
    HUNGERFORD’S BANK a. THE POTSDAM AND WATERTOWN RAILROAD COMPANY.
    
      Supreme Court, Sixth District;
    
      General Term, October, 1859.
    Usury.—Indorsers for Corporations.
    The act of 1850 (Laws of 1850, 344)—prohibiting corporations from interposing the defence of usury—does not affect the contract in respect to other parties; but merely precludes the corporation and those in privity with them from avoiding it.
    An accommodation indorser of usurious negotiable paper made by a corporation, may interpose the defence of usury.
    Appeal from a judgment rendered on a trial by the court.
    The decision below will be found reported 9 Ante, 124, where the facts are fully stated. From that judgment the defendants appealed to the general term.
   Br the Court.—W. F. Allen, J.

The plaintiff loaned to the Potsdam and Watertown Railroad Company money at a greater rate of interest than that allowed by law, and to secure the repayment of the money so loaned with the illegal interest, the note in suit was given, the individual defendants indorsing as the sureties, and for the accommodation of the Railroad Company, the maker of the note. Judgment at the circuit was given against the indorsers, upon the ground that they were estopped by the “ Act to prohibit corporations from interposing the defence of usury in any action,” passed, April 6, 1850, from "alleging usury as a defence to this action.

The defendants are in no sense strangers to the contract of loan, so as to preclude them from setting up the defence of usury when sued upon their indorsement, or from seeking affirmative relief by action on the ground of usury. They are sureties of the borrower, and as such are embraced in the term “ borrower,” as used in the eighth section of the Revised Statutes relating to usury, and in the fourth section of the usury law of 1837. (3 Rev. Stats., 5th ed., 73, §§ 8, 74, 13; Post a. Bank of Utica, 7 Hill, 391; Cole a. Sanger, 10 Paige, 583; Mun a. Hovey, 9 Ib., 197.) A mere stranger to the transaction cannot ordinarily allege usury in respect to it; but a party to a deed or contract, as well as those standing in legal parity with him, can, unless estopped or under disability of some kind, always show it to be void when it is sought to be enforced against him. The defendants are not certainly strangers to their own contract of indorsement. They, and they only, can allege the invalidity of their contract. (Dix a. Van Wyck, 2 Hill, 522; Green a. Moore, 4 Barb., 332.) They are not necessarily restricted, by their relation to the principal, to the defences which may be made available to the maker of the note.

They are not joint contractors with the maker, and the contracts of the maker and indorsers are entirely distinct, and governed by different rules. The contract of the one is conditional, while that of the other is absolute. An action against an indorser may be defeated by want of demand and notice, by dealing with the principal debtor to his prejudice when he occupies the position of a surety; and an indorsement may be void as obtained by fraud, or for some other reason while the contract of the maker is valid. So too one party to a note (maker, or indorser), may be estopped by his own acts from setting up a defence true in fact and common to both, and which would be fatal, while the other parties may avail themselves of it. (McKnight a. Wheeler, 6 Hill, 492; Holmes a. Williams, 10 Paige, 326; 3 Kern., 316, per Denio, J.; Chamberlain a. Townsend, 26 Barb., 611; Dane a. Schutt, 2 Duer, 621; Clark a. Sessions, 4 Ib., 408; Prescott a. Davis, 4 Barb., 495.)

As one party may be estopped by his own acts from setting up a defence, so he may be estopped by act and operation of law, or by a statute describing him by name, or by his status or condition, or as a contractor in a particular form without affecting the parties not named. The contracts of makers and indorsers of promissory notes are treated, as they are in truth, as separate and several contracts. They may or may not be supported by the same consideration, but a joint-action will not lie against them, although they may now by statute be sued together, but in such case the action is regarded for all the purposes of protecting the rights of parties, and is prosecuted as a several action against the several parties. The validity of the contract of indorsement does not necessarily depend upon the validity of the engagement of the maker. It is true where both grow out of the same transaction, and depend upon the same consideration, if one is illegal both are necessarily so; but it doesAs one party may be estopped by his own acts from setting up a defence, so he may be estopped by act and operation of law, or by a statute describing him by name, or by his status or condition, or as a contractor in a particular form without affecting the parties not named. The contracts of makers and indorsers of promissory notes are treated, as they are in truth, as separate and several contracts. They may or may not be supported by the same consideration, but a joint-action will not lie against them, although they may now by statute be sued together, but in such case the action is regarded for all the purposes of protecting the rights of parties, and is prosecuted as a several action against the several parties. The validity of the contract of indorsement does not necessarily depend upon the validity of the engagement of the maker. It is true where both grow out of the same transaction, and depend upon the same consideration, if one is illegal both are necessarily so; but it does, not follow that because one is not in a situation to allege the illegality,- the other shall be precluded. The law which prohibits the borrower in this case to allege usury is very direct in its "terms, and simple in its provisions. “No corporation shall-hereafter interpose the defence of usury.” Assignees and representatives of corporations, although not named, are within the spirit of the act, and therefore within its terms, and they are not permitted to avail themselves of a defence from which the corporations are excluded. (Curtiss a. Leavitt, 15 N. Y. R., 296, point 8.)

. Whether under all circumstances creditors and others claiming under a corporation should be within the prohibition is not settled, and is not free from doubt, but need not be considered here. So too, although the letter of the act merely forbids corporations from interposing the defence of usury, it has been very properly held that it necessarily takes from the corporation the right to assert the usury in any way—defensively, and in any way to vacate or set aside a contract, as well by affirmative action as by way of a defence to an action on the contract. It takes from the corporation the objection of usury. (Butterworth a. O’Brien, 28 Barb., 187.) This being so, the language used by the learned judge of the Court of Appeals in Curtiss a. Leavitt, was appropriate and expressive. The undertaking of a corporation founded upon a usurious consideration is, quoad the corporation and its receiver or assignee, as if no statute of usury existed. A statute is as no statute to one who is prohibited to use or claim the benefit of it. It is as a repealed statute to him. His rights are not affected by it. Judge Comstock says (p. 85): “ My impression is that the act must be construed as a repeal of the statutes of usury, as to all contracts of corporations stipulating to pay interest,” &c.

This is doubtless true, but that does not extend necessarily to collateral contracts of others. Here we have the agreement for a loan usurious in itself, consummated by the borrower—and the absolute promise or contract of the corporation to pay, as to which it is said, and need not be decided, the statute of usury is repealed, and the collateral and conditional contract of the sureties, as to whom the statute of usury is in full force. Judge Burrows (p. 154) better expresses my idea of the effect and operation of the statute, and refers to it as operating upon the condition of the artificial beings named, and thus as to their incidentally affecting the contract, he says: “ The condition of this class of beings becomes the same as if the usury laws never existed.” The statute operates directly upon the person, and only indirectly and incidentally upon the contract. Construction has no place in respect to a statute or other instrument which is perfectly plain and easy to be understood, giving the words their ordinary and usual signification. The statute was passed under the pressure of the case of the Dry Dock Bank a. The American Life Insurance and Trust Company, in which the plaintiff was exempted from the payment of a very large sum of money, loaned under a 'contract held to be usurious (3 Comst., 344), and was not designed especially to give moneyed corporations the advantage over needy individuals competing for loans in the money market.

It may have had that -effect, but such was not its primary object; which was to hold corporations to their engagements irrespective of the general policy of the usury laws as affecting the contracts of individuals. The language chosen is well calculated to carry out the primary object of the act, and is not so general as to interfere with the usury laws or to affect individuals. If the statute of 1850, by implication repeals the usury laws, so far as contracts for loans to corporations are concerned, as is claimed, then a repeal of that act would not so restore the usury laws as to invalidate contracts made during its existence, by bringing them within the penalty imposed by the usury laws. A repeal of the act could not affect the contract, and yet my-impression is that a repeal of that act would place all contracts of corporations on the same footing with contracts made by individuals. The statute would preclude a corporation surety from interposing the defence of usury, although the individual and principal debtor not within the act would not be estopped. It certainly cannot be claimed that all parties to .a promissory note or bill of exchange, in which the name of a corporation is found as maker, drawer, indorser, or acceptor, are by the act of 1850 debarred from the protection of the statutes of usury.

It is supposed that there is some mysterious connection between the contracts of the maker and indorsers by means of the loan which constitutes the consideration of both, by which the disabilities of the maker are transferred to the indorsers. But I am unable to see by what process. If the Legislature had said, as they might, that the statutes of usury should not apply to contracts for the loan or forbearance of money to corporations, the case would be different, and the plaintiff’s counsel would be right; but it is not so written, and we are not permitted to go beyond the statute. If such had been the substance of the act, then it would not have affected the liability of corporations upon contracts made in other States, and void by the usury laws of those States. Our statutes could not repeal foreign statutes, and they could have been pleaded in our courts.

But the statute does, in truth, as intended, said Judge Com-* stock in Curtiss a. Leavitt, prohibit corporations from interposing in our courts the usury laws of other States and countries as a defence to their contracts; which shows that the statute Operates not by way of a repeal of our statutes of usury, but simply upon the ground- that the prohibition is personal. I do not suppose that it would make any difference if the action was against the defendants as j oint borrowers with the railroad corporation, and upon a joint contract. But it is not so, and the contracts are as independent as if written on separate pieces of paper. Suppose the defendants had loaned their note to the Railroad Company, payable to bearer, and the company without indorsement had sold it for less than its face, so that it would have been void for usury; would the fact that the loan was made to a corporation bring the parties to the note within the provisions of the act of 1850, and exclude them from the benefit of the usury laws ?

Certainly not, as I think—and if not—then the fact that the corporation indorsed the note would not affect the makers, and to go one step farther, the fact that the corporation borrowed the indorsement rather than the note of the individuals, would not vary the rights of the parties. The statute is (3 Rev. Stats., 5th ed., 73, §5): “All bonds, bills, notes, assurances, conveyances, all other contracts and securities whatsoever, &c., whereupon or whereby there shall be reserved or taken a greater sum or value for the loan, or forbearance of any money, &c., than is prescribed by statute, shall be void.”

An indorsement by way of security is within the provision.

The note and indorsement received vitality by the transfer to secure the loan, and depend upon it for a consideration ; and if that is illegal, the contract fails. It is no answer to the plea of usury when interposed by the indorser, to say that the maker is estopped, or by law precluded from alleging the defence. When the maker interposes the defence, the estoppel may be replied.

It is as to the contract of the corporation that the statute of usury is quasi repealed, not as to the contract of the individual indorser. It is only by a construction not warranted by the language of the act, nor required by any necessity, nor necessary to give full effect to the statute and the intent of the Legislature as expressed in it, that it can be claimed that the loan to a corporation, and all securities connected with it, are made valid by being taken out of the operation of the statutes of usury by the act of 1850, and I am not prepared to go that length.

We are cited to two cases, Bork a. Seaman (24 Penn. State R., 435), and The Market Bank of Troy a. Smith, decided by the United States District Court for Wisconsin, and reported in the American Law Register for September, 1859, in which .the same construction was given to the statute, and with the reasoning I am entirely satisfied. Perhaps a shorter answer to the defence interposed in those States would have been, that the laws of this State affecting the remedy had no extra-territorial force, and such would have been consistent with the view taken of the statute.

I think the learned justice erred in his application of the statute at the circuit, and that the judgment must be reversed, and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event. 
      
       Present, W. F. Allen, Pratt, Balcom, and Mullen, JJ.
     