Bank of Garvin v. Freeman

181 S.W. 187, 107 Tex. 523, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 186
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1915
DocketNo. 2426.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 181 S.W. 187 (Bank of Garvin v. Freeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Garvin v. Freeman, 181 S.W. 187, 107 Tex. 523, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 186 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice YAHTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The suit was by the Bank of Garvin against P. R. Fr.eeman, E. D. Steger, and the Freeman-Steger Lumber Company, to recover, a balance due on a $5,000 note which had been executed by the lumber company and endorsed by B. D. Steger, and which was payable to the Bank of Garvin. In its petition the bank alleged that though the note was-originally the obligation of the Freeman-Steger Lumber Company and E. D. Steger, the said P. R. Freeman, appellant below, became primarily liable to it for the payment thereof in that he voluntarily assumed its payment in a contract made between him and the Freeman-Steger Lumber Company and E. D. Steger. To- present the issues more clearly, we have extracted the following portion of the statement of the case-made by the honorable Court of Civil Appeals:

*527 “The Freeman-Steger Lumber Company was a corporation under the laws of Oklahoma. Half of its capital stock, it seems, was owned by ■appellant and parties he represented. The other half was owned by E. D. Steger, Gus Steger, and others. The company was indebted in sums aggregating about $30,000, which it could not pay. Among the debts it owed was one for $10,343.92 evidenced by its promissory note dated December 19, 1907, payable six months after its date to the order of the Bank of Garvin. E. D. Steger as an endorser on this note was liable to its owner for its payment. In March, 1908, the company borrowed of appellant the sum of $30,000, and to secure the repayment of the loan executed and delivered to him a mortgage on the property it owned. About the same time Gus Steger delivered to appellant capital stock of the company of the face value of $1000. April 21, 1909, when there was a balance of $5000 due and unpaid on the note for $10,343.92 above mentioned, same was canceled, and in lieu of it the lumber company made, and said E. D. Steger endorsed, a new note for said balance, payable, as the other one was, to the order of said Bank of Garvin. The suit was by said bank against the lumber company, E. D. Steger and appellant, to recover a balance due on the $5000 note. The verdict rvas in favor of the bank against the other parties for $3404, and in favor of E. D. Steger against appellant for a like sum. The judgment was ■in accordance with the verdict—except that it was against appellant in faA'or of said Ed D. Steger for only so much as he might pay of the judgment against him in favor of the bank.

“The theory upon which the recovery against appellant was had was that he had promised said E. D. Steger out of his oavu money to pay the $10,343.92 debt due by the lumber company to the bank. The consideration relied upon to support the promise was that E. D. Steger and associates, in compliance Avith an agreement that they would do so if appellant would pay said debt‘and others the lumber company owed, had assigned to appellant enough of the capital stock of the company to give him control of it and had turned over to him the management of its affairs, and further, that appellant afterwards, to induce said E. D. Steger to endorse the note sued on, representing a part of said debt, had promised him to pay it.

“The verdict involved a finding by the jury that appellant promised E. D. Steger to pay the debt evidenced by the note sued on out of his own means. The sufficiency of the testimony to support such a finding is not questioned in the assignments.

“A contention made here by appellant is that, if he promised E. D. Steger to pay said debt with his own means, his promise was a verbal one to pay the debt of another, and therefore within the statute of frauds. Another contention he makes is that, if he promised said E. D. Steger to pay the debt out of his own means, his promise was to indemnify said E. D. Steger against his liability as an endorser on the note, and therefore was not a promise the bank could sue on.

“It appeared from the testimony that the lumber company owned *528 several sawmills, and that its business was to manufacture and sell lumber; that it was indebted to various persons in various sums, which it could not pay; that it had to pay its debts or cease to carry on its business; that it had endeavored to borrow money with which to pay its debts, and failed; that its stockholders met to discuss its condition, and after inquiry then made estimated that its debts aggregated about the sum of $30,000; that as a result of the conference of its stockholders, appellant, owning or controlling half its capital stock, agreed with E. D. Steger, Gus Steger and others, together owning the other half of said stock, to lend the company $30,000 with which to pay its debts, if the company would secure the repayment thereof to,, him by a mortgage on its property, and if said Stegers and their associates would transfer to him enough of the capital stock of the company owned by them to give him a majority of said stock and the control of its affairs; that in accordance with the agreement appellant loaned the company $30,000, the company executed and delivered to him a mortgage on its property to secure the repayment of the loan, said Gus Steger transferred to appellant capital stock of the company of the face value of $1000, and he assumed the exclusive management and control of the company’s affairs; and that, with the money he had loaned the company, and other property it owned, appellant paid debts of the company, improved its mill property, and paid expenses incurred in carrying on its business.”

The trial was by a jury which rendered a verdict in favor of the bank and against Freeman, Steger and the lumber company for the sum of $3404, as shown above. Judgment was in accordance therewith, except that E. D.' Steger was given a judgment against Freeman for so much as he might pay on said judgment in accordance with the plea contained in his cross-action.

At the trial the court submitted to the jury the plaintiff’s theory of his right to recover, based upon the allegation that the defendant in error, Freeman, had, for a valuable consideration, contracted with the lumber company, and with E. D. Steger, to assume the payment- of the note sued upon, and the verdict of the jury in favor of the Bank' of Garvin, plaintiff in error, was, in effect, a finding as true, the allegations made by the bank upon which a recovery was sought and secured by it. There was no assignment of error made by the defendant in error, Freeman, either in the trial court or on appeal which challenged the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain this finding of the jury; neither was the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain this finding raised by Freeman in his motion for a new trial.

The only defenses pleaded in the answer of the defendant in error, Freeman, were a plea of privilege, alleging his residence to be in Dallas County, and not in Fannin, and the one alleged in his special exception to the effect that the alleged promise on his part to pay the note was a promise to answer for the debt of another, and not being in writing, could not be sustained under the statute of frauds.

On appeal to the honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the Sixth *529

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W. 187, 107 Tex. 523, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-garvin-v-freeman-tex-1915.