Ware v. Paxton

352 S.W.2d 520, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2076
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 1961
Docket15779
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 352 S.W.2d 520 (Ware v. Paxton) 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
Ware v. Paxton, 352 S.W.2d 520, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2076 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinions

YOUNG, Justice.

This is a second appeal of appellant’s suit against appellees of date December 29, 1950 on a note for $3,048, foreclosure of chattel mortgage and reasonable attorney’s fees; countered by the Paxtons’ cross-action for double the amount of usurious charges allegedly paid within two years (Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Art. 5073); also for damages for claimed unreasonable collection efforts. See 266 S.W.2d 218, where the Eastland Court sets forth in detail the facts antecedent to first trial and the issues there raised and considered. The District Court on first trial had rendered [521]*521judgment for appellees for $181.84; finding usury in amount of $936.40 which the East-land Court concluded was not sustained by the record, and reversed the case for further development of amount of usury, if any, holding in such connection that “the execution of a new note or obligation to the original lender which included unpaid usurious interest made to the borrower on a prior indebtedness is not payment of such usurious interest;” and that the right to recover double the amount of usury under Art. 5073 is confined to usurious interest charges which have been actually paid.

On this second trial, likewise to a jury, the court rendered judgment denying any recovery on the note in suit, finding usurious interest in the amount of $690 paid within two years from date of cross-action on which the Paxtons were entitled to double recovery; with a net result after due offsets and credits of “$861.66 double damages for usurious interest, computed as reflected in Exhibit A prepared by the Court and attached hereto”. Also, based on jury answers there was an award to the Paxtons of $15,000 actual damages for unreasonable collection efforts and $10,000 as exemplary damages together with legal interest from date of judgment of November 9, 1959.

Prior to the second trial of 1959 and before introduction of evidence plaintiff (appellant) filed first and second trial amendments, reducing his cause of action to-a balance of $1657.10 his declared intention being “to remove from the lawsuit any issue pending as to usurious interest, brokerage fees, insurance premiums, or any other charges”; claiming that he sought judgment only for that principal balance on the monies loaned by him with legal interest from December 29, 1950, together with foreclosure of chattel mortgage. He now vigorously asserts through numerous points that by thus reducing his claim by $1340.90 as of December 29, 1950, he has eliminated all usury as a defense. The trial court properly rejected this plea, which is untenable as a matter of law; as well as being inimical to many jury findings. We deem it unnecessary to detail the contents of the present jury verdict, embracing some 46 issues and answers; they being essentially similar to those fully discussed on first appeal. Issues 26 and 27 for example which appellant does not seriously attack, find that Ware failed to give Paxton credit for $1148 on the loans involved. Appel-lees claim the note sued upon of $3048 was usurious in its entirety; and appellant in the same connection states that “had Pax-ton paid Ware the full $3048 he would have paid usury”. He cannot by an ex parte determination of over-charges thus eliminate entirely the question of usury.

The instant trial did not follow usual procedure. Plaintiff Ware first placed the Paxtons on the stand who admitted signing the $3048 note of December 29, 1950, put same into evidence and rested. Paxton then called Ware to the stand, who produced various notes, ledger sheets, contracts for loans, credit insurance applications and other papers, reflecting the continuous series of loan transactions from June 7, 1947 to December 29, 1950; all of which were introduced for the limited purpose of demonstrating the amounts that the Paxtons were required to sign for and also amounts Ware admitted as having been repaid according to his records. Paxton then took the stand, testifying to various differences in the amounts received by him in contrast to the amounts reflected in the records of plaintiff Ware, for example in the Mercantile Bank Loan of January 9, 1950 ($3744) the $576 received by Ware in such transaction being treated on previous appeal as “additional interest”. Paxton likewise called to the stand one Canterbury, the accountant for Ware, who testified to an itemization from the latter’s records of the amounts advanced to Paxton and repaid by him, based on conversation between himself, (Canterbury) and Ware; making summary thereof which reflected a balance due Ware of $1697.10 — the amount now sued for under trial amendments» -

[522]*522• Appellant' presents 28 points on appeal, arguing same in groups. They do not refer to any assignment of error in amended motion for new trial to which they are germane as required by Rule 418, Tex.Rules Civ.Proc.; in fact appellees charge that many of them are not covered by the 253 assignments of error at all and therefore should be stricken. Other deficiencies of briefing rules are pointed out which we do not pause to discuss. For notwithstanding this, it is manifest from appellant’s brief as a whole, that the prime consideration on this appeal relates to the jury findings of damages, both actual and exemplary.

In appellant’s first series of points, he asserts that Paxton accepted above figures of Canterbury as correct, vouching for him as a witness. However, this would not preclude plaintiffs from contradicting the testimony of Canterbury as distinguished from attacking his credibility. Aetna Life Insurance Co. v. Love, Tex.Civ.App., 149 S.W.2d 1071. And in the testimony of Pax-ton he alludes to several differences of fact between his own version as to amounts received and repaid to Ware, in the latter column alone these differences amounting to $1148 (Jury answer No. 27). Furthermore, in issues and answers 2 through 25 (only generally attacked by appellant) are findings favorable to the Paxtons’ plea of usury; and findings 28 through 32 are in accord with Paxton’s testimony that he had riot received as much as appellant had stated in connection with transaction of several dates. In sum, the trial court’s judgment (Exhibit A) which fixes March 22, 1949 as the cut-off date for double damages, that between that date and December 13, 1949 Paxton had actually paid in cash, as interest, $690 more than he received for which Paxton was entitled to double damages totalling $1380. Exhibit A further reflects that in the period of January 1950 to December 29, 1950, Paxton received $1682.60 more than he had repaid; and after subtracting this $1682.60 from the totals of $1148, $1380, and $6.26 (over payment pri- or to March 21, 1949) the trial court arrived at an excess in favor of Paxton of $851.66 designated by the trial court as “net usury judgment.”

On the other hand it is the contention of appellant (points 10 through 13) that the effect of jury answers 26 and 27 was to establish $1148 as in full of all credits to which appellees were entitled; - which amount subtracted from his claimed balance due of $1697.10 left $549.50 for which he should have judgment; necessarily precluding any recovery for usurious interest in this lawsuit. In this connection appellant, in reply brief, submits an exhibit parallel to the court’s Exhibit A, fixing March 31, 1951 as the cut-off date for establishment of double damages; obviously following the finding in Ware v. Paxton, first, appeal, to such effect.

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Ware v. Paxton
352 S.W.2d 520 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
352 S.W.2d 520, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ware-v-paxton-texapp-1961.