Financial Security Services, Inc. v. PHASE I ELECTRONICS OF WEST TEXAS, INC.

998 S.W.2d 674, 1999 WL 486932
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 20, 1999
Docket07-98-0182-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 998 S.W.2d 674 (Financial Security Services, Inc. v. PHASE I ELECTRONICS OF WEST TEXAS, INC.) 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
Financial Security Services, Inc. v. PHASE I ELECTRONICS OF WEST TEXAS, INC., 998 S.W.2d 674, 1999 WL 486932 (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

JOHN T. BOYD, Chief Justice.

In challenging a judgment in favor of appellee Phase I Electronics of West Texas, Inc. (Phase I), appellant Financial Security Services, Inc. (FSS) presents seven issues which, it contends, show errors requiring reversal committed by the trial court. For reasons we later state, we reverse the judgment of the trial court and render judgment that Phase I take nothing on its usury claim against FSS and that FSS take nothing on its claim seeking an award of attorney fees.

FSS specializes in providing financial and other services to the security and alarm industry. Jim Alexander and his son Karlen founded Phase I in 1993 to provide alarm services. In March 1994, Phase I and FSS executed a set of agreements. Included in those agreements were a loan and security agreement, a promissory note, a contingent payment agreement, and a billing and collection services agreement. The general nature of the relationship of the parties was that Phase I would enter into contracts with its customers to provide alarm monitoring services. The contracts were presented to FSS and, while they were not actually assigned to FSS, on contracts upon which FSS made cash advances, Phase I would assign a security interest in favor of FSS as collateral to secure those cash advances. For a separate fee, FSS provided billing and collection services to Phase I. In instances in which FSS was providing those services, Phase I agreed not to bill or collect itself. FSS would take the payments made from Phase I’s customers, deposit them in a collateral account, and apply them first to the cost of monitoring the alarms by a third party; second, to *676 FSS’s own billing and collection fees; third, to interest on the promissory note from Phase I; and finally, on principal owed on that note.

The nominal interest on the Phase I notes was 13 percent. The cash advances to Phase I were subject to a five percent “program fee.” For the purpose of determining the maximum allowable rate of interest, the parties agree that the program fee was interest. FSS and Phase I also executed a “contingent payment agreement” we will describe in greater detail below.

Phase I originally assigned 275 contracts to FSS on which FSS advanced $78,751. FSS later determined that approximately 40 of those contracts did not have original signatures. Phase I admitted that it could not locate original contracts for those customers so it “recreated” the contracts using customers’ signatures from other documents. During the first three months of the contracts between FSS and Phase I, the payments received from Phase I’s customers were not enough to pay the monitoring charges. By letter dated May 18, 1994, FSS offered to “eliminate the Contingent Payment amount due of $26,-250.42” if Phase I paid its entire loan balance within 30 days.

Phase I did not pay the note and, by certified mail, FSS sent a second letter in which it stated that a deficiency of $4,211.59 existed in Phase I’s collateral account and requested payment. It noted the contracts that did not contain proper signatures and requested “true correct and complete” contracts. It also alleged that Phase I had told it that customer contracts had been canceled when in fact Phase I continued to bill and collect those customers directly. In the letter, it requested that those contracts be restored to FSS’s billing system and set a deadline of August 31,1994, within which Phase I must satisfy its request or be considered in default.

Because Phase I did not comply with this request, on September 2, 1994, FSS sent another letter stating that Phase I’s note was in default and if the total due FSS of $88,499.95 was not paid by September 22, 1994, FSS would accelerate the note and foreclose upon its security interest. On October 3, 1994, Phase I filed the suit giving rise to this appeal in which it alleged violation of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (the DTPA), a breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, breach of contract, negligence, usury, and seeking a declaratory judgment that the contracts were void. In January 1995, it paid the balance due on the note to FSS. Although Phase I has never paid the contingent payment amount, FSS has not sought payment of that amount.

On July 14, 1997, the trial court granted a partial summary judgment in favor of FSS denying Phase I’s DTPA claims. However, it denied the portion of FSS’s motion seeking summary judgment on the breach of contract and usury claims. In its judgment, the trial court recited that Phase I had agreed to dismissal of its claims of the breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing and negligence. 1 After a bench trial, the trial court rendered judgment that FSS contracted, charged, and/or received a usurious rate of interest in excess of double the allowable amount and awarded Phase I a recovery of $312,-024.24 together with post-judgment interest from March 2, 1998, at the rate of 10 percent per annum. The court’s judgment did not make an express disposition of Phase I’s breach of contract claim and contained no “Mother Hubbard” clause. However, it is the rule that when a judgment such as this one, not intrinsically interlocutory in character and rendered and entered in a case regularly set for a conventional trial on the merits, no order for a separate trial of issues having been *677 rendered, has been entered, we may presume that the trial court intended to, and did, dispose of all the claims remaining before it. North East Independent School District v. Aldridge, 400 S.W.2d 893, 897-98 (Tex.1966).

The specific issues raised by FSS are 1) whether the base collateral is interest, 2) whether the contingent payment amount is interest, 3) the effect of FSS’s nonreceipt of the contingent payment amount, 4) whether the trial court erred in finding that FSS contracted for a usurious rate of interest, 5) whether the usury saving clause cured any potential usury violation in the contracts, 6) whether the trial court erred in failing to apply the usury saving clause to the contingent payment in determining the legal limit, and 7) whether FSS is entitled to recover attorney fees.

The parties agree that former Article 5069-1.01 — .12 of the Revised Civil Statutes (Vernon 1987) (repealed 1997) governs this case. Article 5069-1.01(a) defines interest as “the compensation allowed by law for the use or forbearance or detention of money.” The parties also agree that the maximum legal rate of interest applicable to this transaction was 18 percent. Article 5069-1.06 provides penalties for interest charges in excess of the legal maximum, including the forfeiture of three times the interest charged. If the interest charged is more than twice the amount allowed, the lender must also forfeit the principal and other fees. Id.

Our supreme court has held that a usurious transaction is composed of three elements. They are 1) a loan of money; 2) an absolute obligation to repay the principal; and 3) the exaction of a greater compensation than allowed by law for the use of money by the borrower. First Bank v. Tony’s Tortilla Factory, Inc., 877 S.W.2d 285, 287 (Tex.1994).

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998 S.W.2d 674, 1999 WL 486932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/financial-security-services-inc-v-phase-i-electronics-of-west-texas-texapp-1999.