
    William H. Henry & Company, Respondent, v. John E. Fry and William F. McLiney, Appellants.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term, First Department,
    November, 1912.)
    Guaranty — debt of another — usury — dismissal of complaint.
    Where, in an action on defendant’s written guaranty that if plaintiff would loan S sixty dollars they would pay in full any judgment recovered therefor, the undisputed proof shows that S obtained from plaintiff a loan of forty dollars for four months upon his promise to pay back sixty dollars, and that on making the loan plaintiff exacted of S a confession of' judgment for sixty dollars and fifteen dollars costs and ten dollars attorney’s fees, and also required him to give the guaranty in suit, the debt so guaranteed was void for usury under sections 371-373 of the General Business Law.
    The obligation of defendants, as sureties, to pay said debt was also void for usury; and a judgment in favor of plaintiff will be reversed and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
    Appeal by defendants from a judgment of the Municipal Court of the city of Hew York, borough of Manhattan, fourth district, entered in favor of the plaintiff.
    Blandy, Mooney & Shipman (Andrew J. Shipman and Ralph W. Thomas, of counsel), for appellants.
    Hamerman & Rosenfeld (Jacob R. Schiff, of counsel), for' respondent.
   Seabury, J.

Several questions are urged upon this appeal, but the determination of one of them is decisive, not only of the appeal but of the action itself. The plaintiff sues upon a written agreement of guaranty, wherein the defendants agreed that, if the plaintiff would loan one Shea sixty dollars, they would pay the full amount of any judgment recovered against Shea for this debt. The only oral evidence in this case was given by Shea, who was called by the plaintiff and cross-examined by the defendants. If, for the purpose of this appeal, we adopt the view most favorable to the respondent and assume that a judgment by confession was recovered against Shea by the plaintiff, it is, nevertheless, evident that the loan to Shea was usurious. The undisputed proof shows that Shea sought to borrow forty dollars from the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff loaned him this sum for four months upon his promise to pay back sixty dollars. It is fairly inferable from the testimony that was given that, at the time of making the loan, the plaintiff exacted of Shea a confession of judgment for sixty dollars and fifteen dollars costs and ten dollars for attorney’s fees. It also appears that, at the time the loan was made, the plaintiff required Shea to give it the guaranty agreement, upon which the plaintiff now seeks to recover the amount of its usurious debt from these defendants. The debt, payment of which these defendants guaranteed, was void for usury (General Business Law, §§ 371-73), and the obligation which the defendants, as sureties, assumed was of the same character. To treat the agreement of guaranty as of a different character from the original debt would place the principal in a better position than the sureties and leave the sureties without the right to recover indemnity from their principal, and enable the usurer to evade the prohibitions of the statute. 1 Brandt Law of Usury & Guaranty, (3d ed.) 509. In Rosa v. Butterfield, 33 N. Y. 665, the court, while holding that the defense of usury was unavailable to a corporation, through Davis, J., said: “ If the notes be intrinsically usurious, and therefore violations of the statute, the guaranties are necessarily so; for they are coeval in their creation, and identical in their consideration. * * * Unlike the guaranty of an existing contract, which may stand by itself, though the obligation guaranteed be invalid, these instruments must look for their consideration to that which upholds the notes, and when that fails through illegality, nothing remains to sustain any part of the transaction. In that view they are neither more nor less than collateral undertakings for the payment of a loan void by statute; and, as part of the securities upon which the usurious loan was based, are infected with a vice that pervades and destroys the whole.”

In Heidenheimer v. Mayer, 42 N. Y. Supr. Ct. 506, 516, Speir, J., said: “ I am unable to appreciate the view taken by counsel between the notes and the guaranty as separate existing contracts. If these notes are intrinsically usurious, and therefore in violation of the statute, the guaranty is equally so. It had no different or other consideration' than the notes. They were delivered at the same time and identical in their consideration, and the contracts are not independent.”

In Webb on Usury (§ 301), it is said: “ The guaranty of the performance of an obligation must stand or fall with the obligation; so, if a note, the payment of which is guaranteed, is void for usury, and the guaranty is supported by no qther consideration, it must of necessity fall with the note. The guaranty fails to the same extent as the usurious debt guaranteed, fails.”

The fact that the usurer sought to disguise the illegal character of the contract under the cover of a confession of judgment and an agreement of guaranty does not in any respect better the position of the lender. It was a mere subterfuge or contrivance to cheat the law. The law in such cases looks at the substance of the transaction rather than its superficial appearance. Where the real transaction is a loan of money,” said Lord Mansfield, “ the wit of man cannot find a shift to take it out of the statute.” Floyer v. Edwards, 1 Cow. 112, 114. The original obligation being void for usury, the guaranty of the defendants to pay the debt was of the same character, and no recovery can be had upon it.

It follows that the judgment should be reversed, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.

Guy and Bijub, JJ., concur.

Judgment reversed and complaint dismissed, with costs.  