Bounds v. Stephenson

187 S.W. 1031, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 833
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1916
DocketNo. 7441.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 187 S.W. 1031 (Bounds v. Stephenson) 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
Bounds v. Stephenson, 187 S.W. 1031, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 833 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

RAINEY, C. J.

We take from appellants’ brief the statement of the case, as follows:

Appellants for themselves, other stockholders similarly situated, and for the General Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company, sued John B. Stephenson, James A. Stephenson, George W. Riddle, A. Ragland, T. A. Smith, Frank Ezell, J. H. Christler, and the General Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company, and alleged, in substance: That appellants are stockholders of the General Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company, which company was incorporated for the purpose, of transacting all kinds of surety, casualty, and liability insurance. All defendants, except James A. Stephenson and J. II. Christler, were alleged to be directors, John B. Stephenson was alleged to be president, and T. A. Smith secretary, of said company. It was alleged that John B. Stephenson had dominated the company since its organization; that by virtue of agreements and conspiracies between John B. Stephenson, James A. Stephenson, J. H. Christler, George W. Riddle, A. Rag-land, Harry L. Seay, and others, John B. Stephenson had retained himself in the offices of director and president of the company, and had voted to pay himself large sums of money in the way of salaries; that John B. Stephenson and his brother, James A. Stephenson, and their partner, J. II. Christler, acquired in their effort to control the company certain shares of the company’s stock, and in order to sell said stock lent to the purchasers and prospective purchasers thereof the company’s money, at 6 per cent, per annum, with which to pay therefor, when *1032 the company could have lent its money at 8 and 10 per cent.; that said. John B. Stephenson paid large sums of money to Locke & Locke, and other attorneys, unlawfully and improperly, the company at the time having a general attorney, who was employed and paid for the purpose of attending to its iegal affairs; that in order to acquire and hold control of the company John B. Stephenson sent out letters, signed by the General Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company, asking stockholders for proxies, authorizing him, or some of his copartners, or dummy directors, to vote for such shareholders; that said campaigns for proxies were conducted at the expense of the company; that said John B. Stephenson, J. H. Christler, and other officers, as directors of the company, voted themselves salaries; that John B. Stephenson and his copartners made a contract with J. H. Christler to elect him a salaried officer of the company, and pay him a salary, in consideration for his purchase of stock from a copartnership composed of John B. Stephenson, J. A. Stephenson, and others, and that this contract was carried into effect, and a salary was paid to J. H. Christler, although said Christler was wholly incompetent and unfit to discharge the duties of the office; that said John B. Stephenson, as president of the company, obligated the company on a bond in the penal sum of $30,000, conditioned that James A. Stephenson, T. H. Stephenson, and D. D. Crockett would pay a note executed to W. C. Tyrrell, and that said T. H. Stephenson and D. D. Crockett would sell a certain number of shares of the stock of the Republic Trust Company at a certain price per share; that James A. Stephenson, T. H. Stephenson, and John B. Stephenson are brothers; that a judgment was obtained by W. C. Tyrrell against the company on said bond in the sum of approximately' $24,000, and a judgment by the company over against James A. Stephenson; that the company was compelled to pay the judgment to Tyrrell and borrow the money for said purpose, but that John B. Stephenson had failed and refused to collect the judgment from his brother, James A. Stephenson, although the plaintiffs, as stockholders, demanded that such judgment be collected, and pointed out property that could be levied on, and out of which said judgment could be collected; that on account of the unlawful expenditures made by John B. Stephenson, plaintiffs, as minority stockholders, were entitled to a judgment in behalf of the company against John B. Stephenson, and were also entitled, in behalf of the company, to have the .-judgment against John B. Stephenson, James A. Stephenson, Harry L. Seay, ¿’rank Ezell, George W. Riddle, T. A. Smith, and T. L. Camp, by voting their own stock and proxies, acquired in a campaign conducted at the expense of the company, had voted to liquidate the company and to make themselves, with exception of James A. Stephenson and Harry L. Seay, liquidating agents, but, after so voting to liquidate, said John B. Stephenson, George W. Riddle, T. A. Smith, Frank Ezell, and T. L. Camp delivered all of the property and assets of the company, amounting in value to over $300,000, into the hands of John B. Stephenson, and by an instrument in writing, purporting to be a resolution of the directors, gave John B. Stephenson plenary power to sell the assets of the corporation at any price, to retain all of the officers and employes of the company at exorbitant salaries, and thereby dissipate the company's assets, and to do any and all other things which he (John B. Stephenson) might desire to do with regard to the properties and assets of said company; that it had become manifest that the object for which the corporation was organized could not be attained, and upon this becoming manifest the stockholders of the company owned the assets jointly, and were entitled to have a receiver appointed to take possession of them and wind up the affairs of the company; that John B. Stephenson, to whom the so-called directors delivered the assets of the company, with full power to dispose of the same, was. insolvent, and not only insolvent, but by his conduct in the handling of the business of the company, particularly with reference to his said refusal to collect the judgment from his brother, James A. Stephenson, and his conduct with reference to selling stock belonging to his brother and himself to persons to whom he had lent the company’s money at 6 per cent, to pay for the stock, had shown himself to be an unfit person to act as trustee for the stockholders in winding up the company’s affairs. The suit was dismissed as to J. H. Christler. Plaintiffs, in behalf of the General Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company, asked for judgment against John B. Stephenson for the moneys unlawfully expended by him for attorney’s fees, salaries, conducting campaigns for proxies, etc., and also, in behalf of said company, prayed for a mandatory injunction requiring the collection of the judgment against James A. Stephenson, and for the appointment of a'receiver to take possession of the assets and wind up the affairs of the General Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company. The case was tried before the court, and judgment was rendered that plaintiffs take nothing, and that the defendants recover of plaintiffs their costs, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

[1] The first error assigned is:

“Evidence showing, without contradiction, that under the by-laws of the General Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company the executive committee had the sole authority to appoint an attorney, and that the executive committee employed T. L. Camp as attorney for the company, who was paid a salary of $250 a month to attend to the legal business of the company, and further showing that John B. Stephenson, the president of the company, without authority, employed other attorneys to perform the services which the said T. L. Camp was obligated to perform by the terms of his employment, and that said John B.

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187 S.W. 1031, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bounds-v-stephenson-texapp-1916.