Arno Co-Operative Irr. Co. v. Pugh

177 S.W. 991, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 708
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1915
DocketNo. 404.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 177 S.W. 991 (Arno Co-Operative Irr. Co. v. Pugh) 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
Arno Co-Operative Irr. Co. v. Pugh, 177 S.W. 991, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 708 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Statement of Case.

HIGGINS, J.

The Arno Co-operative Irrigation Company, Robert G. Weiner, R. S. Johnson, and F. E. Knapp) filed suit in the district court of Reeves county against Spencer B. Pugh, John B. Dandridge, Leslie A. Needham, and I. O. Carroll, No. 1190, and the said Needham, Dandridge, Pugh, and Carroll filed a certain suit against Robert G. Werner and one Earl H. Prince, No. 1345, which said suits were by agreement of the parties and order of the court consolidated and tried as one suit. After the order consolidating said causes, the parties repleaded. The Arno Co-operative Irrigation Company, W'erner, Johnson, and Knapp filed their amended petition, complaining of Pugh, Dandridge, Needham, and Carroll, and alleged that Johnson, Werner, and Knapp were the duly elected, qualified, and acting directors and officers of the plaintiff Arno Cooperative Irrigation Company, a private corporation ; that on or about April 21, 1911, Dandridge & Pugh were the owners of 7,804 shares of the capital stock of said company, being a majority of the stock of the company. On said date said company had become heavily involved and indebted in large sums of money which it and the said Dandridge & Pugh were unable to pay, and by reason thereof the said company had become insolvent, and its assets were about to be dissipated and consumed by its creditors, and on or .about said date the said Dandridge & Pugh procured one Earl H. Prince to advance such sums of money as should be necessary to redeem the said properties of the said Arno Co-operative Irrigation Company from its creditors, and in consideration therefor transferred and assigned to said Prince the said 7,804 shares of the stock of said irrigation company under an agreement that a holding company for said 7,804 shares should be formed, and the said stock in the holding company issued to said Prince and Dandridge & Pugh in the proportion of two-fifths to Dandridge & Pugh and three-fifths to Prince, said Prince to have management and control of both said companies, to the end that he might work said properties out of debt, and at the same time the said Dandridge & Pugh transferred to the said Prince the certificate of stock in said Amo Company and all right, title, and interest therein, and turned over and delivered to the said Prince the stock book, record books, minute book, seal, and other properties of said company. The petition further alleges that, in pursuance of said agreement, Prince advanced large sums of money for the purpose of paying off the indebtedness of said irrigation company in order that it might continue its business and the exercise of its franchise; that on May 6, 1911, at a meeting of the stockholders of said irrigation company, Werner and Prince, together with J-. W. Parker, were elected as directors of the company, at which meeting Dandridge and Pugh were present and participated and acquiesced in said proceedings; that said officers continued in office until on or about February 20, 1913, when at another meeting of the stockholders Johnson, Werner, and Knapp were elected as the officers of said corporation; that Prince proceeded to organize said holding company, but before said properties could be transferred thereto certain creditors of Dandridge & Pugh instituted bankruptcy proceedings against them, and enjoined the said Prince from transferring said properties to said holding company as contemplated by said agreement; that thereafter Prince, with the consent of Dandridge & Pugh and the permission of said bankruptcy court, transferred said properties to the plaintiff Robert G. Wemer, who assumed the obligations of said Prince under said contract, subject to the injunction issued in said bankruptcy proceedings; that thereafter Dandridge & Pugh filed a suit in the superior court of Cook county, Ill., against the said Robert G. Werner, and caused an injunction to be issued restraining him from proceeding to transfer said properties to the holding company, and .thereafter the said Dandridge & Pugh continuously prevented by suits, injunction, and otherwise the carrying out of said agreement to transfer said properties to the contemplated holding company; that thereafter, and on or about December 12, 1912, after the said Prince and said Werner had paid off the debts of said irrigation company and had repaired its irrigation system, spending large sums of money therein, Dandridge, Pugh, Carroll, and Needham, for the purpose of depriving and defrauding Werner of the benefits of said agreement and for the purpose of obtaining the benefits of *993 said advancements, forcibly entered upon and took possession of all the physical properties of the said Amo Co-operative Irrigation Company, which are described in said petition, pretending to act as officers of said company, and caused a fictitious seal of said company to be made, and caused fraudulent minute books and stock books of said company to be made and executed which they were using, and were pretending to act as officers of the said Arno Company, without right; that Johnson, "Werner, and Knapp, the real officers of said company, by said acts of appellees, were deprived of the possession of said properties, and the Arno Company was deprived of its property and the use and control thereof; that the acts of the appellees' resulted in preventing Werner from carrying out and performing the conditions of said agreement between Prince and Dandridge & Pugh, and prevented him from realizing upon the assets of said company the moneys advanced by him and three-fifths, of the profits thereof as represented by stock in said contemplated holding company.

The prayer of said petition reads;

“That upo-n final hearing hereof the plaintiff Arno Co-operative Irrigation Company recover of and from the defendants the title and possession of all and singular the above-described properties, and that plaintiff Amo Co-operative Irrigation Company have its writ of possession for said property; that the said defendants and each of them he restrained from pretending to act for or on behalf of said company, and from using a seal or purported seal of said corporation, and from in any manner interfering with plaintiffs in the management and control of the said company, or entering upon and. interfering with the use and possession of any of its said property, and from attempting to vote or exercise control over the said 7,804 shares of stock as aforesaid, and for such other relief, general and special, to which plaintiffs may be entitled and they will ever pray.”

Dandridge, Pugh, Needham, and Carroll answered, denying that Johnson, Werner, and Knapp were the officers of the Arno Company; admitted use of the seal and minute book of the Arno Company, and claimed to be its duly constituted and acting officers ; admitted and alleged that they were in possession of the irrigation company’s system and operating same, and denied the appellants’ right to recover possession of said system; alleged that they were in possession and operating said system under and pursuant to a contract theretofore, on January 8, 1910, entered into by and between said Arno Company and said Dandridge & Pugh, whereby Dandridge & Pugh, in consideration of the company’s agreement to issue to them certain water rights under said system, agreed to maintain said system free from debt until the happenings of a certain event, viz., the event named therein, which should entitle the water right owners to the management of said system, in performance of which contract Dandridge & Pugh had expended, in improving, maintaining, and operating said company’s system, in excess of $40,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 S.W. 991, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arno-co-operative-irr-co-v-pugh-texapp-1915.