Adams v. Farmers Gin Co.

114 S.W.2d 583, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 937
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 1938
DocketNo. 1735.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 114 S.W.2d 583 (Adams v. Farmers Gin Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Farmers Gin Co., 114 S.W.2d 583, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 937 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Justice.

Plaintiffs C. A. Adams et al., stockholders of the Farmers Gin Company, a corporation, sued said company for debts alleged to have been incurred as hereinafter shown. It was alleged that defendant’s gin was destroyed by fire in December, 1925; that plaintiffs were owners of certain shar'es of stock in said corporation; that on May 1, 1926, “ * * * there was called a meeting of the stockholders i-n a manner provided by the Constitution and by-laws of said corporation, which meeting was called for the purpose of determining whether or not the corporation should be dissolved and the assets of said corporation distributed and divided among the stockholders of said corporation according to the shares of stock held by them, or whether or not they should continue in business and erect a new gin; *584 * * * and all officers and directors of said corporation also present. * * *

“That at said time and place it was determined by the stockholders at said meeting that the company owned and had in its possession at said time monies and other assets sufficient to pay all of its outstanding- indebtedness, to apply $10,000 cash in dividends, and there then remained sufficient amount to make each of the shares of stock that had been so issued by the company of the value of $125.00, including those shares now owned by these plaintiffs;/ that the said stockholders at said meeting then considered whether all of such assets be distributed among the said stockholders, and that the said company dissolve, liquidate, and cease business or whether it should buy new machinery, erect a new gin and continue in the ginning business, and it being proposed that each of the stockholders so owning said $125.00 dividend, which had not been distributed, loan such amount to the company and permit the 'company to use same for the purpose of so erecting and equipping a new gin, and at said time each stockholder was offered the opportunity to take and receive his said sum of $125.00, or to loan the same to the company for said purpose, and these plaintiffs and those under whom they claimed as transferrees of said stock, elected to lend their $125.00 per share to the said company, and upon^ resolution duly offered and motion made, and duly carried, a contract was then and there made and entered into by and between these plaintiffs, and'the defendant and those stockholders under whom they now claim, which was evidenced in writing in the form of a resolution and duly entered upon the Minutes of said corporation under and by which each stockholder, so permitting the said company to take and use his respective $125.00, should be repaid such sum with 10% interest thereon as soon as the revenues arising from the operation of such new gin, when so erected, had paid off and discharged all other indebtedness then owing by the said company, together with the operating expenses of such gin, and that no dividends should be declared upon any outstanding stock until and after such indebtedness had so been paid by the said company, defendant herein.”

Plaintiffs sought recovery of the unpaid portion of $125 for each share of stock owned by plaintiffs, with interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum from May 1, 1926.

In the alternative, plaintiffs alleged, in the event it be determined that the facts alleged, as above set forth, did not constitute “a loan of said money,” that plaintiffs “are entitled to have the said written agreement enforced as a binding contract by and between them and the defendant herein, and that they have judgment against said defendant for the amount of said sum of money with interest thereon at 10% as provided in said written agreement.” '''

It was then alleged that in “accordance with said agreement” the directors did build a new gin “using the assets of the corporation in .constructing the same, including said $125 per share.” Plaintiffs alleged that in 1933 defendant paid to its stockholders, in accordance with the alleged agreement, $30 per share, and in 1934, $41.-25 per share. That thereafter no such payments were made, although in 1935, the defendant earned enough “to pay its operating expenses and all outstanding indebtedness due by it, and have remaining on hand a sufficient sum to pay the remaining portion of the above said indebtedness.” (The allegations contained in the'last two sentences were supported by the evidence.) Plaintiffs alleged that defendant “unlawfully” paid out of its net earnings approximately $2,600 “in the form of bonuses of so much per bale to those customers who had baled (ginned) cotton with it. * * * ”

The defendant’s charter provided: “The association is formed for the purpose of purchasing and maintaining a cotton gin or gins and the ginning and preparing for market of cotton and cotton seed. * * * ” Also, “The business of the association shall be transacted by five (5) directors * * and that the capital stock was “$15,500 to be divided into 620 shares of the par value of $25.00 each.”

The evidence authorized, if it did not compel, a finding by the trial court of the following facts: That from the time of its incorporation until the gin was destroyed by fire, all the dividends paid were “bale dividends.”

“Q. Anyway, from the time you incorporated up to the time of this fire, all the dividends you had paid were bale dividends ? A. Yes, sir. * * *

“Q. Now, this corporation was organized on a bale dividend basis, wasn’t it? A. It was to be paid on a bale dividend, yes sir.”

After May 1, 1926, .cash payments aggregating $71.25 per share of stock were paid *585 to the stockholders. Then the company returned to the “bale dividend” basis. By “bale dividend” was meant that to the stockholders who ginned with the defendant there was returned approximately the net profit acquired by defendant in ginning the stockholders’ cotton. The result of payment of “bale dividends” was that a stockholder who did not gin his cotton with defendant received no dividend on his stock, even if a net profit was earned by the defendant. In May, 1926, after the destruction of the gin by fire, in December, 1925, the stockholders held a meeting, at which the officers and directors were present, for the purpose of determining whether the corporation should be dissolved and its assets divided among its stockholders, or the gin rebuilt and they continue in the cotton ginning business. At such stockholders’ meeting it was decided, if the corporation were dissolved and its assets divided, the stockholders would be entitled to receive approximately $125 for each share of stock. However, the stockholders voted to rebuild the gin and continue the ginning business. They did not vote to dissolve the corporation and divide its assets. The then assets of the gin apparently consisted of the insurance collected by reason of the burning of the gin, amounting to $10,000 (then in the bank to the credit of the defendant) and the real estate upon which the gin had stood. Out of the 620 shares of stock provided for by the charter there had been issued between 100 and 120 shares and the balance of approximately 500 shares was held as treasury stock. At such meeting the stockholders voted “to loan” their $125 (what they estimated they would be entitled to for each share of the stock if the corporation were dissolved and its assets divided among the stockholders) to the gin company.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.2d 583, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-farmers-gin-co-texapp-1938.