Pinedo v. Halper

18 S.W.2d 253, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 661
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 9, 1929
DocketNo. 2283.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 18 S.W.2d 253 (Pinedo v. Halper) 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
Pinedo v. Halper, 18 S.W.2d 253, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 661 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

*254 PELPHREY, 0. J.

This suit was instituted by defendant in error, as plaintiff, against plaintiff in error, as defendant, in the district court of Presidio county, to recover the sum of $2,697.60, alleged to be double the amount of interest paid by plaintiff to defendant during the term of two years immediately preceding the filing of this suit.

Defendant in error alleged that he had negotiated three separate loans from plaintiff in error and had paid him usurious interest on the respective loans, within the two-year period, as follows:. First loan, $703; second loan, $285 ; third loan, $360.80 — making a total of $i,348.80.

Plaintiff in error answered by general demurrer, certain special exceptions, general denial, and specially pleaded that the matters of the different loans were transacted by and through J. 0. Fuller, attorney for defendant in error, and that all writings pertaining to said loans were prepared by him; that the loans were extended until the year 1929, but that on April 28, 1928, a compromise settlement was had of all matters between the parties; that no specific rate of interest was paid and no unlawful rate of interest charged, and that defendant in.error is estopped by said settlement and compromise to claim usurious interest or penalty; that the said settlement was proposed and sought by defend-' ant in error and his attorney, and, if usurious interest was paid, such fact was unknown to plaintiff in error, and that defendant in error is therefore estopped from now claiming usurious interest and penalties; that plaintiff in error did not speak, read, or write the English language, and that, if he signed any writing calling for an unlawful rate of interest, he did so as a result of being overreached and on account of the fraud of defendant in error and his attorney; and that, if he violated any law in the matter, his action was unintentional and due to his ignorance; and that he tenders into court any excess of interest that may have been collected by him.

Plaintiff in error further pleaded a cross-action seeking damages in the sum of $100 for failure of defendant in error to pay a certain check for that amount alleged ⅜0 have been given by defendant in error as an interest payment, and the sum of $5,000 for damages occasioned by the filing of this suit, which he alleged was done maliciously.

Defendant in error in a supplemental petition demurred specially to plaintiff in error's answer, denied generally the matters alleged in said answer, specially denied any compromise or settlement as alleged by plaintiff in error, and also specially denied plaintiff in error’s allegations as to the-$100 check.

The court sustained the special exceptions of defendant in error to plaintiff in error’s answer, and struck out of said answer the paragraph setting up a cross-action.

Upon the conclusion of the testimony, the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for defendant in error for the sum of $2,597.-60, being the amount sued for, less a credit of $100 as set up by plaintiff in error.

Upon the jury’s verdict being returned as instructed, the court rendered judgment against plaintiff in error for $2,597.60, and he has appealed.

Opinion.

Plaintiff in error submits eleven propositions upon which he seeks a reversal of the case.

The first six propositions relate to the court’s action in instructing a verdict in favor of defendant in error; No. 7 to the introduction of testimony; No. 8 to the court’s failure to submit the issue of conspiracy; Nos. 9,10, and 11, to the court’s action in sustaining special exceptions to' certain paragraphs of his answer.

Paragraph 7 of defendánt’s answer reads:

“Defendant further shows to the court that in all his transactions with the plaintiff herein that no Hens were ever given or notes signed and that there was never any agreement or contract in writing to charge twelve per cent interest and that he at no time ever intentionally or knowingly collected or received any interest in excess of ten per cent and that if he ever collected any amount of interest in excess of the rate allowed by law, that he did so unintentionally and unknowingly and did not intend to do so. That the defendant is unlearned and does not speak, read or write the English language, and that in all of his transactions relative to the loaning of money to the plaintiff and taking papers and deeds and executing receipts and releases and other writings he trusted the plaintiff and plaintiff’s attorney to the extent that he did not believe that the plaintiff nor his attorney would permit him to sign any paper or writing, which he could not read and understand, that was unlawful or illegal and that would penalize him and cause him to violate the law of the State and be classed as a law-violator; that if he signed any such instruments or writings that showed upon the face of such, or otherwise, that he was violating the law, that he was overreached and induced to do so by the plaintiff and his attorney, and that he was designedly and with malice aforethought induced to do so by fraud and deception and with a view of making testimony to be used in the trial of this cause in the recovery of a large penalty. Defendant says he was ignorant of all these things and that the plaintiff and his attorney were either equally ignorant of the law or they did not maliciously, designedly and for the very purpose of mulching the defendant in damages.
“Wherefore, defendant says that if it should be shown that he has violated any law or collected any interest unlawfully in excess of the legal rate, that he did so unknowingly and unintentionally, and was invited, induced and *255 led to do so through his ignorance, by the. plaintiff and his attorney, and that he stands ready to return the excess into court and purge himself of the ignorance of the law under the circumstances.”

Defendant in error specially excepted to portions of this paragraph as follows:

“Plaintiff specially excepts to that part of paragraph 7 of said answer, wherein he pleads:
“(a) That he did not believe that plaintiff or his attorney would permit him to sign anything which was unlawful or would penalize him, and
“(h) That he was overreached and induced by plaintiff and his attorney, and that he was designedly and with malice aforethought induced to sign same by fraud and deception, no facts being stated and no grounds of defense being alleged, and,
“(c) Wherein he alleges, that he was ignorant of the law and that plaintiff or his attorney were also either ignorant of the law or did not maliciously in ignorance of the law constituting no defense, and of all these exceptions severally plaintiff prays judgment of the court.”

The trial court sustained these exceptions, and his action in so doing is made the basis of plaintiff in error’s second assignment.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.W.2d 253, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinedo-v-halper-texapp-1929.