Mitchell v. Oakley

The Chancellor.

There is no doubt, from the statement in the complainant’s bill, that Underhill has practiced a most atrocious fraud upon one or both of the parties to this suit. And if he obtained the money from Oakley on. *69the note, under the pretence that the note was his own, and under circumstances which would render the note void for usury in the hands of the latter if that pretence was not true, he ought unquestionably to be sent to the state prison for swindling. (2 R. S. 677, § 53. The People v. Haynes, 14 Wend. 546.) Independent of the question of usury, however, the complainant has no defence whatever to the note, either in law or in equity; as it is not alleged in the bill that at the time the defendant purchased the note, he knew or had any reason to suspect that Underhill was not the bona fide owner and holder thereof. And in relation to negotiable paper, the principle is well settled that where one of two innocent persons must suffer by the fraudulent acts of a third, he who by his carelessness has enabled such third person to commit the fraud must bear the loss. • Neither is it perfectly clear, even if the facts shall turn out to be as stated in the complainant’s bill, that the purchase of the note was usurious, and that the defendant is not entitled to the protection under the provision of the revised statutes which were in force at the time of his purchase, as a bona fide receiver and holder' of this negotiable note, to the extent of the purchase money actually paid for the same, with interest on that amount. (1. R. S. 772, § 5.) If the purchase of a negotiable, note from the payee before it was due, at a discount, should however be adjudged to be usurious, under the statute then in force, where it after-wards was discovered that it was not a valid note in the hands of the vendor, still the decision of the vice chancellor was right in dissolving the injunction. For this bill having been filed before the act of the 15th of May, 1837, to prevent usury, went into operation^ the decision of this court in the case of Livingston v. Harris, (3 Paige's Rep. 528,) is directly in point to show that the complainant is not entitled to the extraordinary aid of a preliminary injunction, to transfer the jurisdiction of the case from a court of law to this court, without an offer to pay what is equitably due. It is true, the revised statutes did not require an offer to pay what was equitably due as a necessary condition to the granting relief in this court, in a proper case for coming here. But even in cases of concurrent jurisdiction, where *70the complainant has a perfect defence in a court of law if he chooses to avail himself of it, this court will not grant a preliminary injunction, in the first instance, for the mere purpose of obtaining the exclusive jurisdiction of the case, and thus depriving the adverse party of his common law right of trial by jury. In cases of concurrent jurisdiction, a party may come into this court for relief upon the final hearing, if he thinks proper to do so ; subject to the power of this court to refuse him his costs when he takes the case from the jurisdiction of a court of law unnecessarily. (Gridley v. Garrison, 4 Paige’s Rep. 647.) But when he asks the interposition of the extraordinary power of this court, by means of a preliminary injunction, to deprive his adversary of the right of a common law trial as to the matters of fact in dispute between them, he must show by his bill that some injustice would be done him, or that he would be deprived of some legal or equitable right, if his adversary should be permitted to proceed at law.

The order appealed from must therefore be affirmed, with costs.