This is a suit on a note with a usury counterclaim. Diamond Geophysical sued Petroscience Corporation and two individual guarantors of the note. The note provided for interest at the rate of nineteen
1
percent
until maturity, but was silent about interest after maturity. On default of installment payments, Diamond Geophysical accelerated the note and brought suit. Diamond Geophysical’s original petition asked for interest at the rate of nineteen percent after maturity. It subsequently superseded that pleading with an amended petition asking in the alternative for interest at the maximum legal rate after maturity. Pe-troscience and its guarantors counterclaimed for usury. They alleged that since the note was silent about interest after maturity, the legal rate of six percent had to be implied under article 5069-1.03
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, which provides that a written contract with no specified rate bears interest at six percent. They likewise alleged that filing and service of the original petition constituted a “charging” of nineteen percent interest; that the rate charged was more than double the six percent allowed under article 5069-1.03; and, that they were therefore entitled to the special penalties provided in article 5069-1.06. The trial court granted Diamond Geophysical summary judgment on the note and denied the usury counterclaim. The court of appeals affirmed on the sole basis that as a matter of law a superseded pleading is not a “charging” of interest.
One of the grounds Diamond Geophysical also presented to the trial court to support its motion for summary judgment was that under Texas law, when a note specifies a rate of interest before maturity but is silent about any rate after maturity, the prematurity rate is implied as the post-maturity rate. We agree with this statement of Texas law.
This court early wrote that when a note specifies a rate of interest before maturity, but is silent about any rate after maturity, the law implies that the pre-maturity rate continues after maturity.
Roberts v. Smith,
Since the trial court’s summary judgment may properly be upheld on an alternative ground expressly presented to the trial court, we refuse the application for writ of error, no reversible error. Tex.R.Civ.P. 483.
