Hatcher v. Continental Southland Savings & Loan Ass'n

124 Tex. 601
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1935
DocketNo. 6683
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 124 Tex. 601 (Hatcher v. Continental Southland Savings & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatcher v. Continental Southland Savings & Loan Ass'n, 124 Tex. 601 (Tex. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Judge CRITZ

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals.

This case is before the Supreme Court on certified questions from the Court of Civil Appeals for the 7th district at Amarillo, Texas. The certificate, is as follows:

“The appellants Hatcher and wife borrowed $4,500.00 in July, 1926, from the appellee Loan Association, executing their note for said sum, secured by a deed of trust upon certain property in the City of Plainview. At the same time they applied for 68 shares of stock in the Association, a certificate being issued to them and as a part of the transaction for the purpose of securing the payment of the note, they assigned as collateral the shares of stock. The note is made payable when the 68 shares of stock shall reach a value equivalent to the face of the loan for which the note is given.
“Hatcher and wife as plaintiffs filed their amended original petition, upon which the case was tried, on May 31, 1933, praying for a cancellation of the deed of trust upon their property, for judgment for double the amount of interest they had paid to the Association within the preceding two years, amounting to $1,000.00, and for all other legal and equitable relief to which they may be entitled.
"The Court sustained a general demurrer to the amended original petition and upon the refusal of plaintiffs to amend, the cause was dismissed, judgment was excepted to and notice of appeal given and the case is before this Court for review.
“Because a general demurrer was sustained, we deem it advisable to set out substantially the allegations of plaintiffs’ amended petition, which are as follows:
“ ‘That the defendant is a Building & Loan Association, organized for the purpose of loaning money * * * and long prior to the making of the loan hereinafter set out, the defendant devised the idea of making loans at a usurious rate of interest and devised a plan whereby they attempted to evade the usury laws of the State of Texas. They entered into a scheme and devised a subterfuge in the way of stock subscriptions, in order to evade or in an attempt to evade the usury laws of the State of Texas, the said plan and scheme being as follows:
“ ‘That when a party made application for a loan to said defendant, the party making said application would be required to subscribe for some purported stock in defendant’s [603]*603association in an amount equal to the amount of the loan which was to be made to the parties applying for said loan. That a loan would then be made upon the property in question, a note signed for the money loaned, which would not be due at any particular time, but which would be due at a time when the shares of stock became of equal value to the amount of the loan. That said note provided for the payment of interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum from the date it was signed until the maturity thereof.
“ ‘The party applying for the loan was then required to pay the loan back in monthly installments, which monthly installments were divided into interest and stock payments; at each month the borrower was required to pay 10% interest on the original loan for one month, and the balance of said monthly payment was applied to the stock which he had contracted to purchase from defendant association. The monthly payments in each case were considerably in excess of the amount required to pay the ten per cent interest and the excess of the monthly payment, instead of being applied to the principal which had been borrowed, was applied as a payment on the stock subscription of the borrower and by so applying excess payments made by the borrower the defendant association conceived the idea that this would not reduce the principal and they could collect and did collect from its borrowers an interest payment equal to ten per cent per annum each month on the entire sum loaned, and the principal was never reduced at any time. * * *
“ ‘That said scheme was a scheme whereby the defendants could collect ten per cent interest on the full amount loaned for the full term that the loan run without any reduction in principal whatever and that such scheme was fraudulent and made for the sole and only purpose of evading the usury laws of this State. * * *
“ ‘That the device set out herein and said fraudulent scheme for the purpose of evading the usury laws and said fraudulent scheme of stock subscription was arranged in order for the defendants to collect more than ten per cent interest per annum, and was conceived and formed for the purpose of enabling them to collect ten per cent interest on all the money they paid out, or loaned, and then .they had it within their power to pay the purported stockholders only such dividends as they saw fit. The purported stockholders had no voice in the management of the affairs of the Company and had no voice in saying when a dividend should be declared and to whom it [604]*604should be paid, and that if any dividends were declared by the defendants by any of its stockholders such dividends were merely for the purpose of covering up their fraudulent scheme to collect usury.
“ ‘That in pursuance to said plans and schemes as above alleged and in order to evade the usury laws, the defendant, on or about July 19, 1926, loaned to plaintiffs the sum of $4,500.00 and the plaintiffs executed to defendant their promissory note in such sum, which note was due and payable as and when the stock subscribed by plaintiffs may become of equal value to the amount borrowed, a copy of which note is attached hereto, made a part hereof and marked Exhibit A. * * *
“ ‘That the defendant now claims that the plaintiffs subscribed for $4,500.00 in stock in said Company, but the plaintiffs show to the Court that if they did subscribe for any stock in defendant’s corporation they did not know it at the time they made the loan, and that if they did subscribe for $4,500.00 worth of stock in said Company it was taken out or subscribed for at the time the loan was made to them-, and was all one and the same transaction and that said scheme was a subterfuge devised by the defendant for the purpose of evading the usury law. That in said contract, for the loan, as above alleged, the plaintiffs agreed to pay monthly the sum of $71.35, and that after said loan was made the defendant furnished to plaintiffs what they call a “Pass Book” and each time that plaintiffs made a payment to the defendant said pass book is delivered to the agent of defendant who marked in said book the amount of money received by the defendant through .its agent and the date it is received and the name of the agent receiving same. That semi-annually the plaintiffs have said book posted by the defendant as to the value of the shares that plaintiffs have subscribed for, and at each six months the defendant has posted said book and given plaintiffs credit for certain amounts paid by them on their loan. That instead of crediting a portion of the $71.35 to the reduction of the principal, said amounts are credited by defendants upon the stock subscribed for by them, and the defendant claims at this time that the plaintiffs have paid nothing on their said loan and claims that all the payments made by plaintiffs to defendant have been credited to interest on said $4,500.00 and the balance or excess over 10% interest has been credited as a payment on the shares of stock, which defendant claims plaintiffs subscribed for. * * *

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124 Tex. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatcher-v-continental-southland-savings-loan-assn-tex-1935.