May v. National Bank of Eastern Ark.

331 S.W.2d 697, 231 Ark. 588, 1960 Ark. LEXIS 282
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 1, 1960
Docket5-1994
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 331 S.W.2d 697 (May v. National Bank of Eastern Ark.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
May v. National Bank of Eastern Ark., 331 S.W.2d 697, 231 Ark. 588, 1960 Ark. LEXIS 282 (Ark. 1960).

Opinion

J. Seaborn Holt, Associate Justice.

This is a foreclosure suit. We shall refer to appellants as May, and the appellee, National Bank of Eastern Arkansas, as Bank.

Appellee, Bank, filed suit against appellants, W. D. and Dorothy May, his wife, and others, to foreclose a chattel mortgage on certain saw mill and planer mill equipment, which mortgage May and wife had executed to secure payment of a note in the aggregate amount of $29,662.36 executed by them on June 23, 1954. This note of the Mays was a collateral note which was pledged as additional security along with certain invoices for lumber milled by May, and the proceeds of a life insurance policy. The note also provided that additional security would be given to the Bank at a later date and for “attorney’s fees as authorized by law if not paid when due and if placed in attorney’s hand for collection.” January 19, 1955, May assigned to Bank a note in the amount of $29,649.05 of American Radio and Television, Inc., to take the place of, and to be substituted for, the invoices (some 15 in number) set out in the above collateral note of June 23, 1954. The Bank also held a separate Guarantee Agreement signed by John Collins, Paul M. Leird, H. G. Galloway and C. Hamilton Moses, to the effect that these four guarantors would guarantee the payment of the May note above to Bank on condition that before any liability should attach to them on said guaranty, that Bank would first exhaust its security under the chattel mortgage from May to Bank and all other security that the Bank held on said note. On September 11, 1958, a default decree was rendered against May for $19,127.70, on constructive service. The Mays were residents of Dallas, Texas at the time.

Thereafter, May filed a motion asking for retrial, alleging fraud and collusion on the part of Bank and the four guarantors above and a general denial of any liability, and asked for $15,000 damages. It appears that the trial court granted May’s motion and the case was retried on December 19, 1958 and later, on February 9,1959, a decree was entered in favor of the Bank for the balance of the principal sum due on the note remaining unpaid, along with six percent (6%) interest thereon in the total sum of $17,363.82, and if not paid within ten (10) days from date of the decree, that said chattel mortgage be first foreclosed and if the proceeds therefrom be insufficient to pay the balance due, then that said American Radio and Television, Inc., note above be sold to apply on, or to satisfy, any deficiency, and that May was entitled to no damages. The record shows that sales were had in accordance with the decree and that there remained a deficiency left unpaid on the mortgage note and attorney’s fees of $1,-616.23 were also allowed. Following this decree the Mays appealed therefrom to this court and executed and filed a supersedeas bond in the amount of $22,-156.18 on March 12, 1959 which the court approved on May 19, 1959, and ordered the clerk to issue a supersedeas staying all other proceedings relative to the sale of chattels and pledged note pending this appeal.

(1)

For reversal, May first contends that “The decree of September 11, 1958, and the decree of February 9, 1959, are void for lack of jurisdiction of the defendants.” We hold that this contention is clearly untenable for two reasons: (1) The record in this case shows that at the first trial, September 11, 1958, summons was served on the Mays by constructive service in the manner provided by our statutes, § 27-354 and § 27-355 Ark. Stats. A warning order was properly issued and published, an attorney ad litem appointed who properly wrote separate letters to May and Dorothy May to their last known address in Dallas, Texas notifying each of the pending suit against them. His letter to May was returned but the letter to Dorothy May was not returned. The court found, and we hold correctly so, in its decree of September 11, 1958, (the first trial) that proper constructive service was had on the Mays. That decree recites: “That the Defendants, W. D. May, Dorothy May, * * * were served either personally or constructively for the time and in the manner required by law, and this Court has jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter.” (2) We also hold that the Mays entered their appearance in the retrial action when they voluntarily filed their motion for retrial on the issues on October 15, 1958, in which they interposed their defenses. This motion of the Mays was granted and a retrial on the merits was had. Certainly we think, in the circumstances, as indicated, that they entered their appearance for all purposes. The court so found. The decree of February 9, 1959, on the retrial, recites: ‘ ‘ That the Defendants, W. D. May, d/b/a W. D. May Lumber Company, and Dorothy May, were first served constructively for the time and in the manner required by law, and have since entered their appearance on said Motion to Retry, and this Court has jurisdiction of them under personal entry of appearance and the subject matter of this litigation.”

We find no evidence in this record of any fraud or collusion between Bank and the four above guarantors. The court so found: “* * * there was no collusion between the Plaintiff Bank and the American Radio and Television, Inc., nor with any of its officers, trustees, or directors, to deprive defendant W. D. May of anything. ’ ’

(2)

May next argues that: “Plaintiff Bank demanded attorney’s fees, by reason of the note sued on, in a sum in excess of 10 percent of the principal sum plus accrued interest, and said demand is void: (1) Because it is an usurious demand; (2) there is no indemnity agreement expressed in the note sued on.” We do not agree. The collateral note here, which May executed in favor of the Bank on June 23, 1954, provides on its face for interest at six percent (6%) and also contains a provision for “* * * attorney’s fees as authorized by law if not paid when due and placed in the hands of an attorney for collection,”. It is undisputed that the chancellor allowed an attorney fee of ten percent (10%) in accordance with the maximum permitted under Act 350 of 1951 (Ark. Stats. § 68-910) which provides: “A provision in a promissory note for the payment of reasonable attorneys’ fees, not to exceed ten per cent (10%) of the amount of principal due, plus accrued interest, for services actually rendered in accordance -with its terms is enforceable as a contract of indemnity. ’ ’

The Bank produced evidence that, “As of November 18, 1957, the balance of principal and interest due the National Bank of Eastern Arkansas on the W. D. May note, without compounding interest, as permitted in the note, from year to year was $17,363.82. Ten percent (10%) of that amount equals $1,736.38 which was requested as attorney’s fees.” If, therefore, Act 350 of 1951 is constitutional and enforceable, appellants’ plea of usury must fall. We held this Act constitutional in the recent case of Holloway v. Pocahontas Federal Savings and Loan Association, 230 Ark. 310, 323 S. W. 2d 204. We there said: “It is true that for many years such a stipulation in a promissory note (that is, a stipulation that 10% may be added to the face of the note as an attorney fee) was held to be against public policy and therefore, unenforceable, Boozer v. Anderson, 42 Ark. 167, Arden Lbr. Co. v. Henderson, etc., Co., 83 Ark. 240, 103 S. W. 185; but in 1951 the legislature changed the rule by permitting the parties to a note to agree upon a reasonable attorney’s fee for the creditor. Ark. Stats. 1947, § 68-910.

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Related

Ingram v. Luther
424 S.W.2d 546 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1968)
First National Bank of Magnolia v. Magnolia Steel Corp.
261 F. Supp. 283 (W.D. Arkansas, 1966)
Natl. Bank of Eastern Ark. v. Collins
370 S.W.2d 91 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
331 S.W.2d 697, 231 Ark. 588, 1960 Ark. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-national-bank-of-eastern-ark-ark-1960.