MISSOURI-KANSAS-TEXAS RAILROAD COMPANY, Appellant,
v.
FIBERGLASS INSULATORS, Appellee.
Court of Appeals of Texas, Houston (1st Dist.).
*944 Brock C. Akers, Vinson & Elkins, Houston, for appellant.
Ronald G. Wiesenthal, Williamson, Gardner, Hall & Wiesenthal, Houston, for appellee.
Before SAM BASS, COHEN and HOYT, JJ.
OPINION
COHEN, Justice.
Neither a borrower, nor a lender be;
For loan oft loses both itself and friend,...
Shakespeare, Hamlet, I, iii, 75.
Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Company (MKT) sued Fiberglass for $9,290.00 and "interest" for failure to pay demurrage due pursuant to a written contract. The jury found for MKT on all issues, but the court granted Fiberglass a judgment notwithstanding the verdict for damages of $11,469.00, based on usury. The trial judge ruled that, during the trial, MKT had committed usury when Frank Listvan, MKT's accounts manager, requested an award of 10 percent prejudgment interest on the debt, compounded annually, from January 1, 1979. Once Listvan testified, on cross-examination, that he was "charging" prejudgment interest in this fashion, the trial court allowed Fiberglass to file a supplemental answer asserting usury, and thereafter denied MKT's requested trial amendment asserting bona fide error and special issues regarding bona fide error and intent to charge usurious interest.
Based solely on Listvan's testimony, the court found MKT guilty of charging interest at more than twice the legal prejudgment rate, and consequently, it forfeited all principal and interest due to MKT and awarded Fiberglass three times the amount of usurious interest charged, plus attorney's fees. This occurred even though no contract, written or oral demand, business record, or other document ever mentioned interest, and MKT's petition made only a one-word reference to "interest."
To summarize, MKT, which the jury found was owed $15,140.00 by Fiberglass for debt and attorney's fees, left the trial court owing $15,969.00 in damages and attorney's fees to Fiberglass, its debtor when the trial began.
MKT contends that it cannot be guilty of usury because 10 percent is a legal rate of prejudgment interest under Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat.Ann. art. 5069-1.05 (Vernon Supp. 1986). MKT specifically relies on sec. 2 of art. 5069-1.05, which provides that the interest rate on "all judgments of the courts of this state" shall vary from 10 to 20 percent, as determined by the consumer credit commissioner.
We reject MKT's argument. Article 5069-1.05 is captioned "Rate of judgments." The rates it establishes begin to run "on the day the judgment is rendered" and end "on the day the judgment is satisfied." Article 5069-1.05 applies only to judgments.
The contract herein did not mention interest. The statute governing the rate of prejudgment interest in such a case is art. 5069-1.03 (Vernon Supp.1986), which provides:
*945 When no specified rate of interest is agreed upon by the parties, interest at the rate of six percent per annum shall be allowed on all accounts and contracts ascertaining the sum payable, commencing on the thirtieth (30th) day from and after the time when the sum is due and payable.
Articles 5069-1.03 and 5069-1.05 are not ambiguous and do not overlap. Article 5069-1.03 refers only to interest commencing on the thirtieth day after the debt is due, which could only be prejudgment interest, and art. 5069-1.05 refers only to interest on judgments. This was the express holding of the Texas Supreme Court in Miner-Dederick Construction Corp. v. Mid-County Rental Service, Inc.,
The court of civil appeals correctly stated that the proper rate of prejudgment interest is 6 percent per annum. In Pecos County State Bank v. El Paso Livestock Auction Co.,
"[I]n 1975 the Legislature amended Article 5069-1.05, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann., and fixed the usual rate of interest on judgments in this State at the rate of 9% per annum while leaving Article 5069-1.03 unamended at 6%.... As we understand it, the recovery of prejudgment interest where sought at common law as an element of damages was fixed at 6% because the courts by analogy adopted the legal rate of interest fixed by the statute as the standard by which to be governed in assessing those damages for the detention of money. Watkins v. Junker,
MKT's claim that art. 5069-1.05 allows it to charge prejudgment interest of 10 percent cannot be sustained in light of two clear statutes and the holding in Miner-Dederick v. Mid-County Rental. See also Howze v. Surety Corp. of America,
Despite these authorities, we are bound to confront a sizeable group of judicial decisions from Texas and federal courts that hold exactly as MKT urges. These cases hold that prejudgment interest can be recovered on equitable grounds, in addition to the statutory grounds in art. 5069-1.03, and that when equitable pre judgment interest is allowed, it may be recovered at rates higher than the six percent limit in art. 5069-1.03 and possibly as high as 20 percent, based on our post judgment interest statute, art. 5069-1.05. We respectfully decline to follow these cases because, in our opinion, they incorrectly ignore art. 5069-1.03.
In Earl Hayes Rents Cars & Trucks v. City of Houston,
In Haag v. Pugh,
In Allstate Insurance Co. v. Chance,
Two courts of appeals have held and explained how prejudgment interest can be recovered under art. 5069-1.05, purportedly based on Texas Supreme Court authority. In Behring International, Inc. v. Greater Houston Bank,
The facts are such that the trial court may elect to fix the prejudgment interest rate by using the equitable principles enunciated in Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Adams,
The Behring case thus squarely holds that when prejudgment interest is awarded on equitable grounds, it may be awarded at a rate in excess of the six percent limit of art. 5069-1.03. Accord, First City National Bank v. Haynes,
In Stahl, the Texas Supreme Court upheld an award of six percent prejudgment interest made by the lower court on the sole basis of art. 5069-1.03. See Stahl Petroleum Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,
Stahl did not hold that equitable prejudgment interest could be awarded at any rate higher than six percent. Indeed, it held the opposite. The court repeatedly stated that the rate allowed as equitable prejudgment interest was to be "the legal rate of interest."
"... the courts have, by analogy, adopted the legal rate of interest fixed by statute as the standard by which to be governed in assessing damages for the detention of money."
Id. (emphasis in original) (quoting Watkins v. Junker,
Every case cited in Stahl awarded equitable prejudgment interest at the legal rate of interest, i.e., the rate established by art. 5069-1.03, or its predecessors. This statute is entitled "legal rate applicable." The "legal rate" is not the rate set by art. 5069-1.05, which establishes the rate of interest on judgments. Accord, Larcon Petroleum, Inc. v. Autotronic Systems,
We conclude that Stahl allows courts to award prejudgment interest on equitable grounds at the six percent legal rate of art. 5069-1.03 when no statute provides for such a recovery. It thus enlarges the class of cases in which prejudgment interest may be granted without increasing the rate of equitable prejudgment interest that may be awarded.
We respectfully decline to follow holdings by at least five federal courts that equitable prejudgment interest may be recovered under art. 5069-1.05 at rates of up to twenty percent. See Crown Central Petroleum Corp. v. National Union Fire Insurance Co.,
In Crown,
the Supreme Court has created a new rule that supplants the original equitable prejudgment interest rule and favors the policies of restoring symmetry to the law and compensating all plaintiffs.
We disagree with this holding. These laudable goals do not have the effect of repealing an unambiguous statute, art. 5069-1.03. We cannot ignore art. 5069-1.03 simply because it is nonsymmetrical, obsolete, or unwise, nor because other courts, other than the Texas Supreme Court, have done so.
The Crown opinion misconceived the issue decided in Cavnar. The primary issue concerning interest was "whether prejudgment interest is recoverable in personal injury cases."
We thus hold that in a contract case with no agreed rate of interest, prejudgment interest is limited to six percent by art. 5069-1.03. Miner-Dederick Construction Co. v. Mid-County Rental Service, Inc.,
The second point of error is overruled.
MKT's first point of error contends that the trial court erred in finding that it "charged" interest to Fiberglass. MKT denies, as a matter of law, that it ever "charged" interest.
The act found to be "charging" of usurious interest was Listvan's testimony. Listvan testified on direct examination that MKT could have earned interest on the money since November 1978; that MKT was claiming interest; and that 10 percent was a "fair" rate to charge for each year the debt was owed. He calculated the interest due on the debt, adding 10 percent and compounding it each year in order to illustrate the sum owed. On cross-examination, Listvan testified that 10 percent was fair because it was below the prime rate for the period and that he had reached the 10 percent figure after discussions with MKT's finance department. He further testified, on cross-examination, that he was "trying to collect interest from Fiberglass at the rate of 10 percent on this past due balance" and that he was "now charging" Fiberglass with 10 percent interest on the balance.
After Fiberglass made a trial amendment asserting usury, MKT recalled Listvan, and he testified that MKT's books showed only the principal amount of the debt, $9,200.00, and no interest charges. MKT requested to withdraw Listvan's testimony "charging" usury, but the request was denied. The court refused to admit testimony from Listvan that he never intended to "charge" interest.
Texas Revised Civil Statutes Annotated art. 5069-1.06 (Vernon Supp.1986) provides penalties for one "who contracts for, charges or receives interest which is greater than the amount authorized by this Subtitle...." The term "charges" is not defined by statute, and we have found no case deciding whether a pleading for "interest," joined with testimony that a usurious interest rate would be fair compensation, constitutes "charging."
*949 Under Texas law, it is not required that unlawful interest be agreed to or paid in order to violate the usury statute. Windhorst v. Adcock Pipe and Supply,
The following cases held that the acts described constituted "charging": Butler v. Wright Way Spraying Service,
The present case differs from those above because MKT never contracted for, received, or demanded usurious interest before trial; never filed any pleading demanding usurious interest; and never placed an amount due as interest on any business record, invoice, or statement of account. Listvan's testimony was MKT's only demand, communicated or uncommunicated, for illegal interest.
Two courts have held that conduct more offensive to the public policy against usury than that in the present case did not constitute a "charging." In Killebrew v. Bartlett,
Two months later, in Thomas Conveyor Co. v. Portec, Inc.,
One court has held that when the only "charge" of usury was made in a pleading that was amended to seek lawful interest before usury was asserted, then, as a matter of law, no usurious charge was made. Petroscience Corp. v. Diamond Geophysical,
The Supreme Court's holding in Petroscience weakens the authority of Killebrew, where a superseded petition demanded usurious interest, and another court, over dissent, has refused to follow Thomas Conveyor and Killebrew. See Williams v. Back,
We have found no case holding that an oral request for interest, like the one herein, made in or out of judicial proceedings, constitutes usury as a matter of law or fact.
Texas courts have repeatedly held that usury statutes are penal in nature, result in forfeitures, and therefore, are strictly construed. Houston Sash and Door Co. v. Heaner,
In examining the substance of this transaction, we find nothing except Listvan's testimony to indicate a charging. No invoices requesting interest were sent; no written or oral demands for interest were made; no entry for interest was made in MKT's business records; and no petition requested usurious interest. Like the court in Tyra v. Bob Carroll Construction Co.,
We find that Listvan's testimony is too little and too late to constitute usury as a matter of law under a penal statute that we are bound to strictly construe. We evaluate Listvan's testimony not only against the complete absence of anything else constituting a charging of usury, but also in light of the strong public policy favoring recovery of prejudgment interest, see Cavnar v. Quality Control Parking, Inc.,
*951 For reasons stated earlier, we disagree with cases awarding prejudgment interest above the 6 percent rate set by article 5069-1.03. But the important fact in this point of error is not whether prejudgment interest is limited to 6 percent under these facts by article 5069-1.03, or whether, on equitable grounds, it may rise to 20 percent under article 5069-1.05. The fact that at least 10 Texas and federal cases have indicated that such relief exists means that a party, like MKT, who requests such relief is merely exercising its rights under existing case law. If testimony explaining the equitable basis for higher prejudgment interest can be held, as a matter of law, to constitute usury, then those seeking this purported relief must risk severe sanctions under art. 5069-1.06.[1]
The law should not embarrass itself by appearing to create a right to high prejudgment interest rates and then furiously impose Draconian penalties and forfeitures on those bold enough to ask for it. A plaintiff should not have to risk statutory usury penalties under art. 5069-1.06 in order to assert the purported right to equitable relief under art. 5069-1.05. Compare Simmons v. United States,
We sustain appellant's first point of error.
The district court's judgment is reversed, and judgment is hereby rendered: (1) that Fiberglass take nothing on its usury claim against MKT; (2) that, based on the jury verdict, MKT recover from Fiberglass actual damages of $9,290.00, plus simple prejudgment interest on $9,290.00 at the rate of 6% per year from January 1, 1979, to the date of the district court's judgment, May 6, 1985, in the total amount of $3,536.82, plus attorney's fees of $6,120.00 for trial and $2,500.00 for appeal to this Court, plus an additional $5,000.00 in attorney's fees for defending this judgment from an appeal by Fiberglass to the Texas Supreme Court. If Fiberglass does not apply for a writ of error to the Texas Supreme Court, Fiberglass shall receive a credit of $5,000.00. If Fiberglass applies for a writ of error, and the writ is not granted, Fiberglass shall receive a credit of $2,500.00.
Interest shall run at the postjudgment rate of 10 percent per annum from May 6, 1985, on $18,946.82 ($9,290.00 actual damages + $3,536.82 prejudgment interest + $6,120.00 attorney's fees). Interest at the postjudgment rate of 10 percent per annum shall run on the award of $2,500.00 attorney's fees for services in this Court, beginning on the day the last motion for rehearing is overruled or, if none is filed, then 16 days after this opinion is delivered.
All costs in the district court and in this Court are awarded to MKT and against Fiberglass.
NOTES
Notes
[1] See Veale v. Rose,
