Kansas City Life Ins. Co. v. Hudson

71 S.W.2d 574, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1934
DocketNo. 1346.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 71 S.W.2d 574 (Kansas City Life Ins. Co. v. Hudson) 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
Kansas City Life Ins. Co. v. Hudson, 71 S.W.2d 574, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 505 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, Chief Justice.

A brief statement of the facts out of which this suit arose will aid in a ready understanding of the issues presented and discussed in this appeal. Charles Hudson, on November 9,1922, conveyed to Mrs. Eunice Hudson and her daughter, Mary Hudson, a tract of land containing 107.5 acres, situated in Johnson county. The consideration for such conveyance as stated therein was: “The sum of eight thousand five hundred and eighty-nine dollars to me paid, and secured to be paid, by Eunice Hudson and Mary Hudson as follows: The sum of $2,284.88 to me in hand paid by Eunice Hudson of above amount, which said sum is hereby acknowledged and confessed, and the sum of $6,304.-12, to me in hand paid by Mary Hudson, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged and the said Eunice Hudson and Mary Hudson takes the herein described land subject to an *575 indebtedness of $6,000.00, due Ward-Harrison Mortgage Company, and interest on said amount from January 1, 1922, at the rate of 7½% per annum, and' the assumption by grantees of all taxes due on the hereinafter described premises for the year 1922.”

The indebtedness subject to which the grantees were to hold said land was evidenced by certain notes executed by the grantor, Charles Hudson, to the Ward-Harrison Mortgage Company, a corporation. One of said notes was dated November 17, 1920, due January 1, 1931, for the sum of $6,000, with .interest from January 1, 1921, until maturity at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum according to the tenor and effect of ten interest notes thereto attached, all of even date therewith and each for the sum of $420, one of which was payable on the 1st day of January of each year until the maturity of said principal note. All said notes provided for the payment of interest after maturity at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum. Said note and the interest notes thereto attached were secured by a deed of trust upon the land so conveyed, which deed of trust provided that the maturity of said note and the interest then accrued might be accelerated at the option of the holder upon the happening of ' certain contingencies. The remaining note was also dated November 17, 1920, was for the sum of $300, payable in ten equal installments of $30 each, one of which install; ments was to become due on January 1, 1921, and one on the 1st day of each succeeding year to and including 1931. Each such installment was to bear interest after maturity at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum. The sole consideration for this note was interest thereafter to accrue from year to year on the principal note aforesaid at the rate of one-half of 1 per cent, per annum. Said note was secured by a separate deed of trust on said land, in which it was expressly provided that the maturity of all future installments might be accelerated at the option of the holder upon the happening of certain contingencies. It was further expressly provided in said deed of trust that the lien created thereby should be subordinate to the lien created by the deed of trust securing the principal note and the interest notes thereto attached, and that, in event of a sale of the land under such second deed of trust, the balance due thereon should be satisfied out of the proceeds of such sale before any of the same were applied to the satisfaction of the balance due on said $300 note .secured [thereby. Said notes and deeds of trust were all ex&f-ufced at the same time and constituted a part of a single transaction. On account of the provisions for accelerated maturity of the $300 note, which was at the time it was executed wholly for unearned interest, said transaction as a whole was, under the rule announced in Shropshire v. Commerce Farm Credit Co., 120 Tex. 400, 39 S.W.(2d) 11, 84 A. L. R. 1269, usurious. Said transaction was in renewal, enlargement, and extension of a loan made by the Ward-Harrison Mortgage Company to said Charles Hudson on December 31, 1915, which was also tainted with usury, and upon which usurious interest hgd been paid by him.

The $6,000 note, the interest notes thereto attached, and the lien securing the same were on the 15th day of December, 1920, assigned and transferred by the Ward-Harrison Mortgage Company to appellant, fcan-sas City Life Insurance Company. The $300 note, upon which three annual installments had been theretofore paid, and the lien securing the same, were on the 1st day of March, 1924, assigned and transferred by the Ward-Harrison Mortgage Company to the Commerce Farm Credit Company. All the payments required by the terms of the original loan contract were duly made, and all payments required by the terms of the renewed, extended, and enlarged loan contract to and including those due January 1, 1930, were duly made. The further sum of $178.-52 was .paid on the interest due January 1, 1931. Such payments amounted in the aggregate, as found by the court, to the sum of $5,858,52.

Appellees, Mrs. Eunice Hudson and Mary Hudson, the latter a minor suing by Mrs. Eunice Hudson as next friend, on March 24, 1932, filed suit in the district court against appellant, Kansas City Life Insurance Company, and the Commerce Farm Credit Company, and alleged that both said loan contracts stipulated for the payment of usurious interest, and sought to recover as such all payments made thereunder both by them and by their grantor, Charles Hudson. They further sought to have such recovery applied in discharge pro tanto of said $6,000 note. They further alleged that one E. C. Clark was purporting to act as substitute trustee in the deed of trust securing said note; that h§ had advertised the land for sale and would, unless restrained, sell the same. They also tendered the sum of $141.48, the balance admitted by them to be due on the $6,000 note after applying as a credit thereon the amount of the interest so paid, and asked that said deeds of trust, and each of them, *576 and the liens created thereby, be canceled and removed as a clond upon their title to said land. They prayed for a temporary order restraining the sale of said land, and upon final hearing for a permanent injunction restraining such sale. Appellant answered by general denial and by special plea denying that the $6,000 note claimed by it was tainted with usury. The Commerce Farm Credit Company filed a general disclaimer.

There was a trial to the court. The testimony, the substance of which has been hereinbefore stated, was uncontradicted. The court rendered judgment for appellees against appellant in substantial accord with their prayer.

Opinion. ■

Appellant presents a group of assignment in which it contends that the court erred in awarding appellees a recovery against it for usurious interest paid by them and by Charles Hudson, their grantor, and in ordering the same applied as a credit upon the debt evidenced by said $6,000 note heid by it, on the ground that appellees, having taken title to said land subject to such debt, could not plead usury a¡s a defense thereto. The consideration clause of the deed from Charles Hudson, the grantor of the incumbered premises, to 'appellees, has been here-inbefore set out in hsec verba. Said clause contained three subdivisions, the first of which was a recital of the amount of cash paid; the sécond, a stipulation that the grantees were to take the land conveyed by such deed “subject to an indebtedness of $6,-000.00 * * * and interest on said amount from January 1, 1922, at the rate of 7½ per cent per annum”; and, the third, a stipulation that the grantees assumed all taxes for the year 1922.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W.2d 574, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-life-ins-co-v-hudson-texapp-1934.