Western Bank & Trust Co. v. Ogden

93 S.W. 1102, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 465, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 93 S.W. 1102 (Western Bank & Trust Co. v. Ogden) 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
Western Bank & Trust Co. v. Ogden, 93 S.W. 1102, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 465, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 290 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

RAINEY, Chief Justice.

Appellee, J. A. Ogden, sued the Western Bank & Trust Company to recover double the amount of interest paid on an alleged usurious contract entered into between them, and recovered judgment, from which the Western Bank & Trust Company appeals.

The appellee files no brief, and the pleadings and facts set forth by appellant in its brief are as follows:

“Appellee, for cause of action, alleged that he borrowed, on February 14, 1903, from appellant the sum of two hundred dollars ($200), and executed his note, including interest, for two hundred and twelve and sixty-four one-hundredths dollars ($212.64) with interest after maturity, and at the same time he executed to plaintiff a cotton contract, in which he agreed to consign to appellant thirty-two bales of cotton^ or in lieu thereof to pay appellant thirty-two dollars ($32) if he failed to consign said thirty-two bales of cotton; and that on June 20, 1903, he borrowed the sum of twenty-five dollars ($25) from appellant, and renewed his note by giving a note for two hundred and seventy and fourteen one-hundredths dollars ($270.14), and executed another cotton contract for the consignment of four bales of cotton, or to pay $4.00 if he failed to consign said cotton. He alleges that both of said cotton contracts were usurious, and that said cotton contracts, for the consignment of said cotton, were a sham and subterfuge used by appellant to evade the usury laws of this State. That between October 15, 1903, and November 17, 1903, he paid to appellant the said sum of money, except seventy and sixty-four one-hundredths dollars ($70.64). He alleged that $50.14 was interest charged for the use of said two hundred and twenty-five dollars ($225) borrowed money; that on November 14, 1903, appellant required him to execute his note for said balance to the Texas Cotton Commission Company, for the sum of seventy-seven and seventy-one one-hundredths *467 dollars ($77.71), the same being the balance due on said obligations, and that said seventy-seven and seventy-one one-hundredths dollars ($77.71) included the interest on the same until September 15, 1904, and he also executed a cotton contract to said Texas Cotton Commission Company, $12.00. He alleges that Texas Cotton Commission Company, in receiving said usurious interest, was acting for appellant, and he sued for double the sum of sixty-nine and twenty-one one-hundredths dollars ($69.21), which amount he claimed to have paid as usurious interest, his suit being for one hundred and thirty-two and forty-eight one-hundredths dollars ($132.48); citation was issued and served on “The Western Bank and Trust Company.” Appellant plead that it was a corporation, and that its corporate name was “Western Bank and Trust Company,” and not “The Western Bank and Trust Company,” and alleged that there was no such corporation as “The Western Bank and Trust Company.” It excepted generally and specially to the pleadings of appellee, and plead a general denial, and specially that the appellee agreed to consign to appellant the number of bales of cotton mentioned in said cotton consignment contracts, and agreed to pay to appellant $1.00 per bale on all cotton which he might deliver to it, and that said charge of $1.00 per bale should include appellant’s commission, and all charges on said cotton, except freight charges, etc., and all extra charges accruing after being held one month, and that if he failed or refused to consign said cotton, as agreed to in said written consignment, then he should pay to appellant $1.00 per bale for each and every bale of cotton short of the number of bales agreed to be consigned; and that appellant had prepared itself to receive said cotton and sell the same on consignment, and was ready and willing on its part to carry out said contract, and that the charge of $1.00 per bale therefor was not usurious, but was to compensate appellant for its services in handling and caring for and selling said cotton, and for paying insurances and paying expenses, such as fire insurance, rents, taxes, market reports, clerk hire, etc., which expenses were rendered necessary to enable appellant to handle and sell cotton of its customers as it agreed to do in said cotton consignment contracts. Appellant further alleged that on November 14, 1903, it had no part or interest in the business of said Texas Cotton Commission Company, and that it had no interest in the business transactions between appellee and said Texas Cotton Commission Company, and that it did not, directly or indirectly, receive any part of the money paid by appellee to said Texas Cotton Commission Company. Nor did it receive anything after November 14, 1903. Appellant further plead that it could not be held for any sum of money usuriously charged, or collected, by said Texas Cotton Commission Company, alleging that it was a distinct corporation from said-'commission company and had no interest in common with it, and was not liable for any usury collected by said commission company, if it collected any.

The facts show that on February 14, 1903, appellee borrowed from Western Bank and Trust Company the sum of $200 and gave his note therefor for $212.64, with interest to September 15, 1903, charging 10 percent per annum for said money, and that appellee executed to appellant an agreement to consign to appellant thirty-two bales of cotton, to be handled and sold by appellant for his account. He was to pay for *468 such services $1.00 per bale, and if he failed or refused to consign said bales of cotton was still to pay $1.00 per bale as liquidated damages; and that on the 30th day of June, 1903, appellant loaned appellee $35.00 in money and charged him fifty cents interest thereon from said date until September 15, 1903, and appellee executed to appellant another cotton consignment contract for the consignment of four bales of cotton; the entire obligations, principal and interest and cotton consignment contracts amounted to the sum of two hundred and seventy-four and fourteen one-hundredths dollars ($374.14), with interest after maturity; that during the fall of 1903, between September 15 and November 14, appellee paid to appellant the sum of two hundred and three and fifty one-hundredths dollars ($303.50), which paid all of said amount, except $70.64. This balance of $70.64 was well secured by a mortgage on stock, etc., and appellant sold said $70.64, with the accrued interest thereon since maturhw, to said Texas Cotton Commission Company for $70.64, and afterwards appellee executed to said Texas Cotton Commission Company his note for $77.71, due in the fall of 1904, $7.07 of which was interest to maturity, and the note bearing interest after maturity; he also executed to said Texas Cotton Commission Company a cotton contract for the consignment of twelve bales of cotton, or the payment of $13.00 in the fall of 1904. Appellee paid to said Texas Cotton Commission Company the amount of said note and cotton contract, amounting to $89.71, none of which was paid to or received by appellant, but it had sold said obligations remaining unpaid during the fall of 1903. The payments, during the fall of 1903, of appellee to appellant, were general payments and no request was made as to the application thereof,whether the same should be applied to the principal indebtedness, to the interest, or to said cotton contracts. The' payments, however, were duly credited on the appellee’s notes, there'being no credit on either of the cotton contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W. 1102, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 465, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-bank-trust-co-v-ogden-texapp-1906.