OPINION
This is an appeal from a suit for usury by appellants against appellee Tarrant Savings Association which resulted in the granting of a summary judgment in favor of appel-lee by the trial court.
We affirm.
After first receiving a commitment from Tarrant Savings for a loan of $100,000.00 within seven months from November 17, 1978, for the payment of $1,000.00, appellants exercised their option on May 17,1979 and secured from appellee a 20 year loan for $100,000.00, payable monthly at the rate of ten percent (10%) per annum. Paragraph three of the promissory note granted to appellants a prepayment option in the following language:
The balance owing on the principal of this note may be paid at any time after five years from date hereof without penalty; and may be paid at any time prior to five years from date hereof by paying to the *248 holder hereof an amount equal to 365 (one year) days’ additional interest on the balance of principal then owing.
On November 20, 1979, only six months after executing the 20 year note, appellants exercised their prepayment option and paid off the note. They also paid to Tarrant Savings, as provided in the note, a prepayment penalty of $9,932.55, which represented one year’s interest on the balance then due.
Appellants then sued Tarrant Savings for usury, claiming that the $9,932.55 payment, when coupled with the interest already paid to the date of the prepayment penalty, constituted usurious interest.
Appellants raise four points of error in their brief, but all of them, in effect, contend that the summary judgment was improper because there was a fact issue as to whether the prepayment sum of $9,932,55 was reasonable in relationship to the loss or inconvenience suffered by appellee. Appel-lee, on the other hand, simply argues that prepayment penalty, provided for in the note signed by appellants, was not interest, under the statutory definition of interest, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5069-1.01(a) (1971), and that the admitted fact issue of reasonableness was immaterial. Appellee says, therefore, that the summary judgment was proper, because the only fact issue, that of reasonableness, was not a material fact issue. It argues that the prepayment penalty is consideration for the privilege of termination of the payment of interest for twenty years, and is not “compensation allowed by law for the use, forbearance or detention of money; ...” We agree with this proposition.
In support of their argument that there was a fact issue in this case preventing summary judgment, appellants rely almost wholly on the case of
Gonzales County Sav. & Loan Assoc. v. Freeman,
Appellee contends that the Freeman case does not apply to the prepayment situation here and that the statements in Freeman concerning penalties were merely dictum. Appellee argues further that Texas law is well established that a prepayment penalty is not “interest” as the legislature has defined that term, but is simply the consideration given by a borrower for the privilege, which he would not otherwise have, of paying his debt in full, at his own option, before its maturity. The reasonableness or unreasonableness of the consideration given for this option, appellee argues, is immaterial.
Tarrant Savings Association relies in part, as did the Savings and Loan Association in Freeman, for its position that the prepayment penalty was permissible and was not interest, under Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. Ann. art. 852a, sec. 5.07, which reads in pertinent part:
“In addition, associations may charge premiums for making such loans as well as penalties for prepayments or late payments; ... [t]he expenses, fees and charges authorized herein shall be in addition to interest authorized by law, and shall not be deemed to be a part of the interest collected or agreed to be paid on such loans within the meaning of any law of this State which limits the rate of interest which may be exacted in any transaction....” (Emphasis added.)
*249 The Supreme Court in Freeman noted that the purpose of art. 852a, sec. 5.07 was “to exclude from consideration as interest a charge which would otherwise plainly fit within the definition of ‘interest.’ ”
We think that a prepayment penalty does not “plainly fit within the definition of ‘interest’”, as described in Freeman, and that therefore a savings and loan association such as appellee here need not rely on art. 852a, sec. 5.07 or any other statute purporting to exempt prepayment penalties from the definition of “interest.”
A prepayment penalty is not a charge for the “use, forbearance or detention of money,” but is actually the opposite thereof. It is a payment, a consideration, for the option or privilege, as in this case, of paying off a loan early to avoid payment of high interest over a long term of years. Here, appellants committed themselves to a 20 year loan, with interest at ten percent (10%) per an-num for twenty years, but, because of the prepayment privilege granted them in the note, paid off the loan at a penalty, naturally, within six months from the date of executing the loan. By so doing they saved themselves interest payments for nineteen and one-half years.
There are many cases, decided both before and after
Gonzales County Sav., supra,
which hold that a prepayment penalty, being a charge for the termination of the use, forbearance or detention of money, is not “interest”, but is instead exactly the opposite of “interest”.
See,
among others,
Vela v. Shacklett,
In
Boyd v. Life, supra,
the point of law was succinctly stated: “In his sole point of error, Boyd contends that by its judgment the trial court impliedly held that the prepayment charge was not interest and that this was error. We overrule this point. The statutory definition of interest is ‘the compensation allowed by law for the use, forbearance or detention of money ... ’ Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5069-1.01(a) (1971). The charge here was not for the use of money, but for the privilege of repaying the loan before maturity. Boyd could have paid the note under the terms set out and avoided any prepayment penalty. Instead, he chose to prepay the note long before maturity. The insurance company accepted Boyd’s prepayment, but charged him for the privilege. This charge was not interest.
Gulf Coast Inv. Corporation v. Prichard,
The San Antonio Court of Civil Appeals in Ware v. Traveler’s, supra, in approving a prepayment penalty, said: “The courts of this country have uniformly held that a loan transaction otherwise free of usury is not rendered usurious by a voluntary repayment prior to maturity even though the interest paid to the lender exceeds the lawful interest rate computed to the date when the loan was prepaid. In other words, as long as the interest charged and collected does not exceed the legal rate, calculated to the stipulated maturity date, the voluntary act of the borrower in prepaying the loan cannot thereby make the transaction usurious. ... Thus, a sum paid for an early release of a note, being a charge for the termination of the use, forbearance or detention of money, is actually the opposite of interest, and hence cannot serve as a basis for a claim of usury.” (Emphasis added.)
The above quoted language from Ware, which opinion was approved by the Supreme Court by its refusal of writ of error, pretty well scuttles the argument that the prepayment penalty must be reasonable with respect to any loss or inconvenience caused the lender. The Court in Ware said that as long as the interest charged and collected does not exceed the legal rate calculated to the stipulated maturity date, a prepayment penalty cannot be usurious. It *250 is noted that both Boyd and Ware were decided after the Supreme Court’s opinion in Freeman.
The case of
Stedman v. Georgetown S. & L. Ass’n.
For the reasons stated we hold that the learned trial judge properly granted summary judgment in this case, because, while there was admittedly a fact issue as to reasonableness of the prepayment penalty, it was, under the cases here cited, and under the summary judgment proof, immaterial.
The judgment is affirmed.
