Mack v. North American Building & Loan Ass'n

60 S.W.2d 1099, 1933 Tex. App. LEXIS 809
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 4, 1933
DocketNo. 2821
StatusPublished

This text of 60 S.W.2d 1099 (Mack v. North American Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Mack v. North American Building & Loan Ass'n, 60 S.W.2d 1099, 1933 Tex. App. LEXIS 809 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

PELPHREY, Chief Justice.

Appellee brought suit against appellant seeking to recover the sum of $2,204, alleged to be the balance due on a real estate mortgage note in the sum of §52,250, executed by appellant and secured by a deed of trust upon the N. W. 33 ⅛ feet of lot 5 in block C/621 of Cole’s Washington Avenue addition to the city of Dallas, Tex.

From appellee’s petition it appears that the note sued upon and the deed of trust executed to secure the payment thereof were given for money advanced by it to appellant to take up, renew, and extend certain existing liens on the property of appellant. The amounts alleged to have been advanced by appellee were:

A balance of $1,514.10 due on certain vendor’s lien note for $2,750, executed by Grant Curtis lo Mrs. Flora H. De Woody and assumed by appellant, $126.82 due on a note to H. L. Cannady Company for paving lien on appellant’s property, secured by a mechanic’s lien contract, $46.20 paid by appellee for state and county taxes, $66.12 paid for city taxes, and $497.76 preferred interest in a certain mechanic’s lien note executed to M. W. Shan-nalian by appellant.

Appellant, in addition to a general demurrer, special exceptions, plea in abatement and a general denial, attempted to plead certain offsets, that the contract was usurious, and sought to recover the statutory penalty for usurious interest collected.

On the question of the usurious nature of the contract and her right to recover the statutory penalty therefor, appellant alleged:

“Defendant says that all the fees named in said petition were in fact as agreed • and understood in making the loan and giving the said note or contract, really and truly charged unlawfully by plaintiff simply for its blending to her of its own money, and in fact and in law was really for the defendant’s use and detention of the sum so loaned, under the mere guise of fees, and is in fact usurious, and is in fact part of the interest and the whole contract is usurious as to fees, and the expressed 9 per cent interest and the stock and shares charged to her in the contract is also only a method and evasive scheme then so made and framed to so charge her for the use and detention of the principal money so loaned under the guise of stock; and is all and each usurious and void and not collectible, nor any of it; all of which she offers to prove.’’
“6. She has paid $103.00 in cash on said usurious interest in said form of 9 per cent, and fees and stock, etc., as aforesaid, thus extorted from her as usury; and is under the statute providing that she may recover some double as a penalty entitled to so recover same, and so pleads, and asks to recover the same as a penalty. * * * Defendant says that in addition to the above, and in aid of her several pleas above stated, that the plaintiff insisted at the time of said loan that it must in order to make the loan and to suffer her to use their money, it must require of her, and it did require of her to take out numerous shares of stock and to make payments on them, when it was never intended that she should share any dividends as a stockholder or receive benefits thereby; but that under the guise of paying for stock and shares and her being a member, such payments were intended really for the use of the money and its detention, and under the law constitutes that which the law considers, and in fact was for the use and detention of the money loaned and therefore usurious and exceeded 10 per cent interest per annum when taken alone or in connection with the above and foregoing 9 per cent and fees and other charges and impositions, all of which, as aforesaid, were for the use and detention of the money loaned, and which, as ‘she alleges and believes, have received numerous payments made by her amounting to $200.00 on the shares of stock alone.’ ”
“15. Defendant says the note or contract sued on provides that 9 per cent for the five-year term of the loan per annum or for its term as may be shown is provided for contractually, and .the payment of all said demand with the five year interest accumulatin'' and accumulated to the end of the loan’s term, with the fees and other matters therein charged, have all been declared due and payable for the full term of five years, and are made collectible by the contract sued on, which of itself exceeds the ten per cent per annum of the principal and constitutes usury.”
“16. Defendant says the $103.00 she has paid, under the pretense of Plaintiff’s part that the same was fines, fees, interest, and demands for the trouble in plaintiff loaning its own money, constitutes interest not only usurious and unlawful, but since this $103.-50 has been so paid, and contract calls for it as fees, which is but interest, she is entitled to recover double the said $103.00 under the Statute in such cases so made and provided, and for which she prays.”

[1101]*1101She also claimed a credit on the Shanna-han mechanic’s lien note as follows:

“7. She shows that the pretended improvement claim which plaintiff alleges to have taken up and merged into the $2250.00 note or contract sued on was done under these facts, and these are the facts; that said Shannahan was a carpenter and was acting for the plaintiff and for himself with their understanding and with authority that he should aid plaintiff company in getting business loans and borrowers on residences such as was defendants, and that in turn the said plaintiff (called the company here) in obtaining and negotiating such loans, that said plaintiff would require improvements to be made on the security and aid him in getting that job and they would work together in the matters of such loans, and such improvements to be so secured in the name of said Shannahan but to be taken up after the improvements be made, and that said Shanna-han should be paid for improvements; it was their plan and is a proper custom to have the borrower sign such contract (like the said Shannahan contract) before any improvement would be made; that said contract to so pay Shannahan was signed by Defendant in the sum of $7S4.08 to said Shannahan to make the improvements on this security, her house and home; that it not then being definitely decided or known whether the said improvements would come to much or little, and that said Shannahan would only be paid a proper and reasonable value for whatever improvements, he would really make, all to be supervised and attended to by the plaintiff, the lender, who was to have enough made to satisfy its desire and no more, and out of the $784.0S contract for that whole sum would be merged into and figured into the $2250.00 loan and would be paid by her in installments; and that whatever the improvements really made by Shannahan would be actually and reasonably worth, to be valued and inspected fairly and accepted by plaintiff should be all that would be paid Shannahan from same, and that paid him justly and fairly should be deducted from the $7S-1-.0S, and that the balance would be paid her in cash or treated as a then cash payment by her to plaintiff.

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Related

American Building & Savings Ass'n v. Daugherty
66 S.W. 131 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1901)

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.W.2d 1099, 1933 Tex. App. LEXIS 809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mack-v-north-american-building-loan-assn-texapp-1933.