Baber v. United States Light & Heat Corp.

289 S.W. 723
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 1926
DocketNo. 8895.
StatusPublished

This text of 289 S.W. 723 (Baber v. United States Light & Heat Corp.) 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
Baber v. United States Light & Heat Corp., 289 S.W. 723 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

The judgment, from which this appeal is prosecuted, was rendered in a receivership proceeding in the court be-. *724 low in which the United States Light & Heat Corporation was plaintiff, and the Houston Electrical Service Corporation was defendant. ' Appellant and a number of other parties, the Texas Company, the Eirst National Bank of Houston, and the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fé Railway Company, intervened in the receivership suit, setting up claims against the defendant in this suit. A receiver was appointed, and the property and business of the defendant administered under the direction of the court. Prior to the judgment from which this appeal is taken, all oft the property and assets of the defendant had been disposed of except the sum of $-1,000, which had been paid into the registry of the court upon the closing of the receivership and the discharge of the receiver.

The only question on this appeal is the proper distribution of this fund between the appellant and the appellees,1 the plaintiff in the original suit and the interveners before mentioned.

Appellant recovered judgment in the court below for the sum of $1,312.50, but no preference was given his claim, he being only given his pro rata share with the appellees herein in the fund in the registry of the court.

The claim upon which appellant’s judgment is based was for services performed by him in conducting the business of the flouston Electrical Service Company prior to the appointment of the receiver. The contract under which these services were performed is evidenced by the following letter, written by Dr. Van Dyke, the president of the Houston Electrical Service Company, and approved and ratified by the appellees United States Light & Heating Corporation and the First National Bank of Houston:

“It having been indicated that it is desired by the two large creditors that a responsible party be placed in charge of the finances of this corporation, and the board of directors of this corporation having authorized me to do so, > here now agree, as president of the corporation, that John H. Baber, of Houston, Tex., be and he is hereby authorized to take complete charge of all the finances of this corporation, including the supervision of the bank account, of all cash coming into the corporation, and of the paying out of such cash. The said Baber’s judgment shall be conclusive as to all matters affecting the finances of this corporation, as well as the purchasing of additional parts, equipment, merchandise, or material, or the making of payments on account of any such parts, equipment, merchandise, or material already purchased or to be purchased. He shall have control of the bank account, and' his countersignature shall be necessary to all checks issued.
“The enumeration of the specific powers above is not intended as a limitation of the general power of supervision of the finances.
“The said John H. Baber shall receive, as compensation for his services, such sum as shall be proper compensation, in the judgment of the parties at interest.”

Appellant testified as follows:

“I was in charge of the service corporation for about 19% months. Some days I woulcl devote a half day to the service of the corpo^ ration, and some days I would not do as much. A general average of the time I spent in the service of the corporation during that 10% months would be less than half a day each day. Besides this matter, I had another trusteeship that I was looking after, the Houston Motor Truck Company, and then I looked after my lumber interests a little bit; I don’t take any active part in that business, just consultation once in a while, and that is all. I am sure that I devoted as much as one-third of my time every day to this matter. As a practical proposition, I had charge of the Houston Electrical Service Corporation’s affairs during all of that time. Under the agreement, I was supposed to supervise the finances, but as a practical proposition I really ran the business in all its details; Mr. Van Dyke wouldn’t make any move at all without consulting me — buying, or anything like that, spending any money' or hiring employees. In fact, he got rid of several at my suggestion, and I reduced the liabilities during that time, I think, a little over $6,000.”

He further testified ;

“I mean to say that from the time I was appointed trustee I reduced the liabilities over $6,000; I paid the United States Light Company over $4,000. From the time you applied for the receiver until the receiver was appointed, I could not tell you whether the net assets of the company had depreciated rather than increased. I couldn’t tell you whether the creditors are getting about $4,000 less than they would have if the receiver had been appointed in June of last year.
“When I said that the trusteeship about broke even, the payments to the creditors were not taken into account. The way I paid the creditors was by converting the inventory into cash. I paid the U. S. L. a little over $4,000 and the First National Bank about $220 or $230.”

A, calculation, based on' tlie judgment decreeing distribution of funds paid over to the clerk of the court, will show that, under that judgment, appellant would receive for his services only about 16 per cent, of the value of his services, as found by the court, or about $220 for his 10 months’ work.

At the time appellant took charge of the business of the electrical company, under the contract before set out, the company was unable to meet its financial obligations. The appellees Light & Heat Corporation and First National Bank of Houston were creditors holding the largest claims and were unwilling ■ to postpone the enforcement of their claims unless the management of the business, to' the extent evidenced in the letter before set out, was placed in other hands than the officers of the company. None of the creditors of the company held any lien upon its property. Appellee Light & Heat Company held a contract with the electrical *725 company to supply it with all of the batteries which it handled in the conduct of its business. It is manifest from all the evidence that appellees entered into the agreement with the appellant and the electrical company in the hope that, by proper management and conservation of its resources, the electrical company would be able to pay its debts and continue its business.

About four months after appellant took charge of the business, the contract of ap-pellee with the electrical company was terminated by that company, and appellee then instituted the suit for a receiver which resulted in the appointment of a receiver about sis months thereafter. The electrical company terminated its contract with the Light & I-Ieat Company, because that company refused to longer furnish batteries under its contract unless it was paid in cash the price of the batteries. Other batteries could be obtained on consignment, and this was the necessary method in conducting the business of the electrical company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baber-v-united-states-light-heat-corp-texapp-1926.