Chandlee v. Tharp

137 So. 540, 161 Miss. 623, 78 A.L.R. 445, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 296
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1931
DocketNo. 29506.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 137 So. 540 (Chandlee v. Tharp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandlee v. Tharp, 137 So. 540, 161 Miss. 623, 78 A.L.R. 445, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 296 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

*628 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 7th day of June, 1926, Mrs. S. A. Chandlee became indebted to W. S. Matthews, Jr., in the sum of one thousand six hundred fifty dollars, evidenced by two promissory notes for the sum of eight hundred twenty-five dollars each, payable one and two years after date, respectively, and bearing interest at the rate of six per cent per annum. To secure this indebtedness she executed and delivered a deed of trust on certain real estate, which contained a provision for acceleration of the due date of the entire indebtedness, if any part thereof should become due and unpaid. The indebtedness secured by this deed of trust was thereafter assigned to J. H. Tharp, the husband of the appellee, and, when the first note was not paid at maturity, Mr. Tharp exercised the privilege granted in the acceleration clause of the deed of trust by declaring all of the indebtedness due; and thereupon he instructed the trustee to foreclose the deed of trust to enforce the payment of the two notes. Before any other steps had been taken in the matter, and while Mr. Tharp was' away from home, Mr. Matthews, indorser of the notes, and Mrs. Chandlee, the maker thereof, approached Judge J. I. Ballenger, a confidential friend of Mr. Tharp,"who sometimes represented him as attorney, and offered to pay the interest accrued on the indebtedness, amounting to ninety-nine dollars, and to pay the further sum of sixty-four dollars *629 for an extension of both notes for sixty days. Judge Ballenger accepted from Mrs. Chandlee separate checks for ninety-nine dollars and sixty-four dollars, payable to Tharp, the check for ninety-nine dollars bearing on its face the notation, “Interest on notes due by me to Tharp;” and the check for sixty-four dollars the notation, “This check is for extension of note due by me to said Tharp sixty days, and is no payment on said note. ’ ’ He also executed and delivered to Mrs. Chandlee a receipt for the sixty-four dollars, reading as follows: “Received of Miss S. A. Chandlee sixty-four 00/100 dollars for which I give sixty days extension of payment of two notes I have against her. • J. H. Tharp by J. I. Ballenger.” Thereafter he indorsed the two cheeks, and deposited them to the credit of J. H. Tharp; and, upon the return of the said Tharp to his home in Gulfport, Judge Ballenger made a full report to him of his acts in reference to this indebtedness, and Mr. Tharp approved and ratified his acts by retaining the entire sum so paid by Mrs. Chandlee.

Thereafter, for a considerable period of time, Mrs. Chandlee paid twenty dollars per month for further extensions of the indebtedness for that period of time, and. on December 7, 1927, she paid four hundred dollars, three hundred twenty-five dollars of which was credited on the first note, and the balance applied to the payment of interest. Thereafter, until the second note became due by its terms, she paid Tharp ten dollars each month, for which he issued to her receipts, each of which recited that the payment was a bonus for the extension of the note then due for a period of one month. When the second note became due, R. A, Wallace was properly substituted as trustee in the deed of trust, and it was foreclosed by publication and sale of the property covered thereby, at which sale Mr. Tharp became the purchaser at and for the sum of one thousand two hundred dollars, and a trustee’s deed was executed and delivered to him.

*630 After the execution and recordation of the trustee’s deed, Mr. Tharp died testate; and his wife, Mrs. F. F. Tharp, qualified as administratrix with the will annexed, and began the active administration of the estate. Among: the assets of the estate were the two notes of Mrs. Chandlee, showing no credits thereon except the aforesaid credit of three hundred twenty-five dollars, and the one thousand two hundred dollars bid for the property sold at the trustee’s sale; this credit being entered on the note by the substituted trustee. The administratrix filed suit on these notes in the county court, but, upon the filing of a special plea setting up that the notes were usurious, nonsuit was entered. Thereafter, and within the statutory period for the probation of claims against the said estate, Mrs. Chandlee probated a claim against the estate for the recovery and repayment of. all sums paid by her on said notes, including the one thousand two hundred dollars for which the real estate covered by the aforesaid deed of trust was sold, setting forth in detail, in her claim, the circumstances under which these payments were made, the amounts thereof, and charging that the payments so made constituted interest on the principal of the indebtedness at the rate of more than twenty per cent per annum, in consequence of which the entire principal and interest had been forfeited. The administratrix'filed a contest of this claim, and, after a full hearing thereof, the chancellor entered a decree, finding that the payment of sixty-four dollars for an extension of sixty days was a: payment of interest in excess of twenty , per cent per annum on the principal of the debt, and, as a consequence thereof, conferred on Mrs. Chandlee the right to declare the principal of, and all interest on, said indebtedness forfeited, and that she had thereafter exercised this right conferred on her by statute, and allowed the claim for all amounts paid by her in cash, except the item of interest amounting to ninety-nine dollars, which was paid before usurious in *631 terest was received on said indebtedness. As to tbe. item of one thousand two hundred dollars, the amount for which the property covered by the deed of trust securing the indebtedness was sold, the chancellor held that it was not an actual payment on the indebtedness, because the foreclosure sale was void, for the reason that prior to the sale the indebtedness had been entirely extinguished by reason of the exaction of interest thereon in excess of twenty per cent per annum, and that her only remedy as to this item was, and is, a suit to recover property so sold. From the decree disallowing a recovery of this item of one thousand two hundred dollars, Mrs. Ohandlee prosecuted a direct appeal; while the administratrix prosecuted a cross-appeal, assigning as error the allowance of the claim for the various cash payments made by Mrs. Chandlee.

On the cross-appeal there are two contentions urged that may be considered and disposed of together: First, that the claim of the cross-appellee, being in the nature of a penalty, was not a probatable claim; and, second, that the claim, being in the nature of a forfeiture of penalty, does not survive against the personal representative of the deceased.

Section 1712 of the Code of 1930 provides, among other things, that executors, administrators, and temporary administrators “shall also be liable to be sued in aiiy court in any personal action which might have been maintained against the deceased,” and it has been held that our statute providing for the probation of claims against the estate of a deceased person refers, and is limited to, contractual claims. Feld v. Borodofski., 87 Miss. 727, 40 So. 816. It has also been frequently held by this court that a penalty or punitory damages, does not survive, and is not recoverable against, the estate of a deceased person. McNeely v. City of Natchez, 148 Miss. 268, 114 So. 484; Wagner v. Gibbs, 80 Miss.

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Bluebook (online)
137 So. 540, 161 Miss. 623, 78 A.L.R. 445, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandlee-v-tharp-miss-1931.