Employees Loan Co. v. Templeton

109 S.W.2d 774, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1155
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 1, 1937
DocketNo. 13598.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 774 (Employees Loan Co. v. Templeton) 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
Employees Loan Co. v. Templeton, 109 S.W.2d 774, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1155 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

Ralph G. Templeton sued the Employees Loan Company, alleging it to be a fictitious trade-name under which some person or persons to him unknown were conducting a loan business in Fort Worth, Tex., having an agent and representative in charge of the business in the person of J. R. Brown, who likewise was made a party defendant.

Plaintiff’s action is for the statutory penalty of double the amount of usurious interest alleged to have been paid by him to the defendants within two years next prior to the institution of th'e suit.

Plainiff alleged he was employed in the accounting department of the Magnolia Petroleum Company; that on and prior to January,- 1934, and continuously since said date, the defendant Employees Loan Company was an assumed trade-name adoped by persons whose names and addresses were unknown to him, and that said unknown persons under said assumed trade-name, acting by and through his or their local agent and representative, J. R. Brown, had been and were conducting a personal loan business in the city of Fort Worth, Tarrant county, Tex., in which business personal loans were made in small sums to individuals, and in this instance to plaintiff, taking no security therefor and in which exorbitant and usurious interest was charged and collected.

Allegations are made that, with full knowledge of the illegality of the business so conducted by them, the persons who really owner the assets of said business and received the usurious interest charged and cob lected were not revealed to the public, and if known they were persons residing outside the state of Texas, upon whom valid processes issued from courts in this state could not be served.

By,the terms of the petition, a rather lurid picture is presented of the nature and kind of business methods employed by defendants. But it is sufficient for our purposes to say that the petition shows that in January, 1934, plaintiff borrowed approximately $25 from defendants, for which he executed his note for $34, due in ninety days; he avers that covering a period of time up to perhaps March 21, 1936 (the date of the last transaction not being given definitely), the transactions between plaintiff and defendants consisted of payments of installments, renewals -of delinquent installments, in which would be included additional usurious interest, and sometimes additional advancements of new money. Likewise at the maturity of the renewals and failure to pay similar proceedings would be had; in each renewal usurious interest is clearly shown to have been charged and subsequently-paid; at the time of the institution of the suit there was a small amount remaining unpaid on the last renewal of previous loans and renewals; but there was not enough remaining unpaid to offset the amount of interest paid by plaintiff. The petition shows plaintiff had received from defendants the sum of $157.20 and had repaid the aggregate sum of $220.-60, or $63.40 in interest, and prayer was for double the usurious interest and for costs of suit.

The petition alleged sufficient facts also to justify the issuance of an injunction against defendants and their respective employees, restraining them from molesting and harassing him, his family, and his employer, by telephone or otherwise about the balance of the indebtedness remaining unpaid.

The defendant J. R. Brown answered that his connection with the transactions alleged by plaintiff consisted only of being on salary as an employee of the defendant company since January 1, 1936, and personally received no part of any interest paid by plaintiff; that his connection therewith consisted only in receiving payments for his principals and in each instance the full amount so received by him was transmitted to his said principals, and prayed that plaintiff take nothing as against him in the pending suit.

The defendant Employees Loan Company answered with a general denial and specially that prior to July 15, 1935, the “Employees *777 Loan Company” was owned by National .Accounting Company, and that on about that date said trade-name, with its' assets, was purchased by the J. H. Taylor Trust, and that the J. H. Taylor Trust did not assume any of the liabilities of the National Accounting Company, doing business under the trade-name of Employees Loan Company, and having had no connection therewith prior to said July IS, 1935, was not responsible for any obligation that may have been owing by the Accounting Company to plaintiff. That, upon the purchase by the Taylor Trust of plaintiff’s outstanding obligation, it paid full face value therefor in cash without knowledge of any vice in the transaction; that the Taylor Trust has not received any sum of money paid out by plaintiff in usurious interest prior to the date of purchase by it.

Defendant Employees Loan Company further answered that on March 21, 1936, and before the commencement of this suit, it paid to plaintiff the sum of $1.75 in cash and made an additional loan to him in cash and took his note for $30, crediting the excess of $16.80 in the $30 on a previous obligation to the Loan Company, which was due and unpaid, in consideration for the execution and delivery to it of a release by plaintiff of all claims of every kind and character he then had against the Employees Loan Company for past transactions - had with it, and that said receipt, for the $1.75 and the release were executed and delivered before it made payment of the money, and before it made the new loan and advanced the monéy thereon, but for which said receipt and release it would not have made said advancements. The release is pleaded in haec verba, the prayer being that plaintiff take nothing by reason of his suit and that it recover in cross-action against plaintiff the balance of the $19.20, alleged to be due on said last-mentioned loan, and for general relief.

The plaintiff replied with a plea of want of consideration to the allegations made by defendants that a settlement was made with plaintiff- for all claims he had growing out of transactions with the Employees Loan Company and release executed therefor on March 21, 1936.

No jury being demanded, the case was tried to the court upon the testimony offered by all parties. Judgment-was entered for plaintiff against Employees Loan Company and the J. H. Taylor Trust, for $103.-30,- and that plaintiff take nothing against J. R. Brown, and against the Employees Loan Company on its cross-action, but perpetuated the injunction theretofore issued as against all defendants. The Employees Loan Company and the J. H. Taylor Trust have perfected and are prosecuting this appeal.

There are findings of fact and conclusions of law filed by the court, and a brief narrative agreed statement of facts in the record. From the latter and those findings of fact by the court shown by the agreement to be correct, there is little controversy between the parties except as to the application of the law under the facts.

By stipulations in the agreement filed, it seems the questions we are called upon to consider are:

(1) Could the court properly render judgment against J. H. Taylor Trust when citation was only served on J. R. Brown, agent and manager of the Employees Loan Company?

(2) The J. H.

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 774, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/employees-loan-co-v-templeton-texapp-1937.