General Southwestern Corporation v. State

333 S.W.2d 164
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1960
Docket13433
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 333 S.W.2d 164 (General Southwestern Corporation v. State) 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
General Southwestern Corporation v. State, 333 S.W.2d 164 (Tex. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

WOODRUFF, Justice.

The State of Texas, through Will Wilson, its Attorney General, and Joe Res-weber, County Attorney of Harris County, filed this suit under the provisions of Article 4646b, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., seeking a temporary injunction to restrain appellants, General Southwestern Corporation, seven other corporations and eleven individuals from violating the usury laws of Texas pendente lite, and a permanent injunction on final trial. After a hearing, the Trial Court granted a temporary injunction, which appellants superseded pending appeal by filing bond.

The State contended that General Southwestern, through its officers, directors and stockholders, controlled and directed a combine composed of all the appellants in lending money to the public in small loans at usurious interest; that appellant, General Southwestern, in conjunction with In-tercoastal Resources Corporation, furnished the money used by appellant corporations, Apex Credit Company, Thriftway Finance Co., Southwestern Subsidiary Corporation, and Cordial Finance Corporation, in operating six local loan offices, lending money to the public at usurious in *166 terest, four of which offices were in Houston and two in Dallas. All were operated under assumed names except the one office conducted by Cordial Finance.

In eight Points appellants assert the Trial Court erred because: (1) Neither the common law nor Article 4646b, V.A. T.S., authorized the granting of a temporary injunction; (2) Alternatively, if there is authority therefor, the Trial Court exceeded the scope and purpose thereof, thus constituting an abuse of discretion; (3) That the order and Article 4646b, V.A. T.S., deny appellants’ rights guaranteed under the Constitutions of Texas and the United States, by depriving them of their property without due process of law; and (4) There was neither a sufficient nor a prima facie showing that appellants were engaged in the business of loaning money at usurious interest.

Since the last Point requires a review of the proof which to a degree is essential to a discussion of the other Points, it will be considered first.

In reviewing the evidence before a trial court granting a temporary injunction, we are required to give effect to that which was undisputed and not subject to any qualification. As to the disputed evidence, we are required to consider only that, together with all reasonable inferences that may be drawn therefrom, which is most favorable to the appellee. Hotel & Restaurant, Employees’ International Alliance & Bartenders’ International League of America v. Longley, Tex.Civ.App., 160 S.W.2d 124, 126; Red Devil Club v. State of Texas, Tex.Civ.App., 307 S.W.2d 627. “In other words, on appeal the evidence must be construed as sustaining the action of the trial court in granting or refusing a temporary injunction unless such evidence was of the character to compel a contrary conclusion from that on which the trial court presumably acted.” International Ass’n of Machinists Lodge 1488 v. Downtown Employees Ass’n, Tex.Civ.App., 204 S.W.2d 685, 686.

With reference to the State’s contention that General Southwestern, by and through its officers and directors, appellants Horace O. Menking, Otis D. Jenkins, Benjamin Taylor, Jr., James P. Markham, Jr. and Jo W. Walker, Jr., controlled and directed these operations, it was stipulated that the petition stated the facts as to the parties, their stock ownership, their capacities as officers and directors and the interlocking stock-ownership between the companies, 1 except appellants did not admit that Otis *167 D. Jenkins was “anything more” than executive vice president of General Southwestern. However, it was clearly shown by appellant Jo W. Walker, Jr., that Otis D. Jenkins, with the approval of General Southwestern’s board of directors, maintained direct supervision over the loan offices, for which service he was paid $250 per month by these offices. He was authorized to draw checks on the loan offices and he collected $100 per month for advertising. The remaining individual appellants appear to have been loan office employees, who handled the making of loans.

The loan office procedure was shown by the testimony of appellant, Jo W. Walker, Jr., president of Thriftway Finance and manager of its loan office, Acme Credit, who was called as an adverse witness by the State. It was shown that each prospective borrower was asked to sign an agreement employing the loan office or the corporation that operated it under that trade-name to obtain and service the loan and to guarantee its payment, for which he agreed to pay a brokerage. While he waited, his credit was checked and passed on by an employee of the loan office. If approved, the borrower executed a note prepared by the employee payable to appellant Intercoastal Resources for a sum, in the amount the applicant wished to borrow, plus a brokerage charge, which in each instance, if considered as interest, rendered the loan usurious. Upon the borrower’s signing the note, the employee delivered to him in cash the amount of the note, less the brokerage, from unsegregated funds in the cash drawer of the loan office which were accumulated from note payments on loans previously made by that office.

Each loan office made daily reports to Business Records Service, the trade-name of appellant Benjamin Taylor, Jr., who kept the books and records for all these loan offices and companies in an office located in the suite occupied by General Southwestern, of which he was secretary and a director. On these reports, referred to as loan letters, were listed all notes made that day, giving each maker’s name, the payments, amount advanced, the brokerage charged and amount of the note. Also, a list of all payments on notes held by the loan office made that day, showing the amount unpaid, the payment and balance due, was forwarded with the loan letters. No cash or checks, accompanied these reports. Mr. Taylor’s testimony showed that they were used for the making of entries upon the books of the loan offices, the corporations that operated them, Intercoastal Resources and General Southwestern, purporting to effect an assignment of the notes by the loan offices to Intercoastal, which in turn discounted them to General Southwestern, although the notes were retained by the loan offices for service and collection. His testimony further showed that from the data set out on the daily reports, apportionments of the brokerage charges were made on the records between these corporations and the loan offices, and we think it evident that the collection of these items by General Southwestern and Intercoastal Resources was effected by Mr. Jenkins’ authority to draw checks on the local loan offices. It was shown, too, that each of the loan offices made about 200 loans each month.

Proof was offered that on three typical loans made by Acme Credit Company within six months of suit, whereby the borrowers received $20, $50 and $100, the brokerage charges computed as interest would have been 340.46’%, 207.30% and 269.39% annually after allowing as lawful expenses $1 for each $50 or fraction thereof loaned.

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