166 S.W. 705 | Tex. App. | 1914
This is a suit for the balance due on a promissory note, with interest and attorney's fees, instituted by appellant against O. L. Ware and J. W. Ware, appellees, in the justice's court of precinct No. 2, Uvalde county. Appellant sued for $196, including attorney's fees, and the cause was dismissed on the ground that the attorney's fees and the balance of the principal of the note amounted to more than $200. The cause was appealed to the county court, where the appeal was dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
The note was executed on June 7, 1907, and was for $227, due in one year, or before, and provided for 8 per cent. interest per annum from date, and for 10 per cent. attorney's fees on principal and interest in case the note was placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, or suit was brought thereon. On November 10, 1907, all of the interest to that date and $50 on the principal had been paid, leaving due the sum of $177. On May 1, 1908, there was a payment of $2.45. There was no appropriation of the payment, and under those conditions the payment would be applied to the interest. Hampton v. Dean,
When the payment was made, on November 10, 1907, the principal was reduced to $177, and there was due on the note on December 13, 1912, principal, $177, and $69.15, interest, amounting in the aggregate to $246.15. Ten per cent. on that sum for attorney's fees would amount to $24.61, which, added to the principal sum of $177, would be $201.61. That sum was not within the jurisdiction of the justice's court.
In the case of Burke v. Adoue,
The smallness of the excess cannot be taken into consideration. As said by the Supreme Court in Clark v. Brown,
The judgment is affirmed.