Shive v. Braniff Inv. Co.

68 S.W.2d 564
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 29, 1934
DocketNo. 4141.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 68 S.W.2d 564 (Shive v. Braniff Inv. Co.) 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
Shive v. Braniff Inv. Co., 68 S.W.2d 564 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

MARTIN, Justice.

Appellants executed and delivered certain notes hereinafter particularly described, and at the same time executed and delivered as security therefor a trust deed on certain property in Wilbarger county. Having defaulted in the payment of installments thereafter coming due, the trustee, acting under authority of said trust deed, advertised appellants’ property named in said instrument for sale, and was proceeding with a foreclosure according to the terms of said instrument when appellants procured from the district court a temporary injunction restraining the said sale upon the alleged ground that the contract between the parties was usurious. Upon final trial the district court dissolved said temporary injunction, holding in substance and effect that there was no usury in the contract, which ruling presents the legal issue for our determination on this appeal.

That portion of said trust deed deemed material is in the following language:

“If the said Rubye Thomas Shive, and H. D. Shive, her husband, shall well and truly pay off and discharge, at the maturity thereof, according to the tenor and effect thereof, two promissory notes made by Rubye Thomas Shive and H. D. Shive, payable to the order of Braniff Investment Company, a corporation, and described as follows:
“One promissory note of $4200.00, dated May 15, 1926, payable in 108 successive monthly installments of $56.39 each, one subordinated note of $274.32, dated May 15, 1926, payable in 108 successive monthly installments of $2.54 each, with interest thereon from date until paid, said interest payable s-s it accrues at the office of Braniff Investment Company, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, then this conveyance shall become null and void. * * *
“But in ease of default or failure to make prompt payment of said indebtedness, or any part thereof, principal or interest, as the same shall become due and payable, * * » then and in that event the said trustee is hereby authorized and empowered * * * to sell the above described property to the highest bidder for cash * * * and to receive the proceeds of said sale and apply the same as follows: * * * Second, to the payment rateably of said notes then un *565 paid principal and accrued interest (it being understood that when default shall he made in the payment of any of said notes, or any installment of interest on said notes, or a failure to pay any state, county or city taxes assessed upon said property, after the same by law becomes delinquent, all other shall become at once due and payable at the option of the holder or holders thereof).”

The two notes are in the following language:

“$4,200.00 Texas Note — Secured by Real Estate Deed of Trust.
“For value received, I, we, and each of us, jointly and severally promise to pay the Braniff Investment Company, a corporation, or bearer, at the office of Braniff Investment Company, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, (or at such place as may be designated by the holder for the time being of this note) the principal sum of Forty-two-hundred and no/100 Dollars, the same being money actually loaned together with interest thereon, and to pay the same in installments payable on the 15th day of the next ensuing and each and every successive month until 108 successive monthly installments have fallen due, each installment to be in the sum of $56.39: The payment of all said installments by the payment of each on its due date without default and without prepayment shall be payment in full of the principal and interest evidenced hereby.
“All installments shall bear interest at ten per cent (10%) per annum from the date due.
“Provided further, if three installments herein provided to be paid shall become delinquent, or if the holder become entitled to foreclose the deed of trust securing this note for any reason, in either event the holder hereof shall have the option to and may declare the entire debt evidenced by this note immediately due and payable without notice, and may proceed to immediately collect the same, and it is agreed that by reason of said default upon the exercise of said option the interest on said loan shall be ten per cent, and the balance due of principal and interest shall be arrived at as follows: each payment theretofore made hereon shall be accredited as of the date it is received by the holder hereof on the sum of the then balance and accrued interest thereon. * * * ”
“For value received, I, we, and each of us, jointly and severally promise to pay to the order of Braniff Investment Company, a corporation, or bearer, at its office in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, th'e principal sum of Two-Hundred-Seventy-Four and 32/100 Dollars ($274.32), the same to be paid in one-hundred-eight (108) equal installments of two and 54/100 Dollars ($2.54) each payable on the fifteenth day of the next ensuing and each and every successive month until the total number of said installment^] have fallen due. All installments shall bear interest from maturity at the rate of ten per cent (10%) per annum.
“This is one of two notes of even date herewith between the parties hereto, secured by real estate Deed of Trust and the lien of this note is junior to the lien of the other of the said two notes.”

No interest rate from date is specifically named in said instruments, it appearing that the final and total amount of the principal and interest to become due was incorporated in the face of the installment payments. It conclusively appears that the total amount of these installments, if paid according to their face until maturity, would not include any usurious interest. It was proven, and is not denied, that the interest rate on the loan to maturity figured less than 10 per cent.

It is contended, however, that, viewing the transaction as a whole, and giving effect particularly to the stipulation in the trust deed quoted in parenthesis above, the contract shows upon its face to be usurious.

We are of the opinion that the trial court correctly rendered judgment against appellants, and the reasons we give for this conclusion will sufficiently, we think, answer the various contentions of appellants without consuming space in their reproduction.

The instruments quoted from constitute the contract between the parties. They evidence the consummation of a single transaction, and must be construed together. 10 Tex. Jur. § 166. We must be able to say from these that the parties to same intended to enter into an illegal contract for the payment of interest in excess of 10 per cent, per annum upon the contingency of default in the payment of certain installments as therein specified. The note constitutes the obligation to pay, the trust deed the security for same. If we sustain appellants’ theory, what are we to do with the plain unequivocal stipulation of the $4,200 note providing in case of default and maturity of payment that then “the interest on said loan shall be ten per cent” ? If the parties intended to collect both notes, or all installments as written, why insert the provision quoted and the one immediately following it, providing a method of calculation which plainly shows *566

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68 S.W.2d 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shive-v-braniff-inv-co-texapp-1934.