North Texas Building & Loan Ass'n v. Hay

56 S.W. 580, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 98, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 56 S.W. 580 (North Texas Building & Loan Ass'n v. Hay) 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
North Texas Building & Loan Ass'n v. Hay, 56 S.W. 580, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 98, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 289 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

GILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by A. D. Hay and wife and W. S. Buster and wife, defendants in error, against the corporations, the North Texas Savings and Building Association and the State National Loan and Trust Company, plaintiffs in error, to cancel two notes, one for $800 and one for $200, to cancel the liens created to secure them, and to recover usurious interest alleged to have been paid thereon by defendants in error.

The facts being undisputed, the trial court directed a verdict and rendered judgment for plaintiffs in error for $49.50. They having claimed a much larger sum to be due upon said notes, and the debt *99 being secured by a lien on real estate, they have brought the cause before us by writ of error for revision. '•

The facts may be briefly stated as follows: W. S. Buster, who resided in Whitesboro, Grayson County, Texas, was the owner of a lot in the last named place, and was desirous of building a house thereon to be used as a home for himself and wife. For the purpose of procuring the- necessary funds he went to one S. F. Young, the agent of the above mentioned building association, and after some small delay obtained a loan of $600 from said association. In order to secure the payment of this sum he was required to purchase four shares in the association (thereby becoming a member thereof), and to pledge the shares and execute a lien on the lot! As evidence of his indebtedness he was required to execute a note to the association in the sum of $800,- payable on or before 100 months, the estimated time of the maturity of the stock, it being stipulated that if the borrower should pay the dues on his stock and interest and other sums named in his obligation, according to its terms and the by-laws of the concern, that his indebtedness would be discharged upon the maturity of the stock. The par. value of each share was $200, to be matured by the payment of dues of $1 per month per share and by the profits earned by the association derived from the loaning of money received from the various stockholders and borrowers. It is thus seen that the plans and methods of the association were in all material respects such as are usual with such concerns.

While the contract of loan stipulated that the sum borrowed was payable in 100 months, other provisions in the contract and by-laws, which were made a part of it, and the general scheme upon which the corporation was conducted, indicated that the loan was really intended to run until the maturity of the shares, which might occur after the lapse of a much longer period than the time named, depending upon the profits earned by the corporation in the conduct of its business.

On the 7th day of Hay, 1894, Buster procured on the same terms and conditions, and secured in like manner, a loan of $150 for which he executed his obligation for $200 and pledged a fifth share of stock. The excess over the amount actually received in each of the contracts represented what was denominated" "premium.” The amount of this was ascertained in the following manner: The money to be loaned was put up by the association to be bid for by members desiring to borrow, and the party bidding the highest premium, to be not less than 10 per cent nor more than 25 per cent, secured the loan. In both these transactions the premium was fixed at 20 per cent. Only shareholders could become borrowers.

The aggregate premium in these two transactions was $250, to be charged to the loans at the rate of $2.50 per month for 100 months. If the borrower exercised his right to sooner pay the loan by crediting thereon the fixed withdrawal value of the stock and paying the balance due in cash, he was entitled to have the unearned premium credited on the face of the notes. Thus, if he should decide to pay his loan in *100 fifty months, he would be entitled to a credit of $125 as unearned premium.

The amount of monthly payments on the two loans were fixed as follows: Six per cent per annum interest, payable monthly, $5.00; sinking fund for the redemption of the loan, one-third of 1 per cent monthly, $3.33-^-; stock dues of $1 per share per month, $5.00. Total $13.33^- per month, payable without diminution until the maturity of the shares.

The shares purchased by Buster were about one year old, and he was required to pay back-stock dues on them to bring them up to the date of his loan. When these transactions were consummated he built the house upon the lot according to his original purpose, using the borrowed money to pay for its construction. He paid into the association the monthly amounts called for by his contracts until the 30th day of July, 1894, when, with the consent of the association, he sold the property to A. D. Hay, one of the defendants in error; the price of the property, the easy monthly payments, and the other apparent advantages offered by the association being among the inducements to Hay to make the transaction. The consideration as between Buster and Hay was $50 cash, Hay’s note for $352.50 (the price paid by Buster for his lot), and the assumption by Hay of whatever was due by Buster to the association. Thereupon one Wood was called upon to write the deed to Hay, and the parties not being in possession of the necessary data, Wood procured it from the papers in the possession of the association.

Buster had represented to Hay that his debt to the association was $750, less the credits resulting from payments made by him, but Wood, in writing the deed, was controlled by the data procured, from the association. Thus the deed was made to recite as consideration for the purchase, $50 cash, $352.50 represented by Hay’s note, and $1000 the face of the indebtedness due by Buster to the association. This deed was signed by Buster and accepted by Hay without being read by either. Prior to its execution the officers of the association had been consulted and had accepted Hay as a suitable substitute for Buster, and the proposed purchase was assented to by it, the association being fully advised of the purposes of the parties. Immediately upon the delivery of the deed Hay went to one F. S. Young, the authorized officer of the association, to complete the transaction. Thereupon he was advised that it would be necessary for him to indorse upon the Buster obligations his undertaking to pay them. This he did before reading them. He then inspected them in the presence of the officer and discovered for the first time that the two notes aggregated $1000, instead of $750. He demurred to this state of affairs, stating that he had been informed that the amount borrowed by Buster was only $750, and that this was to be credited with the amount paid by Buster, and unless this was true, he would withdraw from the trade. To this Young assented, explaining that the papers were written in that form, but that the real amount was only $750, less' the credits mentioned, and that his indorsement of the *101 papers as they stood would save the trouble and expense to Hay of executing new contracts as between him and the association; that the monthly sums to be paid by him would be credited on the loan. This, though not made entirely clear to Hay, who was unfamiliar with the methods of loan associations, induced him to proceed with the matter. Whereupon Buster’s pass book in which the monthly payments made by him were entered was transferred by Young to Hay, Buster’s name being erased and Hay’s substituted.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.W. 580, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 98, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-texas-building-loan-assn-v-hay-texapp-1900.