Ustick v. Jones

112 S.W.2d 703, 130 Tex. 620, 1938 Tex. LEXIS 205
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1938
DocketNo. 6959.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 112 S.W.2d 703 (Ustick v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ustick v. Jones, 112 S.W.2d 703, 130 Tex. 620, 1938 Tex. LEXIS 205 (Tex. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Taylor

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

*622 W. L. Ustick filed this suit against Lawrence E. Jones and others seeking recovery on a note and foreclosure of the deed of trust security. Defendants plead by way of offset that the note was usurious and that they had made usurious interest payments which, in addition to the principal payments theretofore made, should be deducted from the principal sum borrowed and accrued interest, and prayed judgment accordingly. Upon trial before the court without a jury the plea of usury was sustained, and judgment was rendered for plaintiff with foreclosure for the balance of the principal unpaid after deducting not only the principal payments alleged but interest payments as well. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment. 81 S. W. (2d) 205. The question as to whether the loan contract is usurious is the sole question presented.

The note, deleted as to provisions not pertinent here, reads:

“I, * * * promise to pay * * * the sum of Four Thousand Three Hundred Fifty & No/100 Dollars, with interest from date hereof at the rate of-per cent per annum, payable monthly. The principal and interest of this note shall become due and payable in 120 equal monthly installments of Fifty Six and 55/100 ($56.55) Dollars, each, payable on the first day of each month, beginning on May 1st., A. D. 1927, and continuing one installment on the first day of each month thereafter until this note and all amounts due and to become due hereon, as well as any and all amounts due and to become due under the deed of trust securing this note, shall have been fully paid. * * * Out of said monthly payments any monthly interes' payable shall first be paid, being applied as of the first day of the month in which same are entitled to be credited according to the foregoing terms hereof, and the remainder not necessary to discharge such interest shall be applied on the 1st day of the month of April of each year to the reduction of principal. * * * All past due installments or other amounts due hereon shall bear interest from date when same should have been paid at the rate of ten per cent per annum. And if any amount payable hereunder be not promptly paid when due, and default be made in monthly payment thereof, then the holder hereof shall have the option to declare the entire principal amount of the indebtedness evidenced hereby immediately due and payable.”

" The deed of trust contains no provisions that are at variance with those of the note, and will not be set out. The provisions of the contract, together with the calculations made and applied according to its provisions, discloses that the total amount of interest paid during the loan period when paid without default, *623 is $2,436.00, being the difference between 120 payments of $56.55 each and $4,350.00, the principal of the loan.

It is necessary to an understanding of the questions involved that the plan upon which the loan contract is built be understood, and as an aid thereto certain schedules set out in the statement of facts will be briefly analyzed.

The first schedule shows by its first column of figures the principal of the loan, $4,350.00, reduced consecutively by 120 applications of the agreed monthly installments, $56.55. The manner of prorating the installments as to principal and interest portions respectively, and the manner of applying such portions to a reduction of the loan and liquidation of the accrued interest thereon, is shown by the second and third columns. The interest rate employed in making this schedule is 9.615 per cent, per annum. That part of the schedule covering only the first and last years of the loan period is as follows:

*624 It will be observed that the total amount of interest calculated upon a loan exemplified by the foregoing schedule is $2,-438.69, a sum in excess of the interest required in the present contract by $2.69. It will be observed also that this is the exact amount — lacking one cent, — of the principal of the loan that is not liquidated by the 120 payments. It is therefore obvious that the rate (9.615 per cent, per annum) employed in building the contract exemplified is not the rate employed in building the present contract. The schedule must be rejected as an exemplification of the present contract for another and better reason. The new balance upon which interest is computed for the succeeding loan period is ascertained monthly instead of yearly as required in the present contract. It is obvious for the same reasons stated with respect to the first schedule that the contract exemplified must be rejected as showing, or even indicating, that the present contract is usurious.

The next schedule shows the results of the calculations covering the entire ten year period. It discloses that the calculations upon which it was computed and compiled were so made and compiled as to exemplify with exactness the present contract. According to this schedule only the portions of the installments necessary to liquidate the interest accrued each month are credited monthly. The respective remainders of the installments, while paid monthly, are withheld from credit until the end of the contract year (April 1st) and then credited in the aggregate. That part of the schedule covering the first year of the loan period, the fifth year and the first line of the sixth, and the last year of the period, is as follows:

*625

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.W.2d 703, 130 Tex. 620, 1938 Tex. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ustick-v-jones-tex-1938.