151 N.Y.S. 735 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
On October 8, 1909, M. S. Paine executed and delivered to Eugene F. Vacheron her promissory note to his order for $2,100, payable four months after date. Subsequently she indorsed it. Vacheron also indorsed it, his name being written under hers. The note thereafter came into the hands of plaintiff. In an action upon the note the defense of usury was interposed. • Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in defendant’s favor, entered upon the verdict of a jury, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial upon the minutes.
It would be necessary to reverse this judgment and order for error in rulings upon evidence unless, disregarding all improper testimony, defendant was entitled to a direction of a verdict in her favor. The payee of the note, Vacheron, was the agent and attorney of defendant. He was called as a witness for the plaintiff, and upon cross-examination, against plaintiff’s objection and exception, was permitted to testify to various transactions between himself and defendant, some of which were wholly irrelevant to this controversy; and defendant was afterward permitted to go on the stand and contradict his testimony. It is not impossible that, before this case reached the jury, the
Plaintiff is the widow and was formerly the wife of John B. Sabine, a practicing lawyer in New York. At the date of the transaction here considered she had an account in the People’s Trust Company, and her husband was authorized to draw checks thereon. He not only drew all of the checks, but also made all of the deposits to its credit. Plaintiff and defendant never met until after this note matured. On a previous trial Sabine was called as a witness. Having since died, the testimony which he then gave was read to the jury upon the new trial. After testifying that he was his wife’s agent in the transaction he testified that he bought the note in°question from Eugene F. Vacheron on October 20, 1909, and gave him therefor three checks upon his wife’s account, one for $1,600, one for $100 and the third for $150, all of which checks were subsequently paid. They amounted in the aggregate to $1,850, and represented the purchase price of this note for $2,100, dated October 8, 1909, and payable four months thereafter. There is a conflict of testimony whether defendant’s indorsement was made, as she testifies, “when the note was made out,” or whether the note was brought back to her for such indorsement. Vacheron says that, after offering the note for sale to others he finally offered it to Sabine, and after a conversation with him he went back to defendant with the note and told her that Sabine would buy the note if she would indorse it on the back, guaranteeing its payment. He testifies that she then did so, and he took it back to Sabine and sold it to him. That is all that the evidence discloses respecting the transfer of this note.
It cannot be now disputed that, as between Vacheron and defendant, the note had, in the first instance, no validity. It was given to him to sell. She was then in need of money and she told him that he might “pay $500 if it was necessary to have it discounted.” We shall also assume that plaintiff was the “holder in due course” of the note in suit. (Neg. Inst.
One single question remains: Under the Negotiable Instruments Law, is a note, otherwise void for usury, invalid in the hands of “ a holder in due course ? ” If so, then the errors in the trial may be disregarded, for defendant was entitled to a direction of a verdict in her favor; if not, then the action must be tried again. There are conflicting decisions upon this point in the lower courts. We think the question has not been finally determined by the Court of Appeals. It seems desirable that it should be. The Negotiable Instruments Law provides that “A holder in due course holds the instrument free from any defect of title of prior parties and free from defenses available to prior parties among themselves, and may enforce payment of the instrument for the full amount thereof against all parties liable thereon ” (§ 96). Before the passage of that statute, it was the law that “A note void in its inception for usury continues void forever, whatever its subsequent history may be.” (Claflin v. Boorum, 122N. Y. 385.) In Klar v. Kostiuk (65 Misc. Rep. 199) a majority of the Appellate Term in the first department held that the defense of usury between the original parties to commercial paper is no longer available against a subsequent bona fide holder in due course. In Strickland v. Henry (66 App. Div. 23) this court held that the former Negotiable Instruments Law (Gen. Laws, chap. 50; Laws of 1897, chap. 612), identical in language with the present law, had not changed or affected the rule as above stated. And again, in Oppikofer v. Murphy (146 App. Div. 581) this court restated the original rule, relying upon Strickland v. Henry (supra). But in the latter case the provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Law seem not to have been called to the attention of the court, nor considered in its opinion. And, in the former case, the judgment was reversed upon the question of whether plaintiff was the holder in due course, and its language is not necessarily
Jenks, P. J., Stapleton and Rich, JJ., concurred; Thomas, J., dissented on the ground that the husband had no authority to make the usurious contract; that plaintiff had no knowledge of the condition of the bank account, drew no checks against it during her husband’s life, and did nothing to ratify the transaction.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.