140 N.Y.S. 284 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
The action is brought to recover an unpaid balance on a bond executed by the defendant to one Jean M. Jackson and duly assigned by the latter to the plaintiff. The complaint ■ sets forth the execution of the bond, its assignment to the plaintiff, and that there was due on it after crediting the payments made, the sum of $2,000 and interest, payment of which had been demanded and refused. The amended answer denies “each and every allegation contained in.said complaint, except as hereinafter admitted,” the admissions being limited generally to the execution, delivery and assignment of the bond, and the making of the conceded payments. For a first and
The plaintiff demurred to the counterclaim on the ground that it appears upon its face that more than one year has elapsed since the making of the alleged usurious payments, and that the defendant had, therefore, no legal right to recover them or set them off. The demurrer, I think, was properly sustained by virtue of the provisions of section 372 of the General Business Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 20; Laws of 1909, chap. 25), as the appellant concedes in his brief it would have been, had the demurrer been interposed to a complaint in an action brought by him to recover back the usurious payments. I know of no authority for the proposition that the terms of the section of the General Business Law {supra) must be expressly pleaded as a statute of limitation, and none is cited.
Upon the hearing at the Special Term of the demurrer as a contested motion, and on the hearing at the same time of a further motion by the plaintiff, based on affidavits setting forth the execution by the defendant of a so-called “ estoppel certificate ” executed by the defendant at the time of the assignment of the securities to the plaintiff, and certifying that the
I think the denial was properly stricken out. The answer nowhere admits that any amount is due the plaintiff, and it would seem to follow that the denial is necessarily limited to the allegation in the complaint that the sum of $2,000 and interest is due and owing from the defendant to the plaintiff. As the denial, therefore, admits all the allegations of fact contained in the complaint, and the indebtedness is a mere conclusion of law which necessarily flows from and follows such allegations, it raised no issue. (Emery v. Baltz, 94 N. Y. 408.)
The first separate defense, however, clearly sets up usury, and it was error to strike out that defense on the sole ground that the defendant was precluded from pleading it because of the existence of the “estoppel certificate.” The certificate is evidence, of course, and may well be used to combat the defendant’s contention on the trial, but no authority is cited for the proposition that such a certificate, any more than the usual recitals in the bond tending to show the legal nature of the loan, can operate to prevent a borrower from asserting that the loan, however regular in form, is in fact tainted with the stain of usury.
I think the second partial defense must fall with the counterclaim, and for the same reason which justified the demurrer.
It follows that the judgment should he reversed and the
Jenks, P. J., Burr, Thomas and Carr, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and order modified by denying the motion to strike out the first separate and distinct defense as set up in the amended answer, and as so modified affirmed, without costs.