From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Southern Life Insurance and Tr. Co. v. Packer Prentice

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Mar 1, 1858
17 N.Y. 51 (N.Y. 1858)

Opinion

March Term, 1858

Samuel Beardsley, for the appellant.

S.A. Foot, for the respondents.


Two questions are raised: First. Was the act of 1850 prohibiting corporations from setting up the defence of usury retrospective; Secondly. Does it apply to foreign corporations?

Upon the first question I do not think the point an open one. The precise point, substantially as presented now, was presented in Leavitt v. Curtis (15 N.Y., 9), and was unanimously decided against the position now contended for on behalf of the plaintiffs. It is true that it was not absolutely necessary to the decision in that case that this point should have been passed upon, yet it seems to have received a very careful consideration by the court. Four of the judges, in their opinions, discuss the question at considerable length; and, upon the final decision of the cause, a resolution was passed, by a unanimous vote, in effect that a corporation could not, under the act of 1850, set up usury in any way to defeat a contract otherwise valid. I think, therefore, that a decision made upon so careful examination, although not absolutely necessary to the final decision of the cause, should be deemed res adjudicata in the same court, unless it be shown very clearly to be wrong.

Upon the question whether the act was designed to apply to foreign corporations made parties to suits in the courts of this state, it may be suggested, in the first place, that the terms of the act are general: "No corporation shall hereafter interpose the defence of usury in any action." There is nothing in the words of the act itself which would indicate an intention on the part of the legislature to limit its effect to domestic corporations.

In the second place, no sufficient considerations of local or state policy have been suggested from which we would be authorized to infer a motive on the part of the legislature to restrict the operations of the act to domestic corporations. So far as the working of this partial repeal of the usury laws may be allowed to throw any light upon the question, it has been anything but favorable to this idea. Although, in some instances, works of public improvement have been advanced by a resort, on the part of corporations, to the borrowing of money at ruinous rates under the protection of this act, yet it is very questionable whether the benefits have not been, in most cases, more than balanced by the loss which the public, as creditors and stockholders, have suffered by the bankruptcy and ruin which have uniformly overtaken the companies resorting to such methods of raising the means to carry on the undertakings for which they were organized. It is difficult, therefore, to find from the practical workings of the act, I think, any motive on the part of the legislature for restricting its application to domestic corporations.

It is much more probable that the act grew out of considerations connected with the principles upon which the usury laws themselves are based, than from any considerations of local benefit to be realized from freedom on the part of corporations to borrow money at any rate of interest.

These laws were originally based upon the assumption that the needy borrower was in some degree in the hands of the lender. Government has therefore assumed that it was a duty incumbent upon it to protect the former against the rapacity of the latter by adequate pains and penalties. In regard to natural persons, subject to the contingencies of business, often with little or no capital to start with, these considerations might apply with great force; but in regard to corporations organized for the purpose of concentrating in one undertaking the contributions of a large number of individuals until the aggregate shall amount to the capital supposed to be requisite for the successful prosecution of such undertaking, the legislature may well have assumed that no such protection was necessary; that if corporations thus organized became borrowers it would not be from necessity, but voluntarily, to enable them to carry forward some enterprise which afforded a reasonable expectation of profits sufficient to enable them to repay the necessary interest without loss or sacrifice.

Upon the whole, I think no sufficient reason has been adduced to justify this court in holding that the act was designed to be partial in its effect, applicable to corporations of this state only, and not to those of foreign states.

The judgment of the Supreme Court should therefore be affirmed.

All the judges concurring,

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Southern Life Insurance and Tr. Co. v. Packer Prentice

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Mar 1, 1858
17 N.Y. 51 (N.Y. 1858)
Case details for

Southern Life Insurance and Tr. Co. v. Packer Prentice

Case Details

Full title:SOUTHERN LIFE INSURANCE AND TRUST COMPANY v . PACKER AND PRENTICE

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Mar 1, 1858

Citations

17 N.Y. 51 (N.Y. 1858)

Citing Cases

MacQuoid v. Queens Estates

The decision in Isle of Wight Co. v. Smith (51 Hun, 562) is to the contrary. The appellant contends that this…

Country Motors v. Friendly Finance Corp.

In 1858, the New York court of appeals decided Southern Life Ins. Trust Co. v. Packer and Prentice. There it…