Bank of Washington v. San Benito & R. G. v. Ry. Co.

293 S.W. 599
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 1927
DocketNo. 7711.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 293 S.W. 599 (Bank of Washington v. San Benito & R. G. v. Ry. Co.) 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
Bank of Washington v. San Benito & R. G. v. Ry. Co., 293 S.W. 599 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

Appellant sued appellees on an alleged debt of $7,383.60, with- legal interest from June 1,1913 ; said sum being the amount of an estimate for the month of May, 1913, issued by the said railway company for work and material furnished by the Hidalgo Construction Company for the construction and completion of its lines of railroad in' Cámeron and Hidalgo counties, Texas.

Appellant alleged that on May 20, 1913, upon certain representations made by A. T. Perkins, appellee, it loaned $10,000 to the Hidal-go Construction Company, taking its promissory note therefor, secured by a pledge of the May, 1913, estimate aforesaid, also the first money earned thereafter, if said May estimate should be insufficient to pay said note; that on the same date the Hidalgo Construction Company gave it an assignment in writing of said estimate and moneys later to be earned as aforesaid; that about June 13,1913, said railway company duly issued said estimate for the month of May, 1913, amounting to $7,383.60, which estimate was immediately turned over by the Hidalgo Construction Company to appellant’s agent, William R. Compton Bond 8s Mortgage Company, of St. Louis, Mo., together' with a draft for said sum drawn' by it in favor of said agent on R. R. Tompkins of St. Louis, Mo., the disbursing officer and agent for appellees; that said estimate-has never been paid in whole or in part. And appellant alleged that it had obtained judgment on said note against the makers and indorsers thereof, one of whom has since been adjudged a bankrupt and discharged, and the others are dissolved corporations ; that said judgment is uncollectable; and that the collections and other collateral leave unpaid on said note and uncollectable a sum in excess of said estimate and interest, of which estimate appellant is now full owner by purchase at pledgee’s sale.

Appellant further alleged that the work in question was done under a contract between Hidalgo Construction Company and A. T. Perkins, “trustee,” dated July 1, 1912, by which said company undertook to construct and complete said lines of railroad, and A. T. Perkins agreed to pay it on monthly estimates the actual cost of the work, plus a bonus of *600 $500 per mile; that this contract was made pursuant to an agreement between said railway company and A. T. Perkins, whereby all the capital stock and bonds of said railway company and all bonuses obtained from landowners were to be turned over to said Perkins, who was also to receive a separate fee or bonus, and who undertook to construct and complete said lines of railroad, and that the loan to said Hidalgo Construction Company was induced by representations made by said A. T. Perkins to appellant’s said agent to the effect that the May, 1913, estimate would be $9,000 or more, and that he knew no reason-why same should not be paid in due course.

Appellees answered separately.

The debt sued on arose from a contract between the Hidalgo Construction Company and A. T. Perkins, trustee, which contract was introduced in evidence, together with two other contracts of the same date, between A. T. Perkins, trustee, and' the San Benito & Rio Grande Railway Company, and between A. T. Perkins, trustee, and the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company. The actual practice under the contract between Mr. Perkins, as trustee, and the Hidalgo Construction Company, was that at the end of each month an estimate of the costs of the work would be made out, properly certified, and forwarded with the draft on R. R. Tompkins. Mr. Tompkins was secretary to Mr. A. T. Perkins, and he acted as fiscal agent for the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company in paying these drafts. After these estimates were approved by Mr. Perkins, they were paid by the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Cbm-pany.

Frequently the Hidalgo Construction Company pledged these estimates in advance in order to obtain funds with which to operate, and for a long time prior to May, 1913, these estimates had been pledged to Wm. R. Compton Bond & Mortgage Company, of St. Louis, or to clients of that company. Before the loan was made on the estimate involved in this suit, Mr. Fred Emert, of Wm. R. Compton Company, inquired of Mr. Perkins with reference to the amount of the estimate for the month of May, 1913, and whether there ■was any reason that it would not be paid as usual, to which Mr. Perkins replied that there was no reason he knew of that it would not be paid promptly.

-On May 20,1913, the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company went into the hands' of a receiver, and work was stopped on the San Benito & Rio Grande Valley Railway Company. Mr. Perkins held up the approval of the May, 1913, estimate, and, about the end of June, went to San Benito,-Tex., checked up the books of the Hidalgo Construction Company, and ascertained that he had already paid the Hidalgo Construction Cbmpany some $10,000, which had been included in previous estimates for labor and material, for which the Hidalgo Construction Company had not paid, and he declined approval and payment of the May, 1913, estimate.

On July 1, 1912, A. T. Perkins entered into three contracts in writing, one with the San Benito & Rio Grande Valley Railway Company, one with the Hidalgo Construction Company, and one with the St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Company. In all of these contracts he signed, “A. T. Perkins, trustee,” and at the opening of each contract he inserted after his name: “Acting solely as trustee and hereinafter called trustee.” All of these contracts related to the completion of certain lines of railroad for the San Benito & Rio Grande Valley Railway Company, already partly built under an earlier contract with S. A. Robertson, and the construction of new lines of railroad for the San Benito & Rio Grande Valley Railway Company,

By his contract with the San Benito & Rio Grande Valley Railway Company, Mr. Perkins was to construct and complete the construction of said lines of railway, for which he was to get all of the first mortgage bonds issued by that company, same to be issued to the full extent authorized by law, and also all of its capital stock issued in excess of $50,-000 par value, no other stock or bonds meanwhile to be issued by said railway company. In addition to this he had a side agreement with said railway company whereby he was to be paid a fee or bonus “for handling this matter on behalf of the San Benito ’ & Rio Grande Valley Railway Company, and that company never paid it.”

In the contract between A. T. Perkins and the St: Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company, Mr. Perkins sold and agreed to transfer all of said first mortgage bonds and capital stock of the San Benito & Rio Grande Valley Railway Company to the 'St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company, and “in consideration of the sale and transfer” of same the latter company agreed to advance to Mr. Perkins the moneys necessary to enable him to complete the construction of said lines of railroad as provided in the construction contract between him and the San Benito & Rio Grande Valley Railway Company, not to exceed the total cost to Mr. Perkins of the work, such advances to be made monthly.

In the contract between A. T. Perkins and Hidalgo Construction Company, the construction company agreed to construct and complete said lines of railroad, and Mr. Perkins was to 'pay it therefor the actual cost to it, plus a bonus of $500 per mile. Furthermore, said company and S. A.

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Bluebook (online)
293 S.W. 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-washington-v-san-benito-r-g-v-ry-co-texapp-1927.