Bill F. McGraw v. McKenzie Banking Company
This text of Bill F. McGraw v. McKenzie Banking Company (Bill F. McGraw v. McKenzie Banking Company) 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.
Opinion
Bill F. McGraw appeals from an adverse judgment rendered after a non-jury trial in an action for debt evidenced by McGraw's promissory note made to United Bank (the "Bank"), acquired by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC") on the Bank's failure, and transferred by bill of sale to McKenzie Banking Company which brought the action. We will affirm the trial-court judgment.
In his first point of error, McGraw contends the trial court erred in allowing the witness John Arnold to testify over McGraw's objection and request for sanctions that Arnold's testimony be excluded under Rule 215(5). Tex. R. Civ. P. 215(5). In response to McGraw's interrogatory, McKenzie identified Arnold as having knowledge of relevant facts, but omitted to supply an address or telephone number for him as requested in the interrogatory. Arnold is an officer of McKenzie and the individual who responded for McKenzie to McGraw's discovery requests. The trial court found McGraw was not prejudiced by Arnold's testimony because it consisted only of identifying the note, the execution of which was not denied (it was in fact admitted), and identifying McGraw's letter to the Bank and the FDIC's bill of sale of the note to McKenzie, each of which was admitted in evidence without objection. McGraw does not attack the sufficiency of the evidence to support the court's determination of a want of prejudice. We conclude any error was harmless, for the reasons stated by the trial court, and overrule the point of error. See Teague v. Bandy, 793 S.W.2d 50, 53 (Tex. App.--Austin 1990, writ denied); see also Smith v. Southwest Feed Yards, 835 S.W.2d 89, 90-91 (Tex. 1992).
McGraw's second point of error contends the trial court erred in admitting in evidence McKenzie's exhibit two, a photocopy of a cashier's check issued to McGraw by the bank. McGraw objected to admission of the exhibit on the grounds that it was hearsay, not authenticated, and not the best evidence. McGraw's brother testified without objection that the cashier's check was deposited in his account at the Bank and that he thought it represented a loan to him consistent with his large line of credit and his long-standing practice to borrow from the Bank from time to time. We believe, therefore, that any error in admitting the photocopy of the note was harmless. We overrule McGraw's second point of error.
McGraw's points of error three through seven pertain to various elements of his usury defense and counterclaim for usury. The assertion of usury is based on a demand letter McGraw received from McKenzie which asserted a claim for interest as well as principal. The trial court found there was no evidence to support McGraw's contention that the interest claimed in the demand letter was greater than that due under his promissory note; and even if the letter had demanded more interest than the note, any question of usury was moot because McGraw's calculation of usurious interest depended on his premise that he did not owe the principal of any debt to McKenzie. We agree. Moreover, McGraw does not assign error to these trial-court determinations. We hold, therefore, that he waived any error. San Jacinto River Auth. v. Duke, 783 S.W.2d 209, 210 (Tex. 1990). We overrule points of error three through seven.
McGraw's point of error eight complains the trial court erred in failing to find there was no demand for payment of the note in Travis County. While the promissory note specified Travis County as the place of payment of the debt, McKenzie's demand letter did not. As a result, McGraw argues, McKenzie failed to make proper demand and presentment. We hold any error harmless, if error there was, because the terms of McGraw's promissory note include an express waiver of presentment and demand. We overrule McGraw's eighth point of error.
McGraw's points of error nine through eleven complain the trial court erred in its finding of fact number three because there was no evidence or factually insufficient evidence to support the finding. Finding of fact three declares as follows: "After Bill F. McGraw executed [the] note, the . . . bank issued a $50,000 check payable to Bill F. McGraw, which represented the proceeds of that note." McGraw argues the evidence is deficient in failing to show any connection between his promissory note and the cashier's check for $50,000. We will summarize the evidence on this point. By letter dated February 11, 1987, the Bank sent the promissory note to McGraw and requested that he sign it and return it along with his social security number and financial statement. By letter dated February 12, 1987, McGraw returned the signed note, dated February 13, 1987, together with the information requested by the bank in its letter. The date of the Bank's cashier's check is February 17, 1987; it was made payable to Bill F. McGraw; it bears on its reverse the endorsement "For Deposit Bill F. McGraw a/c #109 7153"; and a deposit slip for the brother's account shows a deposit on February 19, 1987, marked "Bill McGraw 50,000." After the controversy arose, McGraw wrote a letter to McKenzie, dated February 1, 1990, in which McGraw stated that he had executed the note "so that the bank could transact some business with my brother." We hold the evidence legally and factually sufficient to support the trial court's finding that the $50,000 deposited in the brother's account represented the proceeds of McGraw's loan from the Bank in the same amount, as evidenced by his $50,000 note. We overrule McGraw's ninth, tenth, and eleventh points of error.
McGraw's point of error twelve complains the trial court failed to conclude that the endorsement on the reverse of the cashier's check is a forgery. While conceding his execution of the promissory note, McGraw denied explicitly that he had endorsed the cashier's check. Moreover, an expert witness testified that in her opinion, based on her comparison of the signature on the cashier's check with other examples of McGraw's signature, the signature on the reverse of the cashier's check was not McGraw's. The examples used for comparison, she explained, were those on "approximately 50 of [McGraw's] checks and about five or six of his signatures on letters or documents." We find in the evidence, however, nothing that tends to establish the genuineness of the comparison signatures that constituted the basis of her opinion. See Tex. R. Civ. Evid. 901(b)(3). In all events, however, whether McGraw personally endorsed the note is immaterial because the trial court found expressly that he had authorized endorsement of the cashier's check, as well as its deposit in his brother's account. That is to say, the court did not find that McGraw had personally endorsed the cashier's check.
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Bill F. McGraw v. McKenzie Banking Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bill-f-mcgraw-v-mckenzie-banking-company-texapp-1995.