128 N.Y.S. 210 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1911
Five of the seven causes of action are founded on promissory notes signed by an attorney in fact representing five employees at defendant’s store in Philadelphia. All the notes bear excessive interest, which varies, as computed by defendant’s attorneys, from 175 to 390 per cent, per annum.
By chapter 77 of the Laws of 1904, which is now section 42 of the Personal Property Law, the Legislature of this State passed, “An act to require lenders of money on salaries of employees to file with employers a copy of agreement or assignment under which claim is made.” The following is a copy of the act:
“Section 1. Any person or persons, firm, corporation or company, who shall after March 18th, 1904, make to any employee an advance of money, or loan, on account of salary or wages due or to be earned in the future by such individual, upon an assignment or -note covering such loans or advances, shall not acquire any right to collect or attach the same while in the possession or control of the employer, unless within a period of three days after the execution of such assignment or notes and the making of such loan or loans, the party making such loan and taking such assignment shall have filed with the employer or employers of the individual so assigning his present or prospective salary or wages, a duly authenticated copy of such agreement or assignment or notes under which the claim is.made.
“ § 2. No action shall be maintained in any of the courts of this state, brought by the holder of any such contract, assignment or notes, given by an employee for moneys loaned on account of salary or wages, in which it is sought to charge in any manner the employer or employers, unless it shall appear to the satisfaction of the court that a copy of such agreement, assignment or notes, together with a notice of lien, was duly filed with the employer or employers of the person making such agreement, assignment or notes by the
If the lenders in this case had lent money to the employees named in the complaint on promissory notes, of which notice had been given to defendant within three days thereafter, there could have been no defense. Instead of this simple procedure, the lenders resorted to the following device: The employee at Philadelphia executed a power of attorney to one Stella Blanding of Portland, Maine. She signed a note in the name of the employee and delivered it to N. W. Hasten Company of the same place. A check was forthwith mailed to the employee. Some weeks or months later, after default and protest of the note, Blanding under her power of attorney executed to N. W. Hasten Company an assignment of a portion of the employee’s salary. Within three days thereafter they mailed a copy of the assignment and a notice of lien to the employer.
One of the defenses is that the notice to the employer was not filed within three days from the time of the loan. All ■the facts are agreed upon. There does not seem to be much room for disagreement as to the meaning of the statute: “Ho action shall be maintained * * * unless * * * a copy of such agreement, assignment or notes, together with a notice of lien, was duly filed with the employer * * * within three days after the said loan was made and the said agreement, assignment or notes were given.”
The notes were made and the checks were delivered at practically the same hour. The copies of notes were never filed' and the notices were not filed until the assignments were executed by the attorney in fact, long after the period of three days had expired. The inhibition of the statute, therefore, seems to attach that “no action shall be maintained.”
It seems to us that one of the purposes of the statute was to minimize the evils of these extortionate loans by taking 'from the lender the means of coercion. Hotice to the employer immediately after the loan is made and the note.is given would tend to this result.
In that case the effect of a failure to file a copy of the agreement or of the notes was not considered.' The assignment only was under consideration. In the present case the making of the note and the advance of the money were practically simultaneous acts. That brings the case clearly xyithin the letter of the inhibition: “Ro action shall be maintained, unless a copy of such notes, together with a notice of lien, was duly filed.”
Perhaps it may be argued with some force that the words “ agreement ” and “ notes ” in the inhibition are without effect, because the “ notice of lien ” ■ can be filed only in connection with an assignment. As a general rule notes and assignments create no lien, and, therefore, no notice of lien can be given. But effect must bé given to all the language incorporated within a statute, where such construction is possible. In this case such construction must be given in order to effect the purpose of the Legislature. We believe that the . law-makers considered that the making of a note under a power to add an assignment as additional security created an inchoate lien, and that the filing of that note with the employer was as much a thing to' be done as the filing of an assignment.
In the case cited from 49 Miscellaneous Reports the court seems to have been of opinion that the assignment and the loan were not made at the same time, but that they would have taken a contrary view had it been established that the attorney in fact of the employee was the alter ego of the lender. We are inclined to hold that such proof was supplied in this case. The lender and the attorney in fact commenced business in Maine at the same time, occupied the same offices, for which the attorney paid no rent, and the attorney negotiated notes with that one lender only.
It also seems reasonable that the notes and the power of
We are also of opinion that the Municipal Court had no jurisdiction. The attorney in fact did not assign any integral part of the employee’s wages, but a portion of the wages of one or more separate weeks. An action under such an assignment seems to require the machinery of a court of equity and the presence of' the assignor as a party. Dickinson v. Tyson, 125 App. Div. 735; Chambers v. Lancaster, 160 N. Y. 342, 348.
If we are right in the above reasoning, the judgment should be affirmed also as to the first and second causes o'f action, in which the notes were negotiated, not in Maine but in Rhode Island; and for the additional reason that the assignment in those cases had no subject-matter on which to operate. The wages were not then earned, nor were the assignors in defendant’s employment. If the subject-matter of an assignment has no actual existence, it should have at least potential existence. Cooper v. Douglass, 44 Barb. 409.
There is another theory upon which the judgment should be affirmed. It seems t'o us that, even if the agent was not the alter ego of plaintiff’s assignor, there are other features in the case which require us to 'affirm the judgment. We" think it is clear that, under section 42 of the Personal Property Law, there can be no recovery of any advance of money or loan on account of salary or wages unless notice of lien is given within three days after such advance or loan' is consummated and the agreement under which the borrower claims is executed, whether such agreement be in the form of an assignment, contract or note.
In this case the borrower obtained the loan through a person whom, for the purposes of the argument, we may denominate his agent. All the agreements with the lender were made through this intermediary by virtue of a power of attorney. The plaintiff claims that he first loaned the money upon the borrower’s note and only thereafter received the assignment, and that he had no claim to the borrower’s wages, until this assignment was made. The whole transac
“And the powers of the aforesaid, attorney are hereby declared to be continuing powers until any and all obligations contracted through or by the execution of the same are finally and completely satisfied and paid; and said attorney is authorized to agree for me with any purchaser of any notes or the receiver of any collateral that, if sufficient funds are not received by virtue thereof to satisfy said obligation in full, then that from, time to time further assignments of ■ wages due or to become due from the employer by whom I am then employed will be made and delivered * * * and said attorney is authorized to execute and deliver said further assignment or assignments on request(The italics are in the printed power of attorney.)
Since this power is only for the purpose of obtaining a loan, it is obvious that the assignments are authorized only
The judgment, should, therefore, he affirmed, with costs.
Lehman and Delany, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.