This is a usury suit. George P. Robertson and wife brought this suit against Connecticut General Life Insurance Company and Dallas Bank & Trust Company to cancel a debt and deed of trust lien on the ground that the contract provided for a usurious rate of interest and that the payments which had been made as interest were sufficient to discharge the principal debt. The Connecticut General Life Insurance Company reconvened and sought judgment for its debt with foreclosure of its lien. The undisputed facts and the material findings of the jury are as follows:
On October 15, 1909, Robertson and.wife executed to A. H. Kahler a note for $3,500, due in five years and secured by a first deed of trust lien on the land in question. The record does not disclose' the rate of interest borne by this note but it is asserted in the brief that it bore 8 per cent per
The jury, in answer to special issues, found that in the preparation of the loan contract of date October 22, 1919, and in the preparation of the loan contract of date September 22, 1924, the Dallas Trast
It may be that the 1914 contract, because of the “squeezing in” of the installment payments on the second lien note, making the whole thereof payable during the first two years of the contract, and the provision for acceleration of maturity in certain contingencies, was usurious under the holding of the Supreme Court in the cases of Shropshire v. Commerce Farm Credit Co.,
This leaves for consideration only the question as to whether or not the 1924 loan contract was usurious. Independent of the tax clause, said contract provided for the payment of interest at a rate of less than 10 per cent per annum, the lawful rate. The fact that it provided for acceleration of maturity in certain contingencies and for interest at the rate of 10 per cent per annum after maturity did not render it usurious. Lincoln National Life Ins. Co. v. Anderson,
The tax clause above referrеd, to and contained in each of the loan contracts is as follows:
“The mortgagor hereby covenants with the mortgagee as follows: * * *
“That mortgagor will pay all taxes and assessments and premiums of insurance now due, or which may become due on said premises, or chargeable against said premises, or said bond, or upon the interest in said premises of the Mortgagee, or its successors and assigns, before thе same shall become delinquent; or, if at any time, any law, either Federal or State, shall be enacted, imposing or authorizing the imposition of, any tax upon this mortgage, or upon said ‘bond’ or upon the principal or interest money secured by this instrument, by virtue of which the owner, for the time being, of the land above described, shall be authorized to pay any such tax upon said ‘bond’ or Mortgage, or the principal or interеst of the debt secured, or upon either of them, and deduct the amount of such tax so paid from the debt hereby secured, or upon the rendering by any court of competent jurisdiction of a decision that the undertaking by the Mortgagor as herein provided to pay any such tax or taxes is illegal and inoperative, then or in any such event, the said principal sum hereby'secured, and all interest thereon to the date of payment thereof, shall, at the option of the holder of said ‘bond’ be and become immediately due and payable, anything in this Mortgage or said ‘bond’ contained to the contrary notwithstanding; provided, this condition of this agreement shall not be construed to incliide any personal tax when imposed against the owner of said ‘bond’ or Mortgage at the residence or domicile of such owner.”
We agree with apрellants that under the above quoted provision of the contracts, the debtors were obligated to pay all taxes that might be assessed in this state against the note or bond at any place other than the residence or domicile of the owner thereof. We also agree with appellants that under the law a foreign corporation may establish a tax situs in this state at a place other than its residenсe or domicile, at which place its notes may be assessed for taxes. Kansas City Life Ins. Co. v. Duvall,
County
Rate of City Rate
Dallas State Per
Year County Rate Hundred
1924 75 86 $2.43
1925 77 76 2.47
1926 65 70 2.47
1927 67 82 2.46
1928 64 82 2.45
1929 68 88 2.43
•1930 69 92 2.43
1931 74 90 2.43
1932 69 81 2.43
1933 77 79 2.43
1934 77 76 2.43
No taxes were ever assessed against the note in question. Under the above rate, if the notes had been assessed at their full face value, the taxes would have еxceeded the equivalent of 3 per cent per an-num and the contract would therefore have been usurious; but it cannot be presumed, .as a matter of law, that the notes would have been so assessed at their full face value. While Revised Statutes, art. 7174, contemplates that all property shall be assessed for taxes “at its true and full value,” as a matter of fact this is not always done. Lively v. Missouri K. & T. Ry. Co.,
The appellants therefore failed to show that the contract was usurious. Since appellants failed to so establish that such contract was usurious, the trial court properly entered judgment for the creditor for the amount of thе note with interest and attorney’s fees.
Appellants suggest that, even though we should be correct in holding that the,trial court, in the state of the record, properly entered judgment for appellees, we should reverse and remand the cause for a new trial, because the appellants tried the case under a misapprehension of the law, believing that they had a right to assume that the note, if assessed for taxes at all, would be assessed at its full value, and that in reliance on such belief, they failed to prove the prevailing standards of valuation at which property was assessed for taxes for the county of Dallas and state of Texas during the years in question. They assert' that upon another trial, they will be able to make such proof. The rule seems to be, however, that we are not authorized to reverse and remand an error-less judgment in order that the case may be more fully developed upon another trial. 3 Tex.Jur. 1143; Harris v. Shafer,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
