Michael Bruce Kentor v. Alden Karotkin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 1993
Docket03-92-00194-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Bruce Kentor v. Alden Karotkin (Michael Bruce Kentor v. Alden Karotkin) 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
Michael Bruce Kentor v. Alden Karotkin, (Tex. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

KAROTKIN
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,


AT AUSTIN




NO. 3-92-194-CV


MICHAEL BRUCE KENTOR,


APPELLANT



vs.


ALDEN KAROTKIN, ET. AL.,


APPELLEES





FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 250TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT


NO. 493,061, HONORABLE JOHN K. DIETZ, JUDGE PRESIDING




Alden Karotkin filed suit against Michael Kentor to collect a promissory note. Kentor counterclaimed based on usury and also brought a third-party action for usury against Mark Rosenfield and Sandra Hauser, two attorneys Karotkin had employed to collect the note. The district court rendered judgment for Karotkin against Kentor on the promissory note and denied all of Kentor's usury claims. Kentor appeals the district-court judgment. We will affirm.



BACKGROUND

In 1984, Alden Karotkin and Michael Kentor were divorced. The property settlement agreement included, in part, a promissory note executed by Kentor and payable to Karotkin in the principal amount of $189,495.50. The note had an annual rate of interest of ten percent (1) and provided for payments of $2,500 on the first of each month until the entire note was paid. Each monthly payment was to be applied first to interest and then to principal. The note included a savings clause which provided that "[n]othing in this note shall authorize the collection of interest in excess of the highest rate allowed by law."

From February 1984 through August 1987, Kentor made payments on the note, some of which were untimely. After August, he made no other payments in 1987 but did make three doubled "catch-up" payments of $5,000 each in February, April, and July 1988. These payments placed Kentor current on the note through January 1988. (2)



Collection Letters

Karotkin hired Mark Rosenfield, an attorney, to collect the note, and later employed Sandra Hauser, also an attorney, for the same purpose. Both attorneys sent Kentor collection letters which form the basis of Kentor's claim that Karotkin and her attorneys attempted to collect usurious interest from him.



A.  The Rosenfield Collection Letter

On October 4, 1988, Rosenfield sent Kentor a collection letter stating that the note was in default and, as a result, was being accelerated and demanding three sums: (1) $135,419.72, representing the remaining principal balance as of January 31, 1988, which was the end of the last installment period paid; (2) $22,500, representing the nine delinquent monthly installments due from February 1988 through October 1988, which the letter clearly stated represented both principal and interest; and (3) $937.15, representing interest on those same nine delinquent payments.

At trial, Rosenfield admitted that he had negligently and unintentionally made a mistake in the collection letter. Although he was correct in requesting the nine delinquent payments, as is plain from the letter and the amortization schedule, he failed to credit the principal portion of the delinquent payments to the principal balance due as of January 31, 1988. Thus, the collection letter demanded a larger sum from Kentor than was actually due and owing on October 4, 1988. Kentor insisted that the additional charge was a demand for usurious interest. Karotkin and Rosenfield denied any intent to charge usurious interest.

On October 14, 1988, Kentor agreed with Rosenfield to a workout arrangement on the note. Kentor paid installments totalling $7,000 at irregular intervals through January 1990, after which he made no more payments under either the accelerated note or the workout plan.



B. The Hauser Collection Letter

On September 27, 1990, Hauser sent Kentor a letter in which she demanded three payments: (1) $135,419.72, representing the same remaining principal balance as of January 31, 1988; (2) $73,000, representing the thirty-two monthly installments due from February 1988 through September 1990, less the $7,000 representing the workout payments; and (3) $208,419.72, representing interest on the thirty-two delinquent payments.

Because Hauser had used the Rosenfield collection letter as her baseline for drafting her collection letter, she, too, committed the same negligent error that Rosenfield had committed. She properly requested thirty-two delinquent installments, but failed to credit the principal balance with the principal portion of those installments. Kentor maintains that this additional charge was also a charge for usurious interest. Karotkin and Hauser respond that they did not intend to demand usurious interest in that collection letter.



Trial and Judgment

After these collection efforts ultimately failed, Karotkin filed suit to collect the note on July 3, 1991. Kentor counterclaimed alleging the collection letters were usurious. In addition, Kentor brought a third-party action for usury against both Rosenfield and Hauser, individually. At trial, Rosenfield and Hauser conceded that the letters overcharged principal. The letters specifically stated that each demanded monthly installment of $2,500 consisted partly of principal with the remainder attributable to interest. Because the $135,419.72 balance requested in both letters encompassed the note's principal amount in its entirety, had the delinquent installments been paid, the outstanding principal balance should have been reduced by the corresponding amount of principal included in each installment of $2,500. Kentor characterizes this as an overcharge of interest, while the appellees consider it an overcharge of principal.

At trial, both sides presented expert witness testimony concerning the calculation of principal and interest for the note. Judy Soslau, who testified for Kentor, treated the entire overcharge as interest. She insisted that any amount requested that exceeded the accelerated principal was interest, because it comprised the compensation for the use, forbearance, or detention of the principal. (3) Tom Glass, the appellees' expert witness, testified that the attorneys' requests for the delinquent payments did not result in an overcharge of interest; he testified that the overcharge resulted from the failure to properly credit the principal portion of each payment to the accelerated principal amount due and owing as of January 31, 1988, the starting point of the calculations in each letter.



A. Kentor's Evidence

Soslau's calculations show that as of October 1, 1988, the unpaid principal balance was $135,419.67 (4) and the accrued interest on the outstanding principal was $9,015.61. Therefore, regarding the Rosenfield collection letter, Soslau stated that the proper amount due on October 4, 1988, at a ten percent interest rate was $144,435.28; that the $157,919.66 amount (5) demanded by Rosenfield exceeded that amount by $13,484.38; and that the effective interest rate for that collection letter, therefore, was 24.9567 percent.

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Michael Bruce Kentor v. Alden Karotkin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-bruce-kentor-v-alden-karotkin-texapp-1993.