60 Tex. 346 | Tex. | 1883
Counsel for appellee make the point that we cannot revise the findings of the district judge who tried this case below, for the reason that there is no statement of facts to be found in the record. This might be a good reason why we should not consider an assignment of error to the effect that the judge’s conclusions of fact were not warranted by the evidence; but when such conclusions are accepted by the appellant as correct, there can be no reason why we should not revise any errors committed by the judge in applying the law to the facts as thus found by him. Our statute provides that appeals-may be taken in such cases without a statement of facts (R. S., art. 1333), and we have so held in effect in Chance v. Branch, 58 Tex., 490.
It is well settled that in order to avoid a contract either altogether or in part for usury, it is necessary that it should itself be tainted with this offense. 3 Pars, on Con., p. 115; 1 Wharton on Con., § 466; Bank U. S. v. Waggoner, 9 Pet., 399.
The judge below found that the note of November 19, 1876, and all others executed after the adoption of the constitution of 1876, were given for interest denounced by that constitution and the laws then in force as usurious, and properly concluded that they could not be enforced. Barnes v. Pilgrim, 24 Tex., 385.
But at the time the note for §1,180, on which this suit is partly founded, was executed, usury was unknown to the laws of Texas, and hence it was necessarily a proper contract so far as the rate of interest was concerned.
This note was therefore valid for both principal and eight per cent, interest, unless affected by the subsequent notes and agreements for usurious interest made after the adoption of our present constitution.
The general principle being as stated, that the contract itself must be tainted with usury in order to avoid it, and this note being wholly free from such taint; and it being also the rule that a valid subsisting debt cannot be impaired by a subsequent void agreement, it would seem that the notes given for illegal interest had no effect upon the validity of the note in question.
This is the doctrine no matter what penalty may be denounced by the law against usury; whether a forfeiture of both principal and interest, or, as in our law, the interest alone.
Whilst the point has never been directly passed upon by this court, it must have been indirectly held in accordance with the above decisions in the case of Payne v. Powell, 14 Tex., 601. It was there in effect held that a subsequent contract to pay usurious interest upon a note, previously executed and untainted with such fault, being void, would not affect such prior note, and the securities upon the latter would be liable as if no such subsequent agreement had been made.
Of course, if the subsequent contract for the illegal interest was made in pursuance of an agreement that this should be done, which agreement was made at the time the original debt was contracted, the case would be different. There the illegal agreement, though executed afterwards, would have had its beginning contemporaneous with the original contract, and the whole arrangement would have been but a device with which to conceal the usurious nature of the transaction. U. S. v. Waggoner, 9 Pet., 399; Gillmore v. Woodcock, 13 Wis., 589.
Nothing of this kind is shown in the present case, and we think the court below erred, in so far as it refused to allow the appellant interest at the rate of eight per cent, upon the note for $1,180 from and after the 19th of November, 1876. For this error the judgment will be reversed and so rendered here as to allow the appellant to recover the amount of principal and interest at eight per cent, due upon said note down to date, less all such sums as were found by the court below to be proper credits upon such note, these
Judgment reformed and affirmed.
[Opinion delivered November 20, 1883.]