116 S.W. 860 | Tex. App. | 1909
Appellant instituted this suit against appellee to recover the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars and forty-six cents under article 3106 of the Revised Statutes as for usury paid. The suit was instituted December 16, 1907, but the petition showed that the usurious interest had been paid on July 3, 1907. The trial court sustained a general demurrer to the petition, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
Opinion. — By an Act of the Thirtieth Legislature, approved April 18, 1907, article 3106 of the Revised Statutes was amended so as to read as follows: "If usurious interest shall hereafter be received or collected upon any contract, either written or verbal, the person or persons paying same or their legal representatives may, by action of debt instituted in any court having jurisdiction thereof in the county of the defendant's residence or in the county where such usurious interest *332 shall have been received or collected or where said contract has been entered into or where parties paying same resided when such contract was made, within two years after such payment recover from the person, firm or corporation receiving the same double the amount of such usurious interest so received and collected." The effect of the amendment was to enlarge the statute in respect to the venue of suits brought under it, but otherwise to limit the amount of the recovery to double the amount of the usurious interest paid, instead of permitting a recovery of double the amount of all interest paid, as was allowed under the amended article.
This Act took effect ninety days after the adjournment of the Legislature, and therefore was not in effect at the time appellant paid the usurious interest to appellee, although it had been in effect several months before the suit was actually filed. The law appears to be well settled that if a statute giving a special remedy is repealed without a saving clause in favor of pending suits, all suits thereunder must stop where the repeal finds them. (Jessee v. De Shong,
Appellant insists that section 6 of the final title of the Revised Statutes operates to save his cause of action, but it is unnecessary for us to decide that question, and some of us at least are inclined to the *333 view that that section had reference only to the intention of the Legislature in adopting the then body of the Revised Statutes, and did not and could not include future repeals by subsequent Legislatures. See the last two cases cited.
For the error of the court discussed, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for trial.
Reversed and remanded.