Boston & Texas Corp. v. Guarantee Life Ins. Co.

233 S.W. 1022, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 965
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1921
DocketNo. 7981.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 233 S.W. 1022 (Boston & Texas Corp. v. Guarantee Life Ins. 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
Boston & Texas Corp. v. Guarantee Life Ins. Co., 233 S.W. 1022, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 965 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

In this cause judgment was rendered below in favor of appellee Farmers’ Life Insurance Company against appellants Boston & Texas Corporation, A. W. Seelig-son as its receiver, and S. A. Hopkins individually, for $110,288.98 as the aggregate sum found to be due the insurance company at that time as the owner and holder of 13 promissory notes for the sum of $5,000 each, dated January 13, 1913, due January 13, 1918, executed by the Boston & Texas Corporation, indorsed by S. A. Hopkins, and payable to the Continental Trust Company of Houston, Tex., together with the foreclosure of a deed of trust lien upon 7,000 acres of land in Mc-Mullen county, Tex., given by the corporation at the time of executing the notes as security for their payment; the judgment being certified for observance to the Seventy-Third district court of Bexar county, in which court the receivership of appellant corporation was pending. ,

The Boston & Texas Corporation, and See-ligson as its receiver, alone appeal, making but three main contentions in this court:

(1) That the notes and deed of trust sued on, having been given in consideration of money borrowed for the express and agreed purpose of enabling the corporation to extend the Artesian Belt Railroad from Christine to Crowther in McMullen county, Tex., were ultra vires, void, and not binding upon appellants.

(2) That no recovery upon the instruments declared upon, or otherwise, was authorized upon any theory of benefits had and received by the corporation, because none were either properly plead or proven.

(3) That, apart from the question of ultra vires, the notes and deed of trust were void because the lending of the money to the corporation, which was a foreign oil company, for the express purpose and design of having it construct and acquire a railroad in Texas, was illegal under Revised Statutes, art. 6406.

It is accordingly thought that a discussion of the grounds upon which the appeal is disposed of may appropriately be confined to the issues thus advanced.

.The appellee insurance company answered these several defenses with two definite but *1023 independent theories, offering hoth pleading and proof in support thereof:

(1) That the loan and the expenditures pursuant thereto were not only for authorized corporate purposes, but in fact redounded to the corporate benefit.

(2) That the corporation at all material times was a “one-man corporation,” that is, that S. A. Hopkins owned and controlled all its stock at the time the notes and deed of trust were given on January 13, 1913, and also on November 30, 1914, when a written ratification and novation of the original transaction had been executed; that he was not only a joint maker with the corporation of all these obligations on both the dates mentioned, but in reality was then and at all other material times had been the substance of the organization itself; that it was a mere vehicle or form through and under which he carried on his operations, and as a consequence both he and it were estopped from setting up ultra vires as a defense, and neither through such claim could escape liability for the debt declared upon.

[1] The cause was tried before the court without a jury, and no conclusions of fact or law were filed; it must therefore in this court be assumed that every material fact upon which there was evidence was found in such way as to support the judgment rendered.

The deference thus due the trial court’s action, in view of the answering issue of es-toppel so raised in both pleading and proof by the appellee, in the opinion of this court makes of primal importance in determining these questions appellants present, the matter of whether or not Hopkins did own and control all the corporation’s stock at the time claimed upon the one hand and denied upon the other, and, if he did, what effect that situation — regarded as a fact — had upon the issue of liability for the obligations in suit. Under the presumption referred to, that he did so own the stock must here be conclusively assumed to have been the finding of the lower court, and as a conseqence there remains in that connection for this court but a single inquiry: Was the evidence sufficient to support such a finding?

[2] After a most painstaking examination of the statement of facts, we conclude that it was. There was, it is true, a sharp conflict in the testimony about the matter, but nothing more, in our opinion, than the trial court had the authority to resolve; in other words, there is neither a total lack of evidence of such ownership nor such a weight and preponderance against it as to make a finding that it existed clearly wrong.

The record of the evidence bearing upon the question is one of much length, and an attempt to even adequately summarize its various features here would probably too much extend this statement. It is deemed sufficient to say that on the date the papers declared upon were originally executed, January 13, 1913, the corporation’s total capital stock was $300,000; of this Hopkins then held in his own name a certificate for $164,-881, representing to the trust company’s officers in procuring the loan, however, that he then owned all the stock both of that cor-portation and of the Artesian Belt Railroad as well; the original contract for the loan under recitation that the purpose of it* was to enable the parties receiving it, and especially S. A. Hopkins, to extend the railroad from Christine to Crowther, was made by Hopkins acting for himself and for the corporation; the resolution of its board of directors authorizing the contracting of the loan stated that the arrangement had been made through Mr. Hopkins, and subsequently he signed its name to a written agreement pro? viding for the use of $10,327.39 of the money so borrowed to pay interest on the agreement of purchase he had prior to May 1, 1912, made for its benefit of the stock of the Ar-tesian Belt Railroad.

On November 30, 1914, in consideration of the then holders’ agreement to accept some overdue interest thereon, Hopkins and the corporation executed a written novation and extension of the notes sued on, the principle having been declared due for failure to pay interest installments thereon, in which they acknowledged the justness of their obligations thereunder, including the continuing validity of the deed of trust lien securing them, and repledged themselves to pay them according to their.tenor and effect.

On March 2, 1914, there had been issued to Hopkins, in addition to the $164,881 he already held, a certificate for $135,112 of the remainder of $135,119 of the stock, so that on the date of this extension and novation agreement he held in his own name all but seven shares of the total capital stock of $300,000. These seven shares appear to have been then, as well as on the date the notes were originally given, standing in the names of seven persons whom Hopkins claimed to be directors in the corporation, one share to each; but the record bristles with testimony to the effect that these persons were on botli the dates referred to, and at all other times had been, mere dummies for Hopkins, nominally holding directorships but in reality only recording his will and doing his bidding.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 S.W. 1022, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-texas-corp-v-guarantee-life-ins-co-texapp-1921.