Case ID: ny_37/html/0521-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Woodruff, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

*Williams v. Fitzhugh et al., executors.
    
    
      Usury.—Jurisdiction.
    
    'Where a mortgage is given to secure several promissory notes, some of which are void for usury, but the others are bond fide, the court will not direct the mortgage to be delivered up and cancelled, except on payment or tender of the amount of the valid notes.
    Our courts have jurisdiction to decree the cancellation of a mortgage upon lands in another state, given to secure a New' York contract, void for usury. Also to restrain the prosecution of a pending suit in the courts of another state, upon such void contract—having acquired jurisdiction of the person of the plaintiif in such action.
    Williams v. Fitzhugh, 44 Barb. 321, affirmed, with a modification.
    Appeal from the general term of the Supreme Court, in the seventh district, where a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, in a case tried before the court, without a jury, had been modified, and, as modified, affirmed. (Reported below, 44 Barb. 321.)
    This was an equitable action by Ellery Gr. Williams against Allen Ayrault, to have six certain promissory notes given by the plaintiff to the defendant, in April and July 1854, amounting in the aggregate to $31,000, and a mortgage upon land in Ohio, to secure the payr ment thereof, adjudged to be void for usury; to have the same delivered up and cancelled; to restrain a certain action pending on two of the notes, in Ohio, and any other action upon either of the notes or upon the mortgage. The defendant died pending the suit, and Daniel Fitzhugh and others, his executors, were substituted.
    
    Upon the trial of the cause, the plaintiff gave in evidence the record of a judgment which set forth the transaction between the parties, and adjudged one of the notes to be void for usury. (33 Barb. 329.) And upon the evidence contained in the record, the judge found that all the said six notes were so void; and adjudged and decreed that the notes and mortgage were void for usury ;• that the defendant deliver up the same to be cancelled; that he execute a discharge of the mortgage in such form that it might be recorded in Ohio; and that the pending suit in Ohio upon some of the notes be enjoined, with costs of suit.
    The general term, on appeal, modified the judgment, so as to except from its operation two notes for $5000 each, dated the 3d April 1854, on the ground, that the record given in evidence did not necessarily decide that those two notes were usurious, and in all other respects affirmed the same. Whereupon, the executors of the original defendant took a further appeal to this court.
    
      Lord, for the appellants.
    
      Danforth, for the respondent.
    
      
       Also reported in 5 Trans App. 61.
    
    
      
       For a former suit upon one of the notes, see 31 Barb. 364, and 33 Ibid. «§9
    
   Woodruff, J.

(after stating the facts.)—The principal question which was discussed on this appeal, and which .includes nearly all of the subordinate questions raised, is, will the courts of this state entertain a bill to declare void and compel the cancellation of a mortgage of lands lying in another state, and executed there, in pursuance of a contract entered into in this state to iccure loans made and payable in this state, some of which loans are usurious and void by our laws ? This question may be intelligibly discussed by inquiring—• 1. Would such a bill be entertained under the same circumstances, if the lands were situated in this state? 2. How is the question affected by the location of the lands without our jurisdiction? 3. Should the court require the surrender and discharge of such a .mortgage, without the payment of the loans which are not ■bund to be usurious ?

* First, then, suppose the lands were situated in this state. 1st. It cannot be denied, indeed, .1 do not understand the counsel for the appellant to question, that such a mortgage is void by the law of the state of New York. Our statute declares that “ all * * * assurances, conveyances, all other contracts ©r securities * * * whereby there shall be reserved, or taken, or secured, or agreed to be reserved or taken,” any greater sum or value for the loan or forbearance of money, than at the rate of seven per cent, per annum, “shall be void.” The proposition is, that a security given to secure, the payment of money is void, if it be given to secure a usurious loan, and if it be so given, the fact that it was also given to secure loans which were not usurious, will not preserve it from entire condemnation. If void in part, it is void altogether.

The late learned Chief Justice Jones, in Fulton Bank v. Benedict (1 Hall 480, 546), thus states the piov>osition: “ It is well settled, that if any part of the >an or debt far which the note or security was given, is usurious, the security is voidreferring, among ctuer cases, to Harrison v. Hannel (5 Taunt. 780). In Jackson v. Packard (6 Wend. 415), it is held, that a mortgage given to secure a sum of money, consisting of one loan made prior thereto, which is usurious, and another which is free from usury, the mortgage is void. “ If a mortgage or other security is given for two or more antecedent loans, either of which was infected with usury, the whole security is void.” That, under the statute, “ there is no such thing as such an instrument being void in part and good for the residue; the taint of usury destroys the whole security.” The debt which was free from usury may be recovered, but the mortgage is void. (Rice v. Welling, 5 Wend. 595.) And in Hammond v. Hopping (13 Id. 505), the same doctrine is re-asserted in reference to contracts generally. “ The statute against usury renders any contract infected with it, utterly void ; but if the usurious security was given in part for a pre-existing valid debt, that debt is not destroyed by the illegal security.” These decisions have stood as the ^aW *°^ ^xs s^e ^or 1X1 ore than thirty years, and I am not aware that their correctness has been questioned in any of our courts.

2d. If, then, the mortgaged premises were in this state, have our courts jurisdiction to decree that the mortgage be given up and cancelled, and is it error, upon the facts assumed, to do so? The statute is: “ § 13, Whenever any borrower of money * * shall file a bill in chancery for relief or discovery against any violation of the provisions of * * this act, it shall not be necessary for him to pay, or offer to pay, any interest or principal on the sum or thing loaned, nor shall any court of chancery require or compel the payment * * of the principal sum, or interest, or any part thereof, as a condition by granting relief. § 14. Whenever it shall satisfactorily appear, by the admission of the defendant, or by proof, that any * * * assurance, pledge, conveyance, contract, security * * has been taken or received in violation of the provisions of this act, the court of chancery shall declare the same to be void,, and enjoin any prosecution thereon, and order the same to be surrendered and cancelled.”

This language, taken literally, seemed, not only to confer jurisdiction, but absolutely to require the court of chancery to decree the surrender and cancellation of securities infected with usury, of whatever description, whenever the borrower saw fit to invoke the interposition of the court, without the aid of any other ground for coming into that tribunal than the fact of usury. But the Chancellor, in Perrine v. Striker (7 Paige 598), held, that where the party had a full and complete remedy at law, he could not come into the court of chancery for relief; that this statute was not intended to compel the court of chancery to take jurisdiction of every question of usury, although a perfect remedy, both as to discovery and relief, could be had in a court of law.” Hence, when the parties to a note, not negotiable, sought a discovery and perpetual injunction against a suit thereon (although the statute authorized the examination of the plaintiff in the *suit at law on the trial), on the ground, that it was usurious, the bill was dismissed, because the remedy was complete at law. But he recognised the jurisdiction, and the propriety of its, exercise, when there were any special circumstances which made the remedy at law ineffectual or incomplete.

In Morse v. Hovey (9 Paige 197), on dismissing the bill, the Chancellor affirms the decision in Perrine v. Striker, and expounds it more fully, thus: “ The legislature did not intend to transfer to this court concurrent jurisdiction with courts of law, in every case of a usurious contract; but merely to give to this court the power to exercise its jurisdiction in those cases where it was necessary to aid the defence of usury; or to remove usurious securities which were a cloud upon the complainant’s title to real property, or which might be used at law, to his injury, in such a manner that he could not interpose a legal defence to a suit on them in a court of law. Here; the note is negotiable, so that it may be sued in the name of a third person; and if the bill had contained the allegation that the usury could only be proved by the oath of the defendant, it might possibly have presented a case for the interference of this court.”

Conceding that this relaxation of the stringent and imperative language of the statute is reasonable, no construction of .the statute has gone further. Accordingly, bills by borrowers, to remove usurious securities, which are a cloud upon the complainant’s title to real property, have uniformly been entertained. See Cole v. Savage, 10 Paige 583, questioned, without impeaching the general doctrine, in Post v. Bank of Utica, 7 Hill 391; Peters v. Mortimer, 4 Edw. Ch. 279; Pearsall v. Kingsland, 3 Id. 195; Dry-Dock Company v. American Life Insurance and Trust Company, 3 N. Y. 361; Schermerhorn v. Talman, 14 Id. 93; Manice v. Dry-Dock Company, 3 Edw. Ch. 143. It is no answer to such a bill, that the mortgagor has a good'defence to a bill for the foreclosure of the mortgage. It is an apparent incumbrance on the land; its invalidity depends upon extrinsic facts. 'The doctrine of Cox v. Clift (2 N. Y. 123), cited by the appellant, that the complainant *has a perfect legal defence against it (When a right under it is asserted), “ written down in the title-deed,” has no application to it; and Ward v. Dewey (16 N. Y. 519) was decided on like grounds. The mortgage is an impediment to a sale of the land for its value. The mortgagor is not bound to w7ait until the mortgagee attempts a foreclosure, not only for these reasons, but because, in the meantime, it may become impossible to prove his defence. If this be so, then, if the lands mortgaged were situated in this state, the mortgage in question was wholly void, and there is sufficient ground for invoking the interposition of the court to decree that such a mortgage be surrendered and cancelled or discharged. Whether it should be so discharged, without the payment of that portion of the debt which has not been adjudged to be usurious, and which, for the purposes of this appeal, is to be deemed both legally and equitably due, will be presently considered.

Second, how, then, is the question affected, by the circumstance that the mortgaged premises are situated in the state of Ohio, where the mortgage was executed? The mere circumstance that the land is in another state can, upon no principle that I can discover, furnish a reason for denying the jurisdiction of our courts, or for questioning the propriety of its exercise. If, when an instrument has been obtained by fraud, a court of equity, having jurisdiction of the fraudulent party, will compel him to do equity, will declare the instrument void, and decree a reconveyance, or the execution of such instrument as may be requisite to the protection of the innocent party, it is not because the case of fraud is peculiar in that respect, but because the complainant is entitled to relief which lies, in part, at least, in a remedy against the person, to compel him to do equity. In such case, it would be possible to say to the complainant, you can defend in the foreign state or country any claim founded on the instrument fraudulently obtained, nay, you can there institute your proceeding and obtain a decree in reto that will protect your land. That is no answer, the court here will act directly upon the ^person and compel him to give up the title or apparent right so acquired, and restore the aggrieved party to his former condition. This is well shown in Deklyn v. Watkins (3 Sandf. Ch. 185), and cases there cited.

So, specific performance of contracts for the conveyance of land in another jurisdiction, although a foreign country, will be decreed, if the court obtain jurisdiction of the person. (Deklyn v. Watkins, 3 Sandf. Ch. 185, and Ward v. Arredondo, Hopk. 213; Mitchell v. Bruen, 2 Paige 615, 616.) So, to compel the performance of a trust in lands, though situated in a foreign jurisdiction, a bill will lie in our courts. In Massie v. Watts (6 Cranch 148), Chief Justice Marshall states the principle, that when the defendant is liable to the plaintiff, either in consequence of contract, trust, or of any species of mala fides, the principles of equity give the court jurisdiction wherever the person may be found, notwithstanding the title to lands out of the jurisdiction may he involved; and the cases collected in Penn v. Lord Baltimore (2 White & Tudor’s Leading Oases in Equity, 664), and the notes thereto in the American edition (Law Library, vol. 72), show that this jurisdiction is exercised in England, whether the lands are within the jurisdiction of the court or not, and even when not within the realm. (See also, the American cases there collected.)

I am entirely unable to discover any difference in the application of the principle governing those cases to them, and to the case under consideration. Whenever the court have, by reason of the equitable rights of the complainant, a power or duty to act upon his person, to compel the execution of a deed, to set aside a conveyance, or to perform a trust, the location of the lands affected in another jurisdiction forms no impediment to the jurisdiction, nor any reason why it should not be exercised. The specific facts out of which the right of the plaintiff in equity arises, cannot affect the rule.

If, then, the mere fact that the lands mortgaged by the plaintiff are situated in Ohio is no defence, does the circumstance that the defendant’s testator, in his lifetime, commenced a suit upon some of the notes secured by this mortgage, *in one of the courts in Ohio, having jurisdiction, and that the present plaintiff set up as a defence the same matters which are alleged in his complaint here, and demanded that the mortgage be cancelled, make any difference? It seems to me, that the short but conclusive answer is, that the pendency of another action for the same cause, in another state, though prosecuted by the same plaintiff, is no bar to an action in this state; still less can the pendency of a suit prosecuted by the defendant, and under his control, to be proceeded in or abandoned at his pleasure. Besides, the suit can, in no just sense, be said to be prosecuted for the same cause. The one is to collect “ some of the notesthe other is to compel the surrender of the notes and the security given for their payment. . It would be a novelty, to hold that a plaintiff could not prosecute and maintain his affirmative rights in this state, because he was asserting those rights for his protection, in defending a prosecution by his adversary in another jurisdiction.

It has, however, been suggested, that the judgment in this case is erroneous, because, although, by the law of this state, a mortgage given to secure two demands, one valid, and the other void for usury, is wholly void, such is not the law of Ohio. There, the mortgage is valid and effectual, as a security for the debt, which is not usurious. In the first place, no such fact is found by the judge who tried the cause, and no evidence was given on the trial to that effect, and no such point appears to have been, in any manner, raised below. In the next place, the whole contract was entered into in this state, and to be performed in this state. True, the mortgage appears to have been executed, or, at least, the execution of the mortgage to have been acknowledged, in Ohio; but it was delivered here, in pursuance of a contract made here, to secure the payment of notes made and payable here. I think, the right of the plaintiff to its surrender and cancellation is to be determined by our laws, and not by the laws of Ohio; and if the transaction, through which it was to become an operative security, gave to the defendant’s *testator no title to hold it as a security, by the law of the place where the contract was made and was to he performed, then the courts of this state should decree its surrender and discharge, upon such terms {if any) as they may properly impose. In short, it is a security given and received by the defendants’ testator in this state, “in violation of the provisions” of the statute of this state. Although it was received as security for notes not found to be usurious, it was none the less received in violation of the statute, for the reason that, by its very terms, it secured some notes which were usurious.

It is to be observed, that no complaint is made nor any claim of error is urged, on this appeal, that it was erroneous, upon the facts found, to pronounce the four notes dated July 1st, 1854, to be usurious and void, and to direct their surrender. The question raised by the present appeal relates simply to that part of the decree which requires the surrender and cancellation, or discharge, of this mortgage, and not to that part which directs the surrender of the four notes adjudged usurious. The mortgage is void; no action can he maintained thereon-in this state, in any form, and it is a cloud upon the title to the lands of the defendant.

Third, does it follow, that the decree in this action, so far as it directed the surrender and discharge of the mortgage, was warranted by well-established rules of equity applicable to the subject? It is familiar doctrine in courts of equity, that “ he who seeks equity must do equity,” and without that, the court of equity will not extend its arm for the relief of the suitor. If he can protect himself, either in whole or in part, at law—if he. can defend, when assailed—very well; he can decline any concession of the equitable rights of the adverse claimant and stand upon his legal position—it may be safe, or it may be in peril-—-but if he invoke equitable interposition, he must come with clean hands and prepared to do whatever in the judgment of equity is fair and equitable to his adversary; else the court will not entertain him, but will *answer, stand upon your legal rights, or come here and perform the just condition of equitable relief.”

It cannot be doubted, therefore, that when a party comes into a court of equity to remove a cloud upon the title to his land, he must do whatever it is equitable that he should do, before the court will interfere. In that respect, he stands in no other or better condition than he who comes to compel the specific performance of a contract to convey: he must come prepared to pay and perform all that by the conditions of the contract he was bound to pay or perform—or than he who comes to set aside a conveyance obtained from him by fraud ■ he must come prepared to restore all that he has received as the consideration of such conveyance.

And, on precisely the same ground, it was the well-settled rule of courts of equity, that he who came into that court to set aside a conveyance or other security as void, because given to secure a usurious loan, must come prepared to pay so much as he had in fact received. He might stand on his legal rights, and defend any and every endeavor to compel him to pay, but if he invoked the aid of a court of equity to give him affirmative relief, that court recognised his equitable obligation to refund what he had received. (Rogers v. Rathbun, 1 Johns. Ch. 367; Tupper v. Powell, Id. 489; Fanning v. Dunham, 5 Id. 122, 137; Morgan v. Schermerhorn, 1 Paige 544; Fulton Bank v. Beach, Id. 429; s. c., 3 Wend. 573; Taylor v. Bell, 2 Vern. 170; Whitman v. Francis, 8 Price 616.)

On what ground is the plaintiff in this case entitled to have his mortgage set aside, without qualification or condition ? The notes which he had given to secure a usurious debt are declared void, and ordered given up to be cancelled.' He cannot be prosecuted upon his mortgage, in any form, in this state, because by law it is void. If he has need of further equitable interference, it is because the mortgage is an apparent lien, a cloud upon the title to his lands, and he should be relieved therefrom. Why, then, if he asks further equitable relief, and invokes the further interposition of a court of equity therefor, should *he not do equity? Why should he not pay to the defendants what he in fact received ?

The answer, and the only answer which is or can be suggested, is, that our statute declares (Laws of 1837, ch. 430, § 4), that whenever any borrower 'of money, goods or things in action, shall file a bill in chancery for relief or discovery, or both, against any violation of the provisions of the title of the statutes, concerning the interest of money, “ or of this act, it shall not be necessary for him to pay, or offer to pay, any interest or principal on the sum or thing loaned, nor shall any court of chancery require or compel the payment or deposit of the principal sum or interest, or any portion thereof, as a condition of granting relief, or compelling or discovering to the borrower, in ány case, usurious loans forbidden by the said title or this act.” This section of the act of 1837 was passed to extend the previous title, so that it should embrace cases in which the court was applied to for discovery, as well as cases in which relief alone was sought, and to relieve him from paying any part of the principal or interest, in either case, and it should, therefore, be read and construed in connection with such previous law, which is as follows (1 it. S. 772, § 8): “Whenever any borrower of any money, goods-or things in action, shall file a bill in chancery for a discovery of the money, goods or things in action taken or received in violation of either of the foregoing provisions, it shall not be necessary for him to pay, or offer to pay, any interest whatever on the sum or thing loaned, nor shall any court of equitj' require or compel the payment or deposit of í/ic principal or any part thereof, as a condition of granting relief to the borrower, in any case of a usurious loan, forbidden by this chapter.” (See Livingston v. Harris, 3 Paige 528; s. c., 11 Wend. 324; and see the history of this legislation in Post v. Bank of Utica, 2 N. Y. 391, et seq.)

What, in these statutes, is the principal sum or interest which the borrower shall not be required to pay? Is it not the “usurious loan” and the interest thereon ? Is it not the *money, goods or things in action, taken or received in violation of the provisions of the act ? Most clearly, that, and only that. It does not contemplate, it is true, the existence of any other equitable condition, but it by no means requires that any other condition should be waived. The subject dealt with is a loan upon usury; it designs that there shall be no means, direct or indirect, in which the payment of such a loan, or any interest thereon, shall be compelled, either by a court of law or equity. And relief against such payment accomplishes the end, so far as this statute directs relief to be given. Hence, the discovery spoken of, and authorized by the statute, is a discovery of the money, &c., taken or received in violation of the statute, and not money which, not being so received, the borrower is bound, both at law and equity, to repay. And it is the principal or interest on the sum loaned, i. e., loaned in violation of the statute, the payment of which cannot be required as a condition of relief.

It follows, that where a contract or obligation is given for two or more separate and independent things or objects, having no connection with each other, and one of those objects is the security of a usurious . debt, although the contract or obligation is altogether void, for reasons above given, and no action, at law or elsewhere, could be maintained thereon, nevertheless, if the party comes into a court of equity to ask that it be surrendered, all that the statutes of usury have done affecting the complainant’s right to relief, is, to forbid that any payment on account of such debt shall be made a condition of relief. As to other conditions, the statute is silent, and the court is left to administer relief upon those principles which govern the subject generally.

When, therefore, the plaintiff asks that a mortgage be cancelled, as a cloud upon the title to his lands, and that a court of equity shall so direct, in virtue of its power and its disposition to enforce his equitable rights, the court may not require that he pay a usurious debt, or any part thereof, or any interest thereon, but it may re<lu^re the performance of *any other duty which is just to the adverse party, unembarrassed by the statutes in question. In equity, the mortgagor, in such case stands, in reference to debts not usurious secured by the mortgage, in the same attitude as a complainant seeking to redeem; he must pay what at law and in equity he owes.

Nor is this any departure from the doctrine already stated, that the mortgage, being void in part, because given to secure a usurious debt, is void altogether. Upon that doctrine, the plaintiff, if he see fit, may rely, and on that ground, he may, if he can, defend himself and the title to his lands whenever and wherever assailed, but if he asks affirmative action and interference from a court of equity, to set aside the mortgage and adjudge its surrender, he must do equity, by paying his just debt, not impeached for usury.

The most that the court below should have done, was to adjudge that so much of the apparent debt as was secured by the four notes dated in July 1854, proved and adjudged (by the decree as modified by the general term of the supreme court) to be usurious, was void; that the said notes be surrendered to he cancelled, and that the defendants be enjoined against the prosecution of any suit upon those four notes. The judgment should be modified to conform to these views, without costs to either party on the appeal, and the judgment rendered at the special term, so far as it adjudged or decreed the surrender or discharge of the mortgage, should be reversed, and so far as it awarded costs to the plaintiff, should be further reversed and modified, so that neither party recover costs of the other in this action.

Judgment accordingly.