Bell v. C.J. Gerlach Bro.

205 S.W. 470, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 28, 1917
DocketNo. 250.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 205 S.W. 470 (Bell v. C.J. Gerlach Bro.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. C.J. Gerlach Bro., 205 S.W. 470, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1251 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinions

BROOK, J.

Perhaps it will be as well to incorporate the original petition of plaintiff in this cause, which was as follows:

“(1) During the summer of 1911 defendant and others sought to incorporate the Trinity Compress & Gin Company, at Trinity, Tex., and did so incorporate such company. That defendant approached plaintiff through Chas. J. Rogan and besought the plaintiffs to subscribe $1,000 to the enterprise, for which stock in said compress and gin company should be ' issued in due time, depicting to these plaintiffs the great profits and advantages that would accrue to the owners of stock in said compress and gin company then and there stating that the revenue from said investment would be great.
“(2) That in order to induce plaintiffs to invest $1,000 in such enterprise the defendant then and there bound and obligated himself to relieve the plaintiffs of such investment, and return to the plaintiffs their $1,000 at the end of one year should the plaintiffs be not satisfied therewith.
“(3) Now plaintiffs say that because of the promise and obligation of the defendant to indemnify them, and relying implicitly upon such promises and obligations, they did subscribe to the stock in said enterprise, and did at or about the time of said subscription pay some small portion of the $/l,000.
■ “(4) That at the time the plaintiffs subscribed as aforesaid the stock was not then ready to issue, but that later, some time about or before September 26, 1911, the said sto.ck was ready to be delivered and then it was these plaintiffs refused to go further until the defendant gave them his obligation in writing, binding and obligating himself in addition to his promises and obligations through the said Rogan and that on September 26, 1911, defendant wrote these plaintiffs a letter, making great promises of success, and on the point of plaintiffs’ demand said, ‘Regarding your stock will say, if you are not satisfied with it at the end of a year, I will take it off your hands.’
“(5) Plaintiffs say that defendant bound himself and became liable to the plaintiffs to pay to them at the expiration of one year $T,000 in exchange for said stock of $1,000 if plaintiffs were not satisfied therewith.
“(6) That before the expiration of one year and oftimes after the expiration thereof plaintiffs advised defendant that they were not satisfied with said stock, and urged and demanded the defendant to pay to them their $1,000, but they say that defendant has wholly failed so to. do, and wholly fails and refuses to answer correspondence through open mail, or by registered letter or by letters from plaintiffs’ counsel; indeed, the plaintiffs say that the quiet and circumspect ‘lobster’ would envy the silence with which defendant has treated their oft demand for a compliance with his firmly bound obligations to them to pay the $1,000.
“(7) And, further, the plaintiffs say that they would not at any time have ventured such investment but for the solemn and positive promises and obligation of defendant to relieve them and protect them against loss further than the use of their money for one year, and, confidently relying upon the obligations and promises of defendant, they did lay out the said $.1,000, and with which investment these plaintiffs are not satisfied, and here now tender in open court said stock asking that defendant be required to pay to them the said $1,000, with 6 per cent, interest from the date of one year after the date of said stock.
“(8) Wherefore plaintiffs pray the court that defendant be cited to appear and answer herein ; that they have their judgment for the full sum of $1,000, with interest thereon at 6 per cent, from one year after the date of said stock, for cost of suit, and for such other and further relief, both' general and special, in law and in equity, that they may show themselves justly entitled to,” etc.

This case, as alleged by the pleadings, was tried with a jury, and resulted in a verdict for the appellees.

[1] In this court for the first time a motion is made, setting up, among other things, the fact that the county court was without juris *471 diction of this cause, and therefore that this court is without jurisdiction of same. As shown by the plaintiffs’ petition, plaintiffs sue in the county court of Trinity county for $1,000, with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent, per' annum. Interest is of three kinds: First, conventional interest fixed by the parties in the contract; second, legal interest, that which is allowed by law when the parties have not agreed upon any particular rate; and, third, interest which is allowed as damages for the detention of money. The last kind, however, is not, strictly speaking, interest at all, but the legal rate of interest is merely used as the measure of damages. Article 4973, Vernon’s Sayles’ Texas Civil Statutes of 1914, gives the following definition of interest:

“ ‘Interest’ is the compensation allowed by law or fixed by the parties to a contract for the use or forbearance or detention of money.”

Article 4974, Id., reads as follows:

“ ‘Legal interest’ is that interest which is allowed by law when the parties to a contract have not agreed upon any particular rate of interest.”

Article 4976 reads;

“The distinction between legal and conventional interest shall be known and recognized by the laws of this state.”

Article 4977 provides:

“On all written contracts ascertaining the sum payable, when no specified rate of interest is agreed upon by the parties to the contract, interest shall be allowed at the rate of six per cent, per annum from and after the time when the sum is due and payable.”

Article 4978 provides:

“On all open accounts, when no specified rate of interest is agreed upon by the parties, interest shall be allowed at the rate of six per cent, per annum from the first day of January, after the same are made.”

Article 4979 provides:

“The parties to any written contract may agree to and stipulate for any rate of interest not exceeding ten per cent, per annum on the amount of the contract.”

Article 4980 provides:

“All written contracts whatsoever, which may in any -way, directly or indirectly, violate the preceding article by stipulating for a greater rate of interest than ten per cent, per annum shall be void and of no effect for the amount or value of the interest only; but the principal sum of money or value of the contract may be received and recovered.”

■With reference to the matters in controversy here, it is sufficient to quote the statute, as above. The interest prayed for in this case and allowed by the court is not within the first specification above set out, that is, conventional interest fixed by the parties in the contract, so that the question, to be determined in this .cause is whether the interest prayed for in this suit is legal interest, or whether it is merely damages.

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.W. 470, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-cj-gerlach-bro-texapp-1917.