Shipman v. Wright

3 S.W.2d 519
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1928
DocketNo. 10163.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 519 (Shipman v. Wright) 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
Shipman v. Wright, 3 S.W.2d 519 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

LOONEY, J.

G. G. Wright, as receiver of United Home Builders of America, brought three separate actions against V. E. and H. T. Shipman, each predicated on a promissory note-and to foreclose the lien of a trust deed on separate parcels of real estate given to-secure the payment of the notes respectively. The suits were consolidated, and, on trial, judgment was rendered for plaintiff on an instructed verdict, from which defendants appealed.

The Home Builders was a co-operative loan association, founded upon a declaration of trust and operated under the supervision of the state department of insurance and banking. It issued and sold to its members a contract, known as “class A, or 3 per cent, loan home purchasing contracts.” It was forbidden by law to make loans on real estate, except upon contracts upon which there had been as much as $150 paid in monthly dues and after the contract had been reached for a loan in its numerical order.

The provisions of the contract pertinent to this inquiry are these: The member agreed to pay a membership fee of $10 and $10 per month on each $1,000 face value contract until a loan should be secured, and thereafter $1 per month on each $100 of the loan, plus 3 per cent, interest, computed annually upon the balance remaining unpaid each year, until the full amount of the principal and interest should be paid. A member was entitled to a real estate loan out of the loan and trust fund equal to the face value of his contract, provided when reached for a loan in its numerical order 15 per cent, of the face value of the contract had been paid and sufficient funds for the loan had been accumulated. However, if sufficient funds were accumulated prior to the payment of the 15 per cent., the member was privileged to advance the difference and immediately secure a loan. Should a member not desire a loan when notified that one was ready under the contract, or in lieu of any other option afforded by the contract, he could surrender the same and receive all monthly dues paid, and, in addition, $150 as a bonus or profits, or, if he preferred, he could sell or assign the contract to any other person or persons; it was also provided that a member could obtain a cash surrender settlement where the contract had been in good standing for 24 months; also, the full face value of the contract would be paid, together with its pro rata share of all Interest earnings from contracts of that class, where payment of. monthly installments had been made for 100 months consecutively. The contract provided that no officer, agent, attorney, solicitor, or employee had authority to make binding promises, representations or statements otherwise than authorized by the contract, nor to promise a loan at any particular time. It was also provided that if and when a real estate loan was made, the member would surrender the contract and take credit on the loan for the amount of all monthly installments previously paid.

1. Appellants contend that the business pursued by Home Builders was that of a lottery, was against public policy, and, as the notes and trust deeds sued upon were executed in furtherance of this scheme, the same were void and unenforceable.

In the case of Barlow v. Wright, 279 S. W. 593, 596, in which the Supreme Court refused a writ of error, this court was confronted with this identical question. We then had under review the scheme or plan of business *521 pursued by Home Builders and contracts identical with those involved here. In disposing of the question, Associate Justice Vaughan, for this court, said:

“The existqnce of the Home Builders was authorized by a valid statutory enactment. The contracts issued by the Home Builders were approved by a public official of the state, and subject to his supervision by the law giving the company a right to exist. Therefore it cannot be said that such contracts are contrary to public policy merely because the business may have been unsuccessful, or because through the gross mismanagement of its trustees it was necessary to place it in the hands of a receiver for the protection of its contract holders.’’

In unison with this holding, we overrule all assignments relating to this contention.

2. Appellants also urge that the business pursued by Home Builders was a scheme designed to charge and collect usurious interest, and for this reason the contracts sued upon are void and unenforceable, and, further, that the evidence was sufficient to raise the issue of usury as to the contracts in suit, and therefore the court erred in directing a verdict for plaintiff.

We do not believe it can be seriously insisted that a purposed scheme to collect’ usurious interest on loans made under contracts sold by Home Builders can be gathered from any of its provisions. Such construction would, in our opinion, be a distortion of its, terms.

If, as appellants contend, the evidence was sufficient to present the issue of usury as to the notes in suit, the same arose, not from any inherent vice in the plan of business pursued, but from the fact that appellants, in the purchase of matured contracts on which they - based applications for loans, paid, as part consideration, certain sums called “bonus money” in addition to the amount of monthly dues theretofore paid by former owners. The consideration paid by appellants for the contract, on which the $1,000 loan was based, included the amount of monthly dues paid by former owner, plus $65 bonus money; and for the five contracts on which they based applications for the $2,000 and the $3,000 loans they paid, in addition to monthly dues paid by former owners, the sum of $1,000, being a bonus of $200 on each of the five contracts.

Appellants’ insistence is that this bonus money was interest exacted and paid in advance for the loans, and that the evidence was sufficient to require the submission of that issue to the jury. It appears that appellants had owned, for at least 20 months, nine $1,000 face value contracts, on each of which they had paid a membership fee of $10, also the regular monthly dues of $10, but these contracts were not, according to their terms, eligible for loans. So, in order to obtain immediate loans, appellants purchased from J. E. Ivans, of Sherman, Tex., the six eligible contracts on which they based applications and, paid therefor, in addition to the amount that represented monthly dues theretofore paid, the sum of $1,065, referred to as bonus. Appellants obtained these contracts from Ivans, and paid him the full consideration therefor. It nowhere appears that Home Builders received any part of this consideration nor that Ivans was acting for it in making the sales.

The only circumstance that outcrops from which it could be surmised that Ivans, in selling the contracts, was representing Home Builders, is the fact that, at the time he was acting as their agent and district manager at Sherman with whom appellants negotiated the loans in question.

Each contract contained a provision that permitted a member to assign a contract in good standing to any person whomsoever, and we find nothing expressed or implied that would have prevented an agent of the association from owning, purchasing, or selling contracts.

. The record further discloses that Home Builders, in settling with appellants after these loans were closed, paid them the full amount of same, deducted the amount of monthly dues previously paid on the contracts, and took their notes for the difference.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shipman-v-wright-texapp-1928.