Gifford v. State

229 S.W.2d 949, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2096
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1950
Docket4702
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 229 S.W.2d 949 (Gifford 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
Gifford v. State, 229 S.W.2d 949, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2096 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

SUTTON, Justice.

This appeal is from the 41st District Court of El Paso County.

. The State brought this suit under the provisions of art. 4646b, Vernon’s, Civil Stats., against K. P. Gifford, doing business undfer the trade name Finance Trust Company, and alleged the deféndant was engaged in the business of habitually loaning money upon contracts for the use and detention of which usurious interest was charged against and contracted to be paid by the borrower. A large number of transactions were detailed in the petition' but on a hearing had evidence was offered as to three transactions. The State sought a temporary injunction and prayed that it be made permanent. At the conclusion of a hearing the trial court granted a temporary injunction from which order this' appeal is prosecuted on a supersedeas bond.

*950 The three transactions presented by the evidence - involved the sale and purchase of automobiles on part time and in all material respects are identical. In the first transaction the automobile dealer made a price of $995 which was the only price made and which price was paid by the purchaser. This amount was used as the price paid in all transactions had in connection with the s.ale, including the procurement of insurance, the application for the’transfer of title and the payment of the sales tax due, with the exception of one statement in the record where a different amount is named as the time selling price, which will be hereinafter noted. The terms of sale were $395 cash and the remainder of $600 financed through the defendant. The evidence given by the purchaser was that the deferred amount of $600 was financed through the defendant; that he was required to execute .a note for $784.20 payable in 12 equal monthly installments of $65.35 each; that an insurance policy was issued to him on the car through the defendant, and that there was prepared at the defendant’s office the purchaser’s affidavit. The purchaser executed a mortgage to secure an .indebtedness to the automobile dealer in the sum of $784.20, payable as provided in said note at the office of the defendant •in El Paso, El Paso County, Texas, with interest after maturity at the rate of 6%. At the bottom of the mortgage following the statement, “In Witness Whereof, the mortgagor has hereunto set his hand, etc.”, appears the following:

“Statement of Items Covering Purchase.
Cash selling price $995.00
Time selling price 1179.20.
Down payment 395.00
Unpaid balance 784.20”

There is in the record, offered by the de-fetidant, an instrument described as “Purchaser’s Statement”, which recites, “For the purpose of securing credit from you in the purchase of the property described, I make the following representations:”

Then follows some personal history as to age, marital status, employment, earnings, etc. which statement is, signed by the purchaser. Following the signature is, another statement, “Itemized Statement of Sale of Merchandise,” bearing the same date as all other instruments, May 3, 1949, and reciting: “I agree to purchase merchandise as described subject to the terms and conditions set forth below:”

Then follows a somewhat lengthy recitation of matters, thought not material, but concludes:

“I, the undersigned obligator, (s) purchaser^) of this property do hereby state: 1. That the installment sale credit extended to me this day as evidenced by this contract, or the one annexed hereto grows out of the purchase, on a time price basis, of the property described below, the amount of such credit being determined in the manner shown: (The description of the car) Appraised Value $643.00 Bk. $550.00.
1. Cash selling price $995.00 ****
5. Total cash selling price ’ 995.00
6. Cash payments • 395.00 ****
9. Total down payment 395.00
10. Deferred balance, Item 5 less 9 600.00
11. Sales tax 9.95
12. Title and transferring 10.00
13. Dicense 11.55
14. Total: Item 10 thru 13 31.50
14. Amount to be financed 631.50
15. Pire and Theft Insurance 6.00
17. Collision (1 yr.) 34.00 ****
22. Total: Item 15 thru 21 40.00
23. Total Int. Chg. — Rate 112.70
24. Total Chgs. 22 and 23 ’ 152.70
25. Total Amt. Note — 14 and 24 . 784.20
26. Down Payment — Item 9 395.00
27. To.tal Time Selling Price, Items 5 and 24 1179.20
28. Total cash selling price — Item 5 995.00"

The manner of payment is then provided for in 12 installments of $65.35.

This last statement purports to have been “Submitted by and payable to” the motor dealer and is signed by the purchaser.

On the same date, May 3, 1949, the defendant paid to the Dealer $550.

The routine followed in the other two transactions were in all material respects the same as the one detailed above. In one the price of the automobile’ was $450 with a cash payment of $250 and a balance of $200; a'note'for $292.30 payable in ten installments of $29.23 each and the interest item recited in the Statement is $69.30. In the third the price paid was $295 with a cash payment of $140 and a balance of $155 *951 arid a note for $220.50 payable in six installments' of $36.75 each and - the interest chargé was $47.55.

The defendant has four points of error and says the statute is not applicable to the transactions detailed, because it applies to “loans” only, and not .to time sales such as these are, because the so-called sales price is a cash price and the total of the items, making up the larger deferred amount, including the items recited as interest charges, is a time sales price and a legitimate commercial transaction.

The trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law on request and found in the first transaction before the Court the defendant financed the deferred payment by a loan of $671.50 for which he charged $112.70 interest, so designated, which was usurious within the meaning of art. 4646b, supra. In the second transaction he found the defendant financed a loan of $222 for a usurious interest charge of $69.30. In the last he found a loan financed by the defendant in the amount of $172.95 for an excessive interest charge of $47.55.

So far as the parties are concerned there were three involved in the transactions under consideration, the seller, the buyer and the financing agency. The seller in each instance made but one price as noted and carried forward in all the transactions incident to the completion of the sale and transfer of the motor vehicles in question.

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Bluebook (online)
229 S.W.2d 949, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2096, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gifford-v-state-texapp-1950.