Barber v. Keeling

204 S.W. 139, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 571
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 1918
DocketNo. 6054.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 139 (Barber v. Keeling) 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
Barber v. Keeling, 204 S.W. 139, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 571 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Appellee sued F. A. Barber, Mabel Barber, his wife, A. H. Murrie, and W. P. Goodloe and his wife, Julia Goodloe, individually and as independent executor of the estate of Emma Keeling, deceased, seeking to rescind a deed, made by him to Murrie, conveying title to lot No. 9, block 19, new city block No. 2331, west of San Pedro creek, in the city of San Antonio, and in the alternative to recover damages in the sum of $2,500. It was alleged that in 1915 appellee was the owner of the land mentioned, and was induced by the fraudulent representations of F. A. Barber as to the value of certain shares of stock owned by the latter and his wife, Mabel Barber, in a certain bank, to convey said land to A. H. Murrie, to be held for Barber, in exchange for said shares of bank stock, which were utterly worthless, and known to Barber and his wife to be without value. It was alleged that Barber was a director in the Federal Bank Trust Company, of San Antonio, and was an intimate friend of appellee, in whose representations he had full confidence, and that he represented to appellee that the shares were worth their par value of $100 per share. It was also alleged that Murrie was a party to and assisted in perpetrating the fraud, and that Mabel Barber knew of the fraud of her husband and agent, and participated in it. A conspiracy to defraud appellee was alleged to exist, and that the Goodloes participated therein. The cause was tried without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of the Goodloes, as innocent purchasers of the land, and in favor of appellee, individually and as independent executor of the estate of Emma Keeling, deceased, for $1,800, as against F. A. Barber, Mabel Barber, and A. H. Murrie. No one complains of the judgment in favor of the Goodloes.

In the fall of 1915, F. A. Barber, who was a friend of appellee, in whom he reposed full confidence, approached appellee upon the subject of purchasing certain bank shares, and represented to appellee that he and his wife, Mabel Barber, owned 18 shares of stock in the Federal Bank Trust Company of San Antonio, which were worth their full par value of $100 a share, which stock he would trade to appellee for the lot owned by him. He represented that the shares were very *Page 140 valuable and would soon double in value. He said to appellee:

"I am interested in you, and I am interested in the bank down here, and we can just make good money out of that, and I am getting this line-up, and I am going to be a rich man after a while. If you want to, I will put you down on the ground floor, and get some stock in that, and in a few years you will be on `easy street,' because this stock is going to double in a little while, and will be five or six times the value that you pay for it. I want you to keep this quiet, because, if the banks get onto this, they will knock it, and perhaps break up the whole deal. Mr. Chambers is president of that bank, and he is a very shrewd, fine banker and business man and he is dealing now, negotiating to get perhaps about $15,000,000 war money, and he has just about got everything closed, and, of course, after he gets it closed up, then you can't get any stock, because it will be worth too much; but I have seen all the papers down there, as director In the bank, and I am in a position to know the ins and outs of the bank, what is going on, and I am just telling you this as a friend, and giving you an opportunity of getting some of this stock, and, if you want it, I will arrange for you to have some of the stock."

Appellee was so stirred by Barber's glowing account of the bank that he became eager to be "put down on the ground floor," and, not having any money, he traded his home, of the value of more than $1,800, to Barber for 18 shares of stock in the newly organized marvelous bank, that was on the very eve of getting "$15,000,000 of war money." The bank was organized and opened on September 14, 1915, and failed on February 22, 1916, having had a precarious existence of about five months. F. A. Barber knew, when he traded the stock for appellee's home, that the bank had never been solvent, and that the shares were worthless. The shares at no time had any value after the bank opened. Barber owned 1 share in the bank, that he traded to appellee; his wife owned the other 17 shares. Being a director, he must have known that more than $12,500 worth of shares had been sold, and, knowing that only that amount was in the bank when it opened for business, he must have known that some disposition had been made of the rest of the money.

The first, second, and third assignments of error are overruled. The facts were sufficient to show that the bonds were valueless when sold to appellee, and that F. A. Barber knew it. Barber was a director of the bank, claimed to know all about its affairs, and should have known that the shares were not worth their face value, when he gave such glowing accounts of them and predicted a wonderful rise in value, which would enrich him and his close friend. He knew how affairs of the bank were being conducted, because he was "in a position to know the ins and outs of the bank." He had no right to paint such roseate pictures of the present and future of the shares in the bank if he was ignorant of their value, for false representations will render a person liable, though innocently made, when the party making them had full opportunity to know their falsity. Davis v. Driscoll, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 14, 54 S.W. 43; Jesse French Co. v. Nolan, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 395, 85 S.W. 821; Morrison v. Adoue,76 Tex. 256, 13 S.W. 166. If, as the evidence shows, appellee believed the representations of F. A. Barber, the effect the representation would not be impaired by any evidence tending to show that appellee could, by an investigation, have ascertained the falsity of the representations. He had the right to rely absolutely on the representations of his friend, who was a director, and stated that he was fully acquainted with all the affairs of the bank, and moved in the inner circle of its business secrets. Wright v. Mort. Co., 42 S.W. 789; Loper v. Robinson, 54 Tex. 510 . Barber claimed to have, and did have as director, special knowledge of the value of the shares of bank stock, and he would be liable if the representations made by him were relied on by appellee and were false, although no confidential relations existed. The case of Baugh v. Houston,193 S.W. 242, decided by this court, so holds, although it is cited by appellant to sustain a contrary doctrine.

There is no merit in the fourth and fifth assignments of error. It does not matter whether F. A. Barber had 1 or 5 shares in the bank. He swore at one time that he had 1 or 5 shares, and at another that he had 1, and, if he was so uncertain about what he owned, it could not be expected that the trial judge could find how many shares he had, as he was the only witness who testified as to the number he owned. It is a matter of no importance anyway, for, if Barber and wife were both guilty of fraud, both were liable for the whole of the damages. The evidence fails to show that Mrs. Barber made any false representations, or that she knew that her husband, as her agent, had made such representations, and she is not liable under the facts, unless she is made so by being bound by the representations of her agent, and by an acceptance of the money arising from the perpetration of the fraud.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 139, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-v-keeling-texapp-1918.