Adams v. First Nat. Bank of San Augustine

294 S.W. 909, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 310
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 1927
DocketNo. 1509.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 294 S.W. 909 (Adams v. First Nat. Bank of San Augustine) 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. First Nat. Bank of San Augustine, 294 S.W. 909, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 310 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

. HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This is an original suit filed in the district court of San Augustine county by the appellant here, Mrs. J. F. Adams, a feme sole, against the First National Bank of San Augustine, Tex., to cancel *910 and annul a judgment of that court rendered in favor of the Eirst National Bank of San Augustine, Tex., against Harry -Wiley and Mrs. J. E. Adams, jointly and'severally, and against Harry Wiley & Co., on July 30, 1925, in cause No. 2537, styled “Eirst National Bank of San Augustine v. Harry Wiley et al.,” for the sum of $4,035.35. In that suit, which, for brevity, will be 'hereinafter referred to as the former suit, the Eirst National Bank of San Augustine, Tes., was suing Harry Wiley and Harry Wiley & Co. on a promissory note, which the bank in that suit alleged was executed by Harry Wiley, as principal, and indorsed by Harry Wiley & Co. The note was for the amount of $2,900, was dated February 21, 1923, and bore interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum from its data, and provided for 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, etc. That suit was filed December 22, 1923. At the January term of the court following, which convened January 6, 1924,- the defendants in that suit, including appellant here, Mrs. Adams, filed their answer, interposing a general demurrer, a general denial, and specially averring that Harry Wiley & Co. was not a copartnership, as alleged by the plaintiff bank in that suit, but that, on the contrary, Harry Wiley & Co. was a corporation duly incorporated under the laws of this state. The prayer in the • answer was that the plaintiff bank take nothing by its suit, and that the defendants go hence without day.

It appears from the present record that, when the former suit was called for trial at the January term of the court, 1924, it was continued by agreement of counsel, and, in short, it was ■ continued by agreement thereafter until the convening of the court for the July term, 1925.

On July 3, 1925, the plaintiff bank in the former suit filed what is termed a first amended original petition, in which it reiterated all the allegations contained in its original petition touching the execution of the note, and added the following allegations:

“And now comes the plaintiff and for further plea in this behalf will show to the court that, if it is mistaken in its allegation that the defendant Harry Wiley & Co. was a partnership composed of Harry Wiley and Mrs. J. E. Adams, and that the said Harry Wiley & Co. was a corporation on the 21st day of February, A. D. 1923, then plaintiff says that on the last-mentioned date said corporation indorsed the-note fully described arid set out in paragraph 2 above, for a valuable consideration and thereby became liable and bound to pay plaintiff and promised plaintiff to pay it the sum of money in said note specified, together with all interest and-attorney’s fees due thereon according to the tenor and effect thereof.
“That, subsequent to the execution of -the note herein sued upon said corporation was dissolved, and that the said defendants Harry Wiley and Mrs. J. F. Adams owned all of the stock pi said corporation and on the dissolution, or whether dissolved or not, received all of the assets of said corporation, which said assets so received by the said Harry Wiley and Mrs. J.' F. Adams amounted to more than $10,-009, after the payment of all liabilities due by said corporation, save and except the debt herein sued on, and the assets of said corporation so received by said defendants Harry Wiley and Mrs. J. E. Adams were more than sufficient to pay the note herein sued upon, and by so receiving said assets said stockholders became bound and liable to pay plaintiff the sum of money in said note above specified, together with all interest and attorney’s fees due thereon.”

The prayer was the same as in the original petition.

When the former suit was tried on July 30, 1925, and judgment rendered against the defendants, as we have stated, neither appellant, Mrs. Adams,-nor her attorney, was present, but the trial was ex parte. In her petition in this suit, appellant alleged, in substance, that the reason she and her attorney were not present at the trial of the former suit was that there was an. agreement between her attorney, Hon. S. M. Adams, and the bank’s attorney, Hon. J. R. Bogard, entered- into about the time the court convened for the July term, 1925, to the effect that the former suit would not be called for trial by the attorney for the bank in the absence of appellant’s attorney, and that the bank’s attorney, Mr. Bogard, agreed and promised to have the former suit set and to notify appellant’s attorney, Mr. Adams, of such setting, but that, in disregard of such agreement, the former suit was called for trial by the attorney in the absence 'of appellant’s attorney, and judgment taken against her on an ex parte trial, which judgment would not have been secured against her had appellant and her, attorney been present at the trial, and, in short,. that the judgment against her was procured under such circumstances as amounted to a legal fraud upon her. Appellant alleged, in this connection, the facts in detail as to the agreement between her attorney and the bank’s attorney in the- formdr suit, and that it was relied upon by her attorney, and that she was expecting her attorney to notify her when to be present in San Augustine for the trial, and that she would have been present with her attorney but for the legal fraud practiced upon her. ■

As showing a meritorious defense that she could have' interposed in the former suit, appellant further alleged in this suit that it is true, as was alleged in her original answer in the former suit, that Harry Wiley & Co., at the time of the execution of the note made the basis of the former suit, was not a copart-nership, but that it was a corporation, and that she was not liable on the note to the bank, as claimed in the former suit, either as an individual, or as the member.of any *911 copartnership, or in any other respect. She alleged further that she had never consented to the execution of said note by Harry Wiley, and never knew that he had executed the same, and that, if Harry Wiley wrote the in-dorsement of the name of the corporation, Harry Wiley & Co.-, on the note, he was not authorized to do so by appellant, nor was he authorized by the corporation of Harry Wiley & Co., and that his act in attempting to bind the corporation of Harry Wiley & Co. was ultra vires that corporation, and that therefore appellant was not liable in any respect or for any reason upon the note. Appellant’s petition in this suit was duly verified by affidavit, and the prayer was that the judgment in the former suit be annulled and set aside as to her, and that she be granted a new trial, and for general relief, both legal and equitable.

Appellee, the First National Bank of San Augustine, answered this suit by a general demurrer and general denial.

When the case was called for trial, a jury was demanded, and, after the pleadings and the evidence, such as was introduced, had been heard, the trial judge peremptorily instructed a verdict in favor of the appellee, and entered judgment thereupon denying to appellant any relief as prayed. It is from that order and judgment that this appeal is prosecuted.

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.W. 909, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-first-nat-bank-of-san-augustine-texapp-1927.