224 S.W.2d 1019 | Tex. | 1949
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This rather complicated dispute between various parties regarding a builder’s lien note and contract comes to us only on the subordinate issues of attorney’s fees, interest and court costs allowable against the note makers and property owners, Mesdames Ingham and Chaney, who are the petitioners here. They originally sued the contractor and payee of the note, Van Smith, in damages for failure to complete the dwelling in question according to the contract. Soon thereafter, Smith’s assignee, B. S. Harrison, who is respondent here, sued them and sundry alleged material lien claimants seeking: (a) recovery against petitioners for the sum of $9,000.00 shown on the note as unpaid, with interest according to the terms of the note at 10% per annum from its stipulated maturity date of June 1, 1946, and stipulated attorney’s fees of 10%; (b) similar recovery for so-called “extras” and “changes” allegedly chargeable against petitioners over and above the contract price and aggregating about $3,200.00; (c) foreclosure of the contract lien with priority over the other lien claimants. The two suits were consolidated, and petitioners, Mesdames Ingham and Chaney filed extended pleadings denying respondent Harrison’s status as a bona fide purchaser of the note, contesting all except a small fraction of the claim for “extras”, asserting a right to damages (as in their original suit) of some $5,000.00 and set-offs of several thousand dollars more on account of materials furnished to the work by various parties and either paid for by petitioners for account of the contractor, Smith, or not paid for at all; offering to pay Harrison whatever balance might be finally adjudged as due him; contesting his right to attorney’s fees or to interest that might accrue prior to final judgment, etc.
In the course of an extended trial there was proof that more or less from the beginning it was understood between the
The trial court, without independent fact findings, rendered a judgment largely favorable to petitioners, refusing respondent Harrison the status of a bona fide holder of the note, disallowing the claim for “extras” except for a small fraction thereof very slightly in excess of what petitioners had always admitted owing, and awarding respondent Harrison a net recovery of only $3,293.58 (as against his total claim of over $12,000.00) with foreclosure. The figure of $3,293.58 was arrived at by deducting from the $9,000.00 shown on the note as unpaid an allowance of $1,000.00 to petitioners on their claim for damages, a set-off of approximately $1,000.00 for payments made by petitioners to materialmen, and an amount of about $4,000.00 which the judgment awarded to the unpaid materialmen and declared'to be payable out of what petitioners owed Harrison and as a credit against that indebtedness. Interest was allowed Harrison on his recovery of $3,293.58, at 6% from February 24, 1947, to the date of judgment, August 7, 1948, and at 10% thereafter — this despite the terms of the note, which provided that the interest should accrue from its maturity date of June 1, 1946, and at the rate of 10%. Harrison’s claim for 10% attorney’s fees was altogether disallowed.
Petitioners attack these rulings of the Court of Civil Appeals, asserting that: (a) no allowance should have been made of attorney’s fees; (b) no interest should be allowed except to accrue after the final judgment of the Supreme Court; and (c) petitioners should have been taxed substantially less than half the costs in the Court of Civil Appeals. Petitioners also complain of the appellate court’s failure to make fact findings in response to some thirty-odd requests made in their motion for rehearing.
We agree with the Court of Civil Appeals that there was no justification for the trial court having awarded a rate of interest of 6% for the period between February 24, 1947, and the date of judgment. Harrison’s rights as asserted both before and in the suit were on the contract, and the only rate stipulated in the contract was 10%. Articles 5069-70, Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes. With respect to the interest period, however, we think the court erred in holding it to begin on June 1, 1946. Continental National Bank of Ft. Worth v. Connor, 147 Texas 218, 214 S. W. (2d) 928, cited below, indeed recognizes that in cases like the present, a note owner who is not a holder in due course takes subject to the defenses of the maker, including those arising from the building contract. See also cases such as Mazzola v. Lucia (Tex. Civ. App.,) 109 S. W. (2d) 273, error refused, 128 Texas 666. Here, despite the contractor’s obligation being the consideration of the note and providing for full completion and delivery of the house free of liens by June 1, 1946, the same day as the maturity date in the note, there was considerable evidence that the house was not completed until long after that date and by the judgment, of which no complaint is now made by respondent, the contractor even at the date of judgment had failed to discharge several thousand dollars of liens which were his responsibility to discharge. The trial court presumably found, therefore, that the note was in equity not due on its maturity date and that accordingly interest would not then begin to accrue. In this connection we consider — without suggesting that the court below necessarily thought otherwise — that there would be no inconsistency on the part of the trial court in maintaining this position and at the same time holding that the stipulated maturity
As to the correctness of the date fixed by the trial court for the accrual of interest to begin — that is February 24, 1947— perhaps the latter was chosen on the theory that petitioner’s note was agreed to be payable only when the loan was consummated and that on February 24th it first became evident — as it did — that no loan would materialize. But this disregards the fact that at that time Harrison clearly was claiming over $3,200.00 as a lien for “extras” to which he was not entitled and in addition was refusing to allow petitioners credit for about $1,000.00 paid by them to materialmen who should have been paid by the contractor. The court having later found against Harrison on both these items, we may view the situation on February 24, 1947, as if both were established as unjust demands on that date. Laning v. Iron City National Bank, 89 Texas 601, 35 S. W. 1048; Gulf Pipe Line Co. v. Nearen, 135 Texas 50, (Syl. 4) 138 S. W. (2d) 1065, 1068, syallabus number (5) ; O’Connor v. Kirby Inv. Co., (Tex. Civ. App.,) 262 S. W. 554, error refused, 115 Texas 616; Kinzbach Tool Co. v. Corbett-Wallace Corporation, 138 Texas 565, 160 S. W. (2d) 509. Assuming the agreement to liquidate petitioners’ obligations from the loan proceeds, it follows that the failure to pay those obligations on February 24th was due to the fault of Harrison in insisting on his unjust claims. The situation was in effect the same as if petitioners had made a formal tender to respondent of what the court later found to be actually due him under the note. It was not a question, as suggested by the court below, of petitioners being unable to get a loan. The loan, as respondent knew, was available in the form of a check, which petitioners had endorsed for the purpose of paying the proceeds to satisfy what was legitimately owing to respondent, and there was obviously no objection by respondent to anything about the transaction except the just conditions imposed by petitioners and the title company on the payment. The fact
For substantially the same reasons heretofore mentioned we think the trial court was correct in disallowing respondent the 10% attorney’s fees stipulated in the note and the Court of Civil Appeals incorrect in reforming the judgment so as to allow such fees as applicable to the balance of some $3,200.00 adjudged in respondent’s favor. Laning v. Iron City National Bank; O’Connor v. Kirby Inv. Co.; Kinzbach Tool Co. Inc. v. Corbett-Wallace Corporation; all supra.
Since petitioners were successful in the Court of Civil Appeals on the main financial issues in the case, and we now hold that that court should not have granted even the relief it did grant against them, the costs in that court should be taxable entirely against respondent Harrison rather than divided equally as was provided below.
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed as to those parts of it which modified the trial court’s judgment so as to permit respondent, B. S. Harrison, to recover interest prior to the date of the latter judgment and so as to permit him to recover attorney’s fees, and as to that part which assessed one half of the costs of appeal against petitioners, Olive Belle Ingham and Cleo Davidson Chaney. The judgment of the trial court is here modified so as to eliminate its provision allowing said respondent recovery for interest prior to the date of said judgment, and as so modified it is affirmed. All costs in this
Opinion delivered December 7, 1949.
No motion for rehearing filed.