after making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
The mere discharge by A. M. Lasater-of the note executed
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by himself and J. L. Lasater, by giving his own note in renewal thereof, would not uphold a recovery from the bank on account of usurious interest in the former note.
Brown
v.
Marion National Bank,
We shall not stop to inquire whether J. L. Lasater can avail himself of - the final payment made by A. M. Lasater. The Court of Appeals held that he could, reaching this conclusion on the authority of cases like
Hough
v.
Horsey,
The Court of Appeals also held that the claim for usurious interest was one which survived the death of the person in ¿whom the right of action was vested, and under the laws of Texas a part of his estate, and consequently one that could be sold and bought like any other chose in action. If. so, that claim passed to the trustee in bankruptcy under section 70 of the bankrupt law, which, in describing the property passing to the trustee, names “property which prior to filing of the petition he could by any means have transferred.''
■ The question then presented is whether this right of action having once passed to the trustee in bankruptcy was retrans-ferred to J. L. Lasater upon the termination of the bankruptcy proceedings, he having returned no assets to his trustee, and having failed to notify him or the creditors of this claim for usury, and beginning this action within less than two months after the final discharge of the trustee. We have held that trustees in bankruptcy are not bound to «accept property of an onerous or unprofitable character, and that they have a
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reasonable time in which to elect whether they will accept or not. If they decline to take the property the bankrupt can assert title thereto.
American File Company
v.
Garrett,
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed, and the case remanded to that court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. .
