Marshall v. United Finance & Thrift Corp. of Dallas County

347 S.W.2d 623, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2400
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1961
Docket15830
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 347 S.W.2d 623 (Marshall v. United Finance & Thrift Corp. of Dallas County) 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
Marshall v. United Finance & Thrift Corp. of Dallas County, 347 S.W.2d 623, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2400 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

Sylvia Marshall was the borrower and defendant corporation the lender; the action in trial court being by her for recovery of usurious interest allegedly paid, damages for physical injuries caused by claimed unreasonable collection efforts on part of defendant, its agents and servants, and for defamation of character in such connection. Also a plaintiff in third amended original petition was her brother Gilbert Miller, claiming physical injuries resulting from the same alleged collection efforts; but the latter was dismissed from suit upon defendants’ special exception. The jury found in answer to Issue No. 1 that no unreasonable collection efforts were made, resulting in a take nothing judgment against *624 the named plaintiff, with • appeal taken by her and Gilbert Miller.

Points of appeal will next be stated: (1) error in ordering dismissal of plaintiff Miller because “unreasonable collection methods exerted on any person constitute an actionable tort, whether such person has or has not been a borrower from the entity exerting such efforts; and (relative to Sylvia Marshall) : the trial court’s error; (2) “in failing to submit to the jury one or more Special issues on usurious interest, for the requiring of a borrower to purchase credit insurance from an insurer selected by the lender constitutes the collection of usurious interest;” (3) “in failing to submit to the jury one or more Special Issues on usurious interest, for the prevention by the lender of the borrower’s being refused unearned premiums on credit life insurance constitutes the collection of usurious interest;” (4) “in failing to submit to the jury an instruction and Special Issue on defamation of character of the Plaintiff Sylvia Marshall, to the witness Ann McNear, since both the pleadings and the evidence clearly established a prima facie case of defamation;” (5) “in excluding from the jury the testimony of the witness Mary Lou Lee as to defamation of character of the Plaintiff Sylvia Marshall by the Defendant;” (6) “in refusing to permit the Plaintiffs to file their First Trial Amendment, since the same was material to the cause and presented prior to submitting the Charge to the jury;” (7) “in failing to submit to the jury a Special Issue on defamation of character of the Plaintiff Sylvia Marshall to the witness Mary Lou Lee, since the testimony clearly supported the issue.”

Concerning- point 1 above plaintiff had alleged that “defendant harassed the plaintiff Gilbert L. Miller during such program even though defendant knew that such plaintiff had never, at any time, borrowed a penny from it. As best as both plaintiffs can remember, the full details of the said program are hereinafter related, the balance thereof being not now remembered by the plaintiffs, but well known to defendant.” Plaintiffs then allege that defendant’s program of reckless collection efforts from January 27 to August 7, 1957 consisted in part of “(b) repeated, incessant telephone calls to the plaintiff Gilbert L. Miller during the day at the plaintiffs’ residence telephone (Taylor 7-3477, (well known to defendant), averaging one (1) to five (5) times weekly during the said period, upsetting the said plaintiff, causing him to break out in welts over the trunk of his body and aggravating his condition of extreme nervousness and pernicious anemia, which condition was known to defendant on or before February 3, 1959.” “That as a proximate result of the foregoing wrongful acts of defendant, the plaintiff Gilbert L. Miller, a person already suffering from pernicious anemia, suffered outbreaks of welts over the entire trunk of his body each time agents or employees of defendant contacted him on and after the 27th day of January, 1959; including the repeated telephone contacts wherein defendant’s agents or employees refused to give their names; he has suffered extreme nervousness and irritability, loss of appetite, and reduced ability to sleep.” And in the alternative plaintiffs alleged that “they suffered aggravation or delayed recovery from the said symptoms, all of which worsened after January 27, 1959,” and have “incurred medical and pharmaceutical expenses, as hereinafter recited.”

The wording of defendant’s special exception sustained to the foregoing allegations of Gilbert L. Miller is not shown in the transcript but appears in defendant’s reply brief as follows : “Defendant especially excepts to the joinder of Gilbert L. Miller as a party Plaintiff in this case for the reason that the said Gilbert L. Miller did not execute any of the instruments in question in this case and no effort was ever exerted upon him to make any of the payments for which his sister, Sylvia Marshall, had obligated herself. His only connection with this cause of action is that he answered the telephone on some seven (7) or eight (8) occasions when representatives from De *625 fendant’s office would attempt to contact the obligor, Sylvia Marshall. Thus, Gilbert L. Miller has no justiciable claim for damages against this Defendant.” It is argued in this connection that the jury having found no unreasonable collection efforts were made against plaintiff, Sylvia Marshall, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that “merely answering the plaintiffs’ telephone did not constitute a cause of action for harassment.”

With respect to point 2 above, ap-pellee correctly states that no issues touching the factual situation there involved were requested as required by Rule 279, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, hence no ground of error is presented. And as to point 3 (refusal of requested issue on refund of unearned premiums on credit life insurance), Art. 3.53, § 7-D provides in part: “life insurance policies shall be non-cancellable by the insured and the premium shall be considered fully earned when paid.” Perforce of the statute therefore no error is shown.

Points 4 and 5 complain of the court’s refusal of requested issues on defamation of character of plaintiff Sylvia Marshall; she having pled and the evidence establishing a prima facie case of defamation; and raised in the testimony of Ann McNear and Mary Lou Lee. Miss McNear was a fellow employee of plaintiff with the Haggar Company and Vernon Smith was manager of the defendant company. It was the testimony of this witness that in January of 1957 she accepted a telephone call for plaintiff at the office from Mr. Smith, who talked over the ’phone in such a loud tone of voice that witness could hear the conversation; and who said in part that “she (plaintiff) just plain didn’t make any attempt to pay her bills and that he just didn’t like her attitude and the whole affair and that she was just plain stealing from the company.” Under counter-point appellee says that “To be actionable, defamatory words must have been communicated orally or in writing tó some third person capable of understanding their import and in such a way that said third person did so understand. Assuming the language in question was defamatory, there was no communication. The third person could only have overheard the voice on the telephone if the plaintiff obligingly held the telephone received so the voice could be overheard. The publication of defamatory words invited or procured by the plaintiff, or with his consent, will not support an action. 27 Tex.Jur. 621, § 19. In the case of Lyle v. Waddle, 144 Tex. 90, 188 S.W.2d 770, our Supreme Court said: ‘There is no libel unless there is a publication, for the gist of an action for libel is injury to the plaintiff’s reputation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
347 S.W.2d 623, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-united-finance-thrift-corp-of-dallas-county-texapp-1961.