180 A.D. 220 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
This is a modern instance resembling what were anciently called post-obit bonds. Appellants are the remaindermen under the will of Otto Huber, who died August 31, 1889, leaving a large amount of land in Kings county which was devised to the widow, Emilie, for her life, with remainder to his children share and share alike. The testator’s daughter Lina D’Esterre died on November 15, 1906. She left three sons: Louis, William and Joseph.
The value of the interests of William D’Esterre and Louis D’Esterre in this estate was about $340,000. In 1910 Louis D’Esterre had assigned his separate interest to secure an advance of $50,000 made to him by Edward T. Stotesbury, of Philadelphia.
In 1912 the brothers William and Louis sought a loan on their remainders through Herbert P. Queal, a New York attorney. He took up the matter with the Philadelphia firm of Bioren & Co. A deed of trust to be given by the borrowers covering their interests under the will of Otto Huber was to secure seventy-five $1,000 coupon bonds, dated July 1, 1912, with interest at six per cent, payable in 1952, or on the next interest day, occurring less than thirty days after the death of Mrs. Emilie Huber. This deed of trust ran to the Logan Trust Company and to Queal, the latter being joined as trustee to avoid any question as to a foreign corporation in the New York courts. The form of negotiable bonds was a further safeguard to protect holders in good faith. To cover the $4,500 a year interest on these bonds the borrowers had to buy an annuity yielding that annual stun based on the life of Mrs. Huber, then seventy-two years
After the death of Mrs. Huber, the fife tenant, in 1914, certain heirs began a partition suit making the Logan Trust Company and Queal parties. The D’Esterres served an answer on these trustees, raising usury as an affirmative defense, which issues were severed and afterwards separately tried, resulting in a judgment sustaining the trust deed and the validity of the bonds issued thereunder.
The loan was held to be a Pennsylvania transaction. The usury law of Pennsylvania (Act of May 28, 1858) was also found as a fact. (See Penn. Laws of 1858, p. 622, No. 557; 2 Purdon’s Digest [13th ed.], 1987, 1988, § 1 el seq.) This permits a debtor to withhold the excess of interest beyond six per cent. If voluntarily paid, the debtor must sue to recover it back within six months from such payment. An agreement to pay more than six per cent does not forfeit the principal or legal interest. The holders of the bonds were found to have taken them in due course and for value.
Besides the issue as to the lex loci contractus, it was contended that the whole scheme was a cloak for usury. In determining the lex loci controlling such negotiation, it is a received rule that “ the place where the last act is done which is necessary to give the contract validity, is the place of the execution of the contract.” (Page Cont. § 1718; Lawson Cont. § 32; Milliken v. Pratt, 125 Mass. 375; Scudder v. Union National Bank, 91 U. S. 406; Thompson v. Taylor, 66 N. J. Law, 253.) Mr. Queal first sent the deed of trust, the seventy-five bonds, and other papers, to-William to be executed in Wyoming, where William and his wife signed, and returned them to Mr. Queal in New York. Execution followed by Louis D’Esterre and wife in New York. Then Mr. Queal, with Louis, took all the papers to Philadelphia and handed them over to the Logan Trust
The determination that the law of Pennsylvania is controlling disposes of these various defenses. Even the objections to the large commissions retained by Bioren & Co. and by Queal are unavailing, in view of the protection by the Negotiable Instruments Law (passed in Pennsylvania May 16, 1901,
I advise to affirm the judgment, with costs.
Jenks, P. J., Thomas, Mills and Blackmar, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
See Penn. Laws of 1901, p. 194, No. 162; 3 Purdon's Digest (13th ed.), 3252 et seq.— [Rep.