Case ID: misc_39/html/0831-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Clarke, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Laure L. McWhirter, Appellant, v. James W. Longstreet, Respondent.
    Appeal from a judgment of the Municipal Court, tenth district, in favor of the defendant after trial by the court without a jury.
    James S. Thompson, for appellant.
    J. G. Lazarus, for respondent.
   Clarke, J.

Action upon a promissory note; defense, usury. Defendant being in urgent need of money, made a note payable to the order of one Ferris, payable in thirty days, for $250, and asked him to procure money on it, making an agreement witli him that if he could succeed in selling same Ferris should receive seventy-five dollars as bonus or commission. A receipt given by Ferris to defendant is in evidence, which, after' describing the note, proceeds: “ The above mentioned note is received on sale. If sold $115 to be returned for same.” The note was a collateral stock note. After some days Ferris told defendant that he had not sold the note, and defendant said that he was very hard- up for money and that any amount over $100 that Ferris might derive from the sale of the note he should retain and give defendant $100.

Thereafter Ferris sold the said note to plaintiff, who paid to Ferris the face value thereof, $250, of which Ferris paid to defendant $100, and took his receipt therefor in writing. Thereafter said note not having been paid defendant made a new note to plaintiff for $253.13/100, payable on demand, and received back his original note. This second note is the one in suit. There can be no doubt that as between the original parties the defense must have prevailed. Nor is there any doubt that the amount of bonus retained by Ferris was unconscionable. But there is no proof in the case that plaintiff was a party thereto, had knowledge thereof, or profited thereby. She testified positively that she paid $250 for the note; that she had no knowledge whatever.of the arrangement between Ferris and defendant; that she had received no part of the bonus, and that she had not been paid back any part of the original amount paid byfiiim. Ferris also testified positively that he had received the $250 from plaintiff and had not informed her of his interest in the transaction, and had not paid her any portion of his bonus. Defendant gave no evidence in contradiction, but seeks by suggestion and surmise from'the fact that Ferris had boarded with plaintiff, who kept a large boarding-house on Fifth avenue, with some thirty rooms; that from that relation it is to be inferred that, plaintiff was cognizant of and a party to the usurious agreement. But this will not do. The rule laid down by Judge Earl in Stillman v. Northrup, 109 N. Y. 477, and followed and applied many times, is as follows: To render the note void for usury, it was not sufficient, for the defendants merely to show that plaintiff’s agent took and exacted the fifty dollars as a condition of the loan. But it was incumbent upon them to show that he took the fifty dollars with the knowledge and assent of the plaintiff, so that she, at least by acquiescence, became a party to the usurious exaction. And the burden of establishing such knowledge and acquiescence on the part of plaintiff rested, upon the defendants, and they were bound to sustain that burden by satisfactory evidence. The defense of usury, involving crime and forfeiture, cannot be established by mere surmise and conjecture, or by inferences entirely uncertain. If, upon the whole case, the evidence is just as consistent with the absence as with the presence of usury, then the party alleging usury has failed.”

Freedman, P. J., and Greenbaum, J., concur.

Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.