, as compensation for making such advances, any sum to be agreed upon in writing, by the parties to such transaction.”
Section 380. “Brokerage on loans. No person shall directly or indirectly, take or receive more than fifty cents for a brokerage, soliciting, driving or procuring the loan or forbearance of one hundred dollars, and in that proportion for a greater or less sum, except loans on real estate security; nor more than thirty-eight cents for making or renewing any bond, bill, note or other security given for such loan or forbearance, or for any counter bond, bill, note or other security concerning the same.”
Section 381. “Recovery of excess. Every person who
“In case such suit shall not be brought within the time above prescribed, in good faith, or in case it shall be discontinued, or wilfully delayed, then the overseers of the poor of the city or town where the offense was committed, may, within one year after such neglect, discontinuance or delay, sue for and recover the money, property or thing in action, so received, delivered or deposited, from the person receiving the same, or his personal representatives, for the use of the poor of the county.”
Although the broker has paid the lender, he will be required to pay over again a sum equal to the amount of illegal commission to the guarantor, who is subrogated to the rights of the borrower. On the theory of the case adopted, the receipt of the $1,450 by the lender did not violate the usury statute and, therefore, it cannot be said that he must remit this sum before he will be entitled to a standing in an equity court.
It results that the decree must be reversed, the claim'of the plaintiff established in the sum of $30,000 with interest from the due date of the loan, and the case remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Decree reversed with costs.