I concur fully with the chief judge as to the four notes mentioned in the first four counts of the complaint, but I differ with him as to his conclusion in reference to the note for $1,000, mentioned in the fifth count of the complaint, and I will briefly state the grounds for my difference:
For precisely the same reasons stated by the chief judge for holding that the four notes must be regarded as Illinois contracts, this note must be so regarded. I agree that the original note for $1,500 was a New York contract, and, therefore, usurious and void. After that note had been long past due, and numerous payments had been made thereon, on the 14th day of September, 1876, the defendant, who was then a resident of the State of Illinois, sent to the plaintiff, who was a resident of this State, a draft on New York for $650, being the interest at the rate of ten per cent on the note, and $500 to be applied upon the principal. On the 25th of September the plaintiff acknowledged the receipt of the draft in a letter which he wrote to the defendant addressed to him at his place of residence, in which he inclosed the note for $1,500, saying that there was no room to make the proper indorsements thereon, and requesting *Page 131 him to send a note dated September 25, 1876, for the $1,000 of principal remaining due to him upon the note. In pursuance of that request the defendant executed the note for $1,000, payable in one year from date, with interest at ten per cent. The note was executed in Illinois at the place of defendant's residence, and expressed no place of payment, and was forwarded to the plaintiff in this State by mail. There was no evidence tending to show that there was any intention on the part of either of the parties to evade the usury laws of this State, and the note was manifestly executed with reference to the laws of the State of Illinois, where the maker resided, and where the laws authorized the rate of interest inserted in the note. The note was given in Illinois in exchange for a note there surrendered through the agency of the mail by the plaintiff to the defendant; and when in pursuance of plaintiff's request this note was executed by the defendant and put in the mail, directed to him at his residence in this State, the contract between the parties was complete, and the note then became the property of the plaintiff. If it had been lost in the mails it would have been lost as the property of the plaintiff, and he could thereafter have sued the defendant thereon as upon a lost note. If it had been stolen from the mails, or unlawfully taken or converted it could have been described in an indictment for the crime as the property of the plaintiff, or could have been recovered by him in an action of replevin, or sued for in an action of trover, claiming it as his property. This must, therefore, be treated as if the parties had met in the State of Illinois, and the plaintiff had there surrendered to the defendant the note for $1,500, and taken from him this note for $1,000 for the balance due upon the prior note; and from these views I do not understand the chief judge to differ.
If this note for $1,000 had been given in this State, even with the lawful rate of interest mentioned therein, in renewal of or in substitution for the prior usurious note, it would also have been tainted with usury and void. A substituted or renewal note thus given is held void for one or both of these reasons: The new note in such a case is given in renewal or *Page 132 continuance of the usurious contract, and is, therefore, void for the same reason that condemns that contract; or it is a new security for a usurious debt or contract and void on that account. In either case the new note is void because it comes under the condemnation of the policy and the letter of our usury laws. But a usurious contract can be purged of the taint of usury and money loaned upon a usurious contract can furnish a valid consideration for a promise to pay the money actually loaned. If the usurious contract be mutually abandoned by the parties and the securities be canceled or destroyed so that they can never be made the foundation of an action, and the borrower subsequently makes a contract to pay the amount actually received by him, this last contract will not be tainted by the original usury and can be enforced. (Hammond v. Hopping, 13 Wend. 505; Kilbourn v.Bradley, 3 Day, 356; Houser v. The Planters' B'k,57 Ga. 95; B'k of Monroe v. Strong, Clark's Ch. R. 76.)
The note for $1,500 when it reached the State of Illinois was not a note condemned by any law of that State. It was not there illegal or tainted with usury, for the reason that the laws of New York were not operative there. It was simply subject to the defense on the part of the defendant of being unlawful because made in violation of the laws of the State of New York, where it was executed. It was a note void, not by the laws of the State of Illinois, but void under the laws of the State of New York. It had no other infirmity in the State of Illinois than that the defendant could defeat a recovery upon it if sued thereon anywhere, for the reason that it was void at the place where it was given. If he had paid on the note in Illinois a rate of interest illegal under the laws of the State of New York, such interest could not, by virtue of the usury laws of this State, have been recovered back in Illinois, or in this State; and neither could the plaintiff, under the laws of this State, be indicted for taking the usury there. It seems to me then that the only inquiry is whether the balance due upon the note for $1,500 and the surrender of that note furnished a valid and legal consideration for the note of $1,000; and that it did is too clear for reasonable dispute. *Page 133
A valid promise to pay money loaned upon a usurious contract which in some lawful way has been purged of its usury is always founded upon a sufficient consideration. In Hammond v.Hopping it was said that such a promise "is founded upon an equitable and moral obligation, which is sufficient to support an express promise. The money actually lent, when legally separated from the usurious premium, is a debt in equity and conscience, and ought to be repaid. This is the settled doctrine of a court of equity, for there the borrower will not be relieved from an usurious contract, except upon the condition of refunding the money lent, with legal interest."
Here then was a note legal by the laws of the State in which it was executed, and founded upon a sufficient consideration, and it is difficult to perceive upon what principle it can be held to be void. It was given for the balance of principal actually due upon the prior note which in the State of Illinois was simply void but not illegal; which there a party could voluntarily pay, and, as I claim, could voluntarily renew. And if this note was valid in the State of Illinois where it was given, then under principles of law universally applied it is valid here, and everywhere. The case of Jacks v. Nichols (5 Barb. 38) is a case precisely in point. It was there held that a new note given in the State of Connecticut at a rate of interest lawful there in the place of, and upon the surrender of a prior note made in the State of New York and there void for usury, was freed from the taint of usury. It is tersely and well said in the opinion of the court in that case "now instead of purging the contract of the excess of interest at the place where it was made (the only occasion for which is the presence of the statute of usury) the parties transfer the scene of their negotiations to another State, where any contract respecting the use of money is valid which does not violate the principles of natural justice, and there cancel the securities taken upon the original agreement, and make a new one upon the subject of the original loan, reaffirming it, and binding the borrower to pay, after a season of forbearance, which forbearance forms a part of the consideration of the new agreement; how can it be *Page 134 said that this contract is tainted with usury? The taint of usury is not recognized by the law of the place where it is made. There a party may agree to pay what he pleases, either for the past, or present use of money; and hence it appears to us that the new contract would be valid. Viewed as an agreement made in a State whose laws are silent on the subject of usury, it must be considered as much divested of the taint of usury as if it had been expressly purged of it, by the agreement of the parties made at the place of the original loan."
That case was appealed to the Court of Appeals and there the judgment was reversed (5 N.Y. 178), but solely upon the ground that the court, differing from the Supreme Court, found that the new security was a New York contract, and not a Connecticut contract, and it is a just inference from the decision that the court agreed with the Supreme Court in its law, and simply differed from it as to the facts.
In De Wolf v. Johnson (10 Wheat. 368), a case quite in point, JOHNSON, J., writing in a case where a new security had been given in the State of Kentucky at a rate of interest legal there, in substitution for a security given in the State of Rhode Island, which was claimed to be usurious there, said: "It is not very easy to discover how the taint of Rhode Island usury can infuse itself into the veins of a Kentucky contract. The defense would not admit of a moment's reflection if it rested on the direct effect which laws against usury have upon contracts. Whatever sums may have been derived through the usurious contract of 1815 (the Rhode Island contract), to the contract of 1817 (the Kentucky contract), they would not affect the latter with usury, unless introduced in violation or evasion of the laws of Kentucky, for the two contracts are governed by laws that have no connection;" that "it is clear that the Kentucky contract must be considered as a new and substantive contract. It is governed by a distinct code of laws from the Rhode Island contract, and cannot be affected by the taint of usury which might have been transmitted to it under some circumstances, had it taken place in Rhode Island. It was, then, equivalent to a payment and reloan, and no one can doubt that money *Page 135 paid on an usurious contract is not recoverable back beyond the amount of the usury paid." To the same effect is the case ofHouser v. Planters' Bank (supra).
I am, therefore, of the opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to recover upon the note for $1,000 as upon an Illinois contract, and that the entire judgment should be affirmed, with costs.