Cotton v. Barnes
Cotton v. Barnes
Opinion of the Court
Jesse Barnes sued Almon Cotton to recover $240, alleged to be double the amount of usurious interest paid by the defendant in error to plaintiff in error. The trial was before the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered for the sum of $190 and for the delivering up and cancellation of the power of attorney given by Barnes to Cotton.
In the original petition it is alleged that Almon Cotton is owner of the Texas Loan Company and the Empire Loan Company, while in the first amended original petition it is alleged that plaintiff in error—
“on the 1st day of January, 1909, and from that date until now,” “was and has been doing-business in the city of Houston, Harris county, Tex., as a money lender, conducting a number of loan offices, or companies, in said city of which he was and is the sole owner, among others, the Texas Loan Company and the Empire Loan Company; that they are merely other names for the defendant, Aimon Cotton, and are the designation of the business and such of the places where he conducts his avocation of money lending; he, in fact, being the company in each instance.”
It is charged that in 1909 Barnes borrowed from Cotton, doing business under the name of Empire Loan Company, $10, and that thereafter he paid to defendant, doing business under such name, $3 per month interest on the original loan until the date of the filing of this suit; that in 1909 he borrowed from defendant below, doing business under the name of Texas Loan Company, the sum of $10, and that thereafter and up to the time-of the filing of this suit, he had paid the sum of $3 per month interest thereon. The second amended petition alleges, in substance, that Barnes borrowed said sums from Almon Cotton, doing business under the loan compa-. ny names, “and his employés in charge thereof,” and that the payments were made to Cotton, doing business under such names and to his employés in charge thereof. It is admitted that the books of plaintiff in error show the receipt of the money paid by defendant in error, and the paying out of all sums borrowed by him.
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.