Kerr v. Tierney
Kerr v. Tierney
Opinion of the Court
The complainant from time to time borrowed from defendant Peter Tierney various sums of money upon which she was charged usurious rates of interest. She gave to him notes, chattel mortgages, and one ■ real estate mortgage. Later a deed was given and a contract taken back. Some quitclaim deeds also appear in the transaction which complainant claims she did not give. Tierney made a contract to sell. Maher the land complainant deeded to Tierney and received payments thereon. Complainant attempted to secure a settlement with defendant and a reconveyance of the land, but failing in her attempts she employed counsel for that purpose. In response to a letter from counsel defendant offered December 16, 1903, to reconvey the land subject to a mort
In their brief counsel say:
“ The sole question which this court is called upon to determine is raised upon the decree and is one of costs.”
They argue that, as the court found against many of the allegations of complainant’s bill of complaint, costs ought not to follow. We quote from the brief:
“Under the decree the complainant was defeated in every claim that she made except the claim for usury, and as to that the court allowed the defendant to charge no-interest although the complainant testified as follows: ‘ I want to pay them with interest, a legal interest, and I want them to return to me all that has been collected, that is legally due me, and that is all I ask.’ Complainant’s counsel in making the tender did not compute interest, the tender was not kept good, it was not sufficient, and notwithstanding all of this the circuit judge, in disregard of the rule, allowed the defeated, and not the prevailing, party costs to be taxed.”
We cannot agree with counsel that complainant was the defeated party. The record clearly shows that defendant
The decree is affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- KERR v. TIERNEY
- Status
- Published