Allen v. Hutcheson

121 S.W. 1141, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 71, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 13, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 121 S.W. 1141 (Allen v. Hutcheson) 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
Allen v. Hutcheson, 121 S.W. 1141, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 71, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 23 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

On August 15, 1903, the J. J. Tobin 011 Company was incorporated under the laws of this State, L. E. Daniell, J. J. Tobin, M. M. Jackson, Stephen Jackson and M. A. Eobertson being the original incorporators, and who were declared in the articles of incorporation to be the directors for the first year.

The powers of the corporation, as declared in its charter, were “For the establishment of an oil company for the purpose of producing, selling, and marketing petroleum, with authority to contract for the lease and purchase of the right to prospect for, develop and use coal and other minerals and petroleum; also the right to erect, build and own all necessary oil tanks, cars and pipes necessary for the operation of the business of said association.” The charter also provided that the place of business of the association should be in the town of Sour Lake, Hardin County, Texas, and that it should be its principal office; that its business should be transacted by five directors, who should be elected by the stockholders annually, on the first Tuesday in July; and that its capital stock should be $40,000, to be divided into 400 shares of $100 each.

After its organization, one hundred shares of the capital stock, being one-half of the stock issued, became involved in litigation. In the suit A. C. Allen was plaintiff, and the Oil Company, L. E. Daniell and others, among whom was J. C. Hutcheson, were defendants or adverse parties. The cause just referred to was styled A. C. Allen v. L. E. Daniell et al. was numbered 3439, and brought in the sixty-first Judicial District.

On May 7, 1904, an agreed judgment was entered in that suit, the substance of which is as follows: A. C. Allen recovered against all defendants, all interveners and parties to the suit the entire 100 shares of stock sued for (the certificates for the stock being specifically described in the judgment), charged with certain trusts impressed upon the stock by the judgment or decree, which are as follows: $15,450 for the benefit of A. C. Allen; $4,000 for the benefit of the First Fational Bank of Sour Lake, Texas; $7,000 for the benefit of Geo. W. Armstrong, and $10:750 for the benefit of J. C. Hutcheson.

The judgment further orders that the Oil Company shall issue certificates for said 100 shares of stock to A. C, Allen in such way as *75 he may request or direct; that the Oil Company shall pay Allen all dividends that have theretofore accrued on said 100 shares of stock, and dividends that may thereafter accure thereon; that the money in the registry of the court .of the 55th Judicial District and in the First National Bank of Houston, Texas, be prorated among Allen, the First National Bank of Sour Lake, Geo. W. Armstrong and J. C. Hutcheson, according to the several amounts, allowed them by the decree; that all dividends and earnings which might thereafter accrue upon the 100 shares of stock should be prorated among A. C. Allen, the First National Bank of Sour Lake, Geo. W. Armstrong and J. C. Hutcheson, proportionate to their several amounts until they shall have been fully paid and discharged, and that then the title of said 100 shares of stock should become absolute in A. C. Allen and not before; that the Oil Company should at once put on the market and dispose of the oil then on hand and deposit the money realized therefrom applicable to said 100 shares of stock affected by the decree, in court for distribution as ordered.

At the time the agreed judgment was entered the company had four wells on its ten-acre tract at Sour Lake, one of which at that time was not productive and had been abandoned prior to that time; one other produced very little and after that time it did not pay to operate it; the other two produced large quantities of oil, and these conditions prevailed on the first of January following. The wells were operated under lease at that time, and the Company received two-thirds of the gross production, amounting to about $5,000 per month free of any expense. There were no outstanding debts against the Company at that time. Prior to the date of the agreed decree, the Tobin Oil Company was, by an order of the court, required to pay into the registry of the court, or into the First National Bank, the dividends due on the 100 shares of stock in controversy, which amounted to the sum of $16,039.15. The Company obeyed the order by depositing that amount in said bank, and that money was on hand when the agreed judgment referred to was entered. There seems to have been no oil on hand at that time.

On December 19, 1904, the books of the Oil Company showed a balance to its credit of $18,355.04, out of which a dividend of $11,550 was declared, one-half of which was payable to A. C. Allen on the 100 shares of stock held by him under the trust impressed by the decree aforementioned.. At its close of business, on January 28, 1905, the Tobin Oil Company had on hand $8,649.93, and there was also then due it from the Guffy Company for oil about $200.

The $16,039.15, placed in the bank under the direction of the court, and one-half of the dividend of $11,550 declared by the Company was paid to Allen and prorated and distributed by him among the beneficiaries in accordance with the decree, J. C. Hutcheson receiving his pro rata share thereof. This was all the money he ever received from Allen or any one else upon the 100 shares of stock held by him under the decree charged with the trust thereby impressed thereon.

L. F. Benckenstein acted as the president of the J. J. Tobin Oil Company on November T, 1904, claiming to have been elected on August 13, of that year. At the same time T. H. Bass claims^ to have *76 been elected secretary and treasurer of the Company and held said position from then until the suit was brought.

When this suit was instituted L. F. Benckenstein, Mally Eastham, T. H. Bass, A. C. Allen and John Lovejoy were acting as the directors of the Oil Company. Benckenstein and Eastham claim to have been elected members of the board of directors of the Company on August 1, 1904, and T. H. Bass on August 19, 1904, and A. C. Allen and John Lovejoy on January 28, 1905. But it appears from the minutes of the proceedings on those dates that each of them was elected by the board of directors instead of by the stockholders of the Company as provided bjr its charter. On the same day 99 of the shares of the stock covered by the decree above referred to were issued to A. C. Allen and the other share to John Lovejoy and registered on the books of the company in their names.

On January 28, 1905, the sum of $1,250 apiece was voted to L. F. Benckenstein and T. H. Bass for salaries from August to February past, also resolutions were passed to buy one-tenth of an acre of land at Humble and ten acres near Dayton and to pay therefor $2,500. All these resolutions were passed by the votes of Benckenstein, Bass and Lovejoy, though Allen was present, but not voting. Both Lovejoy and Allen were owners in common with S. Brown of the land so purchased, Allen having bought the land subsequent to May 7, 1904, for a much less price than it was sold to the Tobin Oil Company and afterwards made Brown a deed to it. The money thus voted to Benckenstein and Bass by themselves was received by them, and the price of the land by Brown and his co-owners.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 1141, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 71, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-hutcheson-texapp-1909.