Signature Indorsement Company v. Wilson

392 S.W.2d 484
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 8, 1965
Docket7646
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 392 S.W.2d 484 (Signature Indorsement Company v. Wilson) 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
Signature Indorsement Company v. Wilson, 392 S.W.2d 484 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

DAVIS, Justice.

Appellee-plaintiff, W. J. Wilson, sued two sets of defendants, viz: (1) Signature Indorsement Company, Signature In-dorsement Co., Inc., Signature Loans, Inc., Mid-Southern Service Company, Finance Operating Company, Service Management Company, Virgil C. Moore, alter ego of the loan companies, and W. Lee Moore, Jr., alter ego of the loan companies, and (2) Crown Loan Brokers, Inc., No. 7, formerly McCarty Finance Service, Inc.; Quick Loan Service of Big Springs, Inc., Union Finance Co., Inc., Consumer Discount Corp., Suburban Loan Corp., Paul R. Luther, Sr., and Paul R. Luther, Jr., alter egos of said corporations for (a) usury double damages (b) actual damages resulting to W. J. Wilson and his wife, Mrs. Frances Wilson, because of unreasonable contacts from said loan companies and their employees in an effort to collect usurious balances upon purported loans made to W. J. Wilson, and (c) exemplary damages because of malice exhibited on the part of said loan companies and their employees by their collection contacts. The suit was filed September 24, 1959. It is alleged that appellants-defendants, Signature Indorsement Company and W. Lee Moore, Jr., (in their amended motion for new trial) had filed a cross-action against Quick Loan Service of Big Springs, Inc., and McCarty Finance Service, Inc. There is no cross-action in the record. There is an order in the transcript dismissing the purported cross-action. The record does not show any service of any process whatever on the cross-defendants. According to a statement in a brief, the Quick Loan Service filed an answer to the cross-action on April 20, 1964, after the cross-action had been dismissed and on the date the trial commenced.

In 1962, W. J. Wilson made a settlement with Paul Luther, Sr., and Paul Luther, Jr., owners of the Quick Loan Service and Crown Loan Brokers, Inc., and affiliates for a total sum of $810.00.

*486 At the beginning of the trial, appellee and appellant entered into the following stipulation:

“For the purposes of this case only, and without the defendants admitting that the charges, collected as insurance premiums and endorsement fees by Signature Loans, Inc., Mid-Southern Service Company, d/b/a Signature In-dorsement Company and Signature In-dorsement Company,' in connection with the transactions between these companies and the plaintiff, W. J. Wilson, were in fact interest, as claimed by the said Wilson, and without plaintiff admitting that such charges were for the purposes named, the plaintiff and said defendants herein stipulate and agree that said defendants handled a series of loan transactions for plaintiff in connection with which contracts were made requiring payment of the charges shown on the schedule attached hereto, and that said defendants received payments thereupon from plaintiff as set forth in such schedule.
“All of the loans made were payable in 3 months. The $23.65 transactions were payable $1.90 per week, for 11 weeks, plus a final payment of $2.75. The $36.30 transactions were payable $2.95 per week for 11 weeks, plus a final payment of $3.85.
“Signed and dated the 11 day of January, 1963.”

Appellee alleged that on March 31, 1958, he borrowed $15.00 from Signature Loans, Inc., and that he executed a note in the total sum of $23.65. From then until May 2, 1959, he executed seven renewal notes. By the renewals he received an additional $30.16, making a total of $45.16 as the result of the loans. Appellee paid back $100.46. Appellee alleged that the claims of the balances on the notes were usurious, illegal, null and void, and unconstitutional; that the appellants contacted appellee and his wife at their places of employment in order to collect the void notes, and such collection efforts were unreasonable and in reckless disregard of the health and welfare of ap-pellee and his wife; that the collection efforts by appellants to try to collect the void notes constituted a course of harassment that resulted in emotional distress, illness, and other bodily harm; that all of the acts of appellants were willful, wanton and malicious; that all of the acts were the proximate cause of the illnesses they suffered, including extreme nervousness, headaches, loss of sleep, reduction in ability to work, extreme fatigue and weariness, harmful loss of weight of appellee Wilson from 165 to 149 lbs., heart pains, loss of appetite, and chronic depression; and, that the damages to his wife resulted in extreme nervousness, headaches, nausea, indigestion, loss of sleep, reduction in ability to work, extreme fatigue and weariness, numbness of shoulders, aching and trembling of the throat and hands, crying and choking spells (feeling that she was burning up), hypertension, and chronic depression.

The case was tried before a jury. Appellant, Signature Indorsement Company, was found to have made unreasonable collection contacts upon appellee Wilson and his wife, Frances Wilson, possibly causing mental or emotional pain and physical illness, and that they acted with malice toward appellee and his wife. The jury found that appellants had charged appellee for insurance premiums and endorsement fees for the purpose of obtaining additional compensation for the use of the money. The jury awarded to appellee $500 as actual damages, and to his wife, Frances Wilson, $2,000 as actual damages. The jury denied Wilson any exemplary damages, but awarded his wife, Frances Wilson, $5,000 exemplary damages for malice and reckless disregard by their unreasonable contacts perpetrated by appellants upon Mrs. Wilson. The trial court deducted $810.00, the amount of the settlement, from the actual damages awarded to Wilson and his wife, and granted a judgment against Signature Indorsement Company, and alter ego W. *487 Lee Moore, Jr., jointly and severally, for $110.60 for usury double damages, $1,690.00 actual damages, $5,000 as exemplary damages, and canceled the purported balance upon the last notes executed by Wilson to Signature Indorsement Company. Appellants have perfected their appeal, and bring forward 23 points of error.

By their point 1, appellants-say the trial court erred in submitting to the jury, over timely objection, special issues Nos. 11 and 15, inquiring about unreasonable collection efforts, for the reason that said special issues submitted in global form an issue of ordinary negligence without separating and inquiring about the several particular elements that allegedly constituted the unreasonable (i. e. negligent) collection efforts pleaded by appellee.

By their point 2, appellant says the trial court erred in not submitting to the jury, over timely objection, special issues Nos. 12 and 16 inquiring about conduct and reckless disregard for the health and welfare of the appellant Wilson and his wife for the reason that the issues were a global submission of the issue of reckless disregard, and such issue should be submitted by referring to a particular fact which appellee claims was established by the evidence, by then inquiring whether such fact actually occurred, and by next inquiring whether such act or omission was actually done in reckless disregard. These points were passed on in Employee Finance Company v. Lathram (Tex.Civ.App.), 363 S.W.2d 899

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Bluebook (online)
392 S.W.2d 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/signature-indorsement-company-v-wilson-texapp-1965.