Schanz v. Sotscheck

McLaughlin, J.:

Action to foreclose a mortgage upon real estate. The appellants interposed an answer setting up the defense of usury, and asked for a cancellation of the mortgage upon that ground. At the trial the court dismissed the defense, as it considered the facts alleged did not constitute usury.

The answer alleged that on February 3, 1911, the firm of Frederick Zittel & Sons agreed with the appellant Carl Sots-check to obtain for him a loan upon his bond and mortgage for $12,000, bearing six per cent interest, upon his paying a bonus of $1,800, which was also to cover the expenses connected with the loan; that the expenses did not exceed $200, “making a net bonus of about $1,600.00, which was exacted for the making of said loan, and it was so understood at the time ” the same was agreed to be made; that Zittel & Sons informed Sotscheck they were ready to make the loan, and thereupon the mortgage in question was given, he receiving from Zittel & Sons $10,200; that the bond and mortgage given were made payable to one Sinnigar, who was not the real party in interest and did not advance the money for the loan, but was a mere dummy for Zittel & Sons, and was a party to the scheme to *800exact said illegal and usurious bonus from the defendants; that Sinnigar, as a part of the same scheme, assigned the bond and mortgage to the plaintiff, who took it with full knowledge of all the facts; and that the transaction was the result of a conspiracy between Zittel & Sons, Sinnigar and the plaintiff, whereby they sought to reserve, take and exact for making the loan $1,600 in excess of six per cent interest. These facts were not only alleged, but the appellants offered to prove the same at the trial, which offer was refused and an exception taken.

I am of the opinion, if such facts had been proved, that the case would have been brought within the statute and established that the loan was usurious. The General Business Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 20 [Laws of 1909, chap. 25], § 371) provides that “No person or corporation shall, directly or indirectly, take or receive in money, goods or things in action, or in any other way, any greater sum or greater value, for the loan or forbearance of any money, goods or things in action, than is above prescribed.” Section 370 of the statute prescribes a rate of six per cent per annum. By means of the conspiracy alleged and offered to be proved at the trial, Zittel & Sons, Sinnigar and the plaintiff exacted, as a condition for the $12,000 mortgage, in addition to the six per cent interest thereon, appellants’ promise to pay a bonus of $1,600, which . sum the defendants did pay when the loan was made. If the firm and the two persons named were acting together in a conspiracy to obtain the bonus as a condition for making the loan, then the act of one may be regarded as the act of all, and the situation is precisely the same as though Zittel & Sons had advanced the money themselves and received the bond and mortgage in their own name and were now seeking to enforce it. That a loan under such circumstances would constitute a usurious transaction is too plain for discussion. (Birdsall v. Patterson, 51 N. Y. 43; Milliken v. Golden, 73 Hun, 212.)

But it is said that the answer does not show an agreement by the appellants to pay the bonus in consideration for the loan, because it is not expressly alleged that the appellants were aware at the time the loan was made that the firm to *801which they promised to pay the bonus was itself making the loan through a dummy. I think such allegation is fairly to be inferred from what is alleged, but if not, if the other allegations are true, it is of no importance. One cannot escape the force of a usurious agreement by resorting to the use of a dummy. Form amounts to nothing if the facts alleged and established show the transaction was usurious. Courts always look to the actual nature of the transaction and not to the form which the parties may have given to it. (Smith v. Cross, 90 N. Y. 549.) In the great majority of usurious transactions a subterfuge of one kind or another is resorted to for the purpose of giving it a legal appearance. Such appearance, however, never deters the court from pronouncing the transaction usurious, once that fact appears. (Braine v. Rosswog, 13 App. Div. 249.) This rule is well stated in Knickerbocker Life Insurance Co. v. Nelson (78 N. Y. 137), where the court stated: “It has been said and reiterated by the courts from the time the schemes and contrivances of lenders became the subject of judicial examination, that there is no contrivance whatever by which a man can cover usury, * * * and that no subterfuge shall be permitted to conceal it from the law.”

The answer is by no means a model pleading. It is inartificially drawn, but there are facts stated sufficient to show, if true, that the loan was usurious. The fact is expressly alleged that the defendants paid to Zittel & Sons $1,600 to obtain the loan; that such payment was made by reason of a conspiracy between that firm, Sinnigar and the plaintiff “whereby they sought to reserve, take and exact a greater sum for the loan to the said defendants than six per cent per annum.”

I am of the opinion that the court erred in dismissing the answer, also in not receiving the proof offered by the appellants to establish the allegations of fact therein set forth.

The judgment appealed from, therefore, is reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellants to abide event.

Laughlin, Olarke and Scott, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, P. J., dissented.