Court Opinion

ID: 3600499
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:47:02.832065+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:39:59.828551
License: Public Domain

[EDITORS' NOTE:  THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 524 
[EDITORS' NOTE:  THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 525 
It cannot be disputed that if the note in litigation had been sold before maturity to a holder for full value, in good faith and in the usual course of business, none of the matters set up in the answer or proved at the trial would have been of any avail to prevent a recovery. Whether the defendant intended to deliver the note or not, or did in fact do so, would have been wholly immaterial. The paper in the similitude of a note had been put in the hands of Seymour and Elliott, for a purpose. If they violated instructions, and passed the paper to an honest holder, it was but an instance of the familiar rule that when one of two innocent persons must suffer, that one must sustain the loss, who has enabled the wrong-doer to commit the wrong. Most of the cases cited by the defendant are explained by these considerations, which have a peculiarly forcible application in their relations to negotiable paper.
The present case, however, has nothing to do with this class of questions. The sole point of inquiry is, whether there has beena violation of the usury laws. That can only be disposed of by a consideration of the rules governing the taking of unlawful
interest, which are in no respect peculiar to negotiable paper. The same question might arise as to a bond and mortgage. Of course, when such instruments have their inception, it is not usurious for the holder to sell them for what they will bring. On the other hand, if they are transferred at a discount beyond seven per cent, not yet in a legal sense having had their inception, the transaction is usurious. It accordingly tends to confusion to consider the present case at all as a question arising under the law of negotiable paper. The sole stress of the present question is this: Has the payee of this note transgressed a statutory rule preventing the taking of unlawful interest, and which, if violated, infects the note, takes it out of the class of commercial instruments and makes it invalid and worthless in the hands of an innocent holder?
Did, then, the present note have its "inception" in view of the usury laws, when the so-called transfer of it was made to Benedict? If void in his hands it needs no argument to *Page 527 
show that it cannot be collected by the plaintiff. The question whether the note was void in Benedict's hands for usury, depends upon the point whether it had its "inception" before it was transferred to him by the payee. This depends upon the point whether the latter could have brought an action upon it against the defendant. The inquiry is not, as has been sometimes suggested, whether the note is accommodation paper, but it is the more broad proposition whether an action could have been maintained upon it before transfer. (Munn v. Commission Co.,
15 J.R., 44; Powell v. Waters, 8 Cowen, 669; Kent v.Walton, 7 Wend., 256.) In the first of these cases SPENCER, J., said: "On a careful examination of the case, we see no reason to doubt that the bill, while in the payee's hands, and before it was discounted by the plaintiffs at a higher rate than the legal interest, was a perfect and available bill, and that when it became due he could have maintained an action upon it against the acceptor or drawer. This appears to the court to be the true test in distinguishing between a case where a discount of a bill at a higher rate of premium than the legal rate of interest, will render the transaction legal, by considering it the purchase of a bill already perfect and available to the party holding it, and where it will be illegal as a usurious loan of money." (P. 55.) In Powell v. Waters the rule is stated in this form: "A note which has been negotiated by the maker and might, if at maturity, be enforced against him by the holder, may be sold at a greater discount than the rate of seven per cent per annum, without involving the purchaser in the penalties of usury. But the note must be perfect and available to the holder to make it salable by him. The test is the right to maintain an action upon it, against the parties to it, if it was then due." (Pp. 685, 686. See, also, 2 Parsons on Bills and Notes, 426.) This author says, in discussing this subject: "Hence we may draw one rule: If no party to the note, who is prior to the holder, could himself bring an action upon it against the maker, then no prior party ever owned the note, and the holder being the first owner, must be held to have loaned the money to the *Page 528 
maker, through the prior parties, who were only agents of the maker; on the other hand, if any prior party could have maintained the action, he owned the note and sold it to the holder."
These authorities serve to show that the rule that a note must have had an inception, to make it the subject of sale, is not confined to the case of accommodation paper, but extends to all cases where the paper, though in the similitude of a note, has no existence as between the immediate parties to it. This point is well shown by the case of Marvin v. McCullum (20 J.R., 288). In that case it appeared that a note made payable to A., or bearer, was never delivered to A., but was passed by the maker to H., as security for a usurious loan. The court held that the mere act of signing a note and retaining it in the hands of the drawer formed no contract; that, before the instrument became a note, there must be a delivery, as an evidence of a contract. On this ground, it appears to me that the case of Hall v. Wilson (16 Barb., 548), was correctly decided. In that case W. had made a promissory note for $120, payable to U., or bearer; it was never delivered, but was placed by the maker in his desk, as a place of deposit, where it was stolen by B., a laborer in his employ, and was by him transferred to one Bigelow, at a usurious discount. It was held that the plaintiff, who derived his title from Bigelow, could not recover. The court, per W.F. ALLEN, J., took the ground that the note never had a legal inception, for want of a delivery, that being essential to its very existence. It, accordingly, could not be the subject of sale, but only of discount; and if a larger sum than the regular rate of interest was deducted, then the transaction was usurious.
It only remains to apply these principles to the case at bar. The note, in order to have been the subject of sale by Seymour or his principal, Weld, must have had all the elements of a contract — parties, consideration, assent and subject-matter. I do not think that there was any consideration for the note. The defendant was to have the one-tenth share of the *Page 529 
right to the patent for Tompkins county, to be conveyed to the company when formed. A fair test of the point whether he received any consideration is to inquire whether, if the transaction had been an honest one and favorable to himself, he could have compelled Weld to convey one-tenth of the right for that county to him? Manifestly not. He would only be contemplated as having a share in the company, if formed. If the plan became abortive nothing would pass. The whole transaction, at the time Seymour and confederate left the defendant, must be regarded as inchoate and provisional and dependent upon the fact of securing nine other men to unite with him. The certificate must be considered as given simply to carry out provisionally the intent of the contract. If the defendant could not have held Weld to the contract in its incomplete condition, it is plain that, under the rules of mutuality, the latter could not have held the defendant.
There is a still more serious difficulty in the case. There was plain and distinct evidence given by the defendant that there was no intent on his part to deliver the note to Seymour and Elliott, and that there was no delivery in fact. If this were true there was no assent, and of course no contract. The minds of the parties never met upon the subject-matter of the contract. The defendant testified without contradiction that they told him that they only wanted the note to show to others that he was one that was willing to go in and make up the company of ten men, and that they gave him the certificate of membership, etc., simply to show to counsel to see that they would be all right; to see that there was to be no deception. He further said: "In answering that the note I gave Seymour and Elliott was for the certificate of membership, I did not mean that I then gave and delivered the note for that purpose. It was drawn for the price of the certificate of membership, but the note was not then delivered to them, nor the other papers mentioned to me, for any other purpose except to be shown to others as I have stated."
If this testimony is to be believed, the case clearly falls within the authorities and principles already considered. The *Page 530 
note had no inception in the hands of Weld. I lay entirely out of view the testimony of Seymour, that he bought the note for his services to Weld and sold it to Benedict. He was a co-conspirator in the vile fraud practiced on the defendant, and could, on general principles of justice, no more have maintained an action on the note than Weld himself. The note had no inception until it reached the hands of Benedict. The difficulty with his claim is that he took the note at a usurious discount, and the plaintiff has no greater rights than Benedict.
It cannot be urged that this was no loan by Benedict, because no loan was intended. The answer is, that the law stamps the transaction with the characteristics of a loan. The same thing might be urged when one discounts an accommodation note at a greater discount than seven per cent, not knowing its true character, but supposing it to be a business note. It is perfectly well settled, that this want of knowledge has no effect. The holder is bound to know the character of the paper he is dealing in, and if it turns out to be accommodation paper, the transaction is usurious. (Clark v. Sisson, 22 N.Y., 312;Dowe v. Schutt, 2 Denio, 621; Newell v. Doty,33 N.Y., 83; Jackson v. Fassett, 12 Abb. Pr., 281; S.C., 33 Barb., 645.) The present case only requires a wider generalization based on a similar principle, and one who takes a note at its inception at a greater discount than the legal rate, must be conclusively presumed to have intended to loan, as the transaction can have no other character. His want of knowledge that the note takes its inception in his hands is immaterial.
It is not necessary, in reaching this conclusion, to disagree with such cases as Howe v. Potter (61 Barb., 356) andHarger v. Wilson (63 id., 237). In each of those cases, the transaction had all the elements of a contract. In Harger v.Wilson the maker of the note intentionally issued the note and put it in circulation, though induced to do so by the fraud of the payee. Here was a valid contract, though in its nature defeasible. The payee could have brought an action *Page 531 
on the note, though the fraud might have been urged as a defence. It was properly held, that the note had an inception in the hands of the payee. Such a case is plainly no authority for the decision of one where the defence is, that the note never took effect at all, because there was no intent to deliver and in fact no delivery.
The learned judge at the Circuit having refused to comply with the defendant's request to submit the question of his intent to deliver the note to the jury, and having charged, as matter of law, that the plaintiff could recover, the order granting a new trial was correctly made and must be affirmed.
Order affirmed and judgment absolute to be entered for the defendant, with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed and judgment accordingly.