Brown v. Davis

178 S.W. 842, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 865
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1915
DocketNo. 822.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 178 S.W. 842 (Brown v. Davis) 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
Brown v. Davis, 178 S.W. 842, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 865 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HALL, J.

Appellee Davis sued appellant Brown upon a promissory note in the sum of $1,000, making the Amarillo Securities Invest *843 ment Company and Mark Logan codefend-ants. The court sustained a general demurrer and all special exceptions to the answer of Brown, and upon his failure to amend rendered judgment against him for the full amount of the note, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted. *

The first nine paragraphs of the answer consist of admissions and denials of specific facts in plaintiff’s pleading. Beginning with the tenth paragraph, the allegations are as follows:

“Specially answering herein, this defendant shows to the court: That some time in the summer of 1912 the Bankers’ Trust Company was conceived and originated, and the Amarillo Securities Investment Company was also conceived and originated for the express and only purpose of selling the capital stock of the said Bankers’ Trust Company and promoting and organizing the same and getting a permit for it to do business in Texas as a trust company, and that the promoters, officers, and managers of the Bankers’ Trust Company were either officers, managers, and owners of the Amarillo Securities Investment Company, or were in control of the same in some way, the details of which are unknown to this defendant, and that D. C. Lowe, R. L. Underwood, and one Brown, whose first name and initials are unknown to this defendant, were,, the agents and acting for both said companies in the matter of selling to the public the stock of said Bankers’ Trust Company, during the time hereinafter alleged and set out.
“(11) That during said year 1912, and especially during the summer and fall, this defendant was in feeble health and prematurely old, and that his said poor health and old age had weakened his mind and will to such an extent that he was easily persuaded and overreached, and his judgment was poor, and his will was easily overcome by artful solicitors and scheming agents with their glittering descriptions of ventures and prospects.
“(12) This defendant further shows to the court: That for many years theretofore he had been well acquainted with the said D. C. Lowe, and that he had been on intimate social and business relations with the said Lowe, and during many years had transacted a great deal of banking business through the said Lowe, and especially in his declining years had learned to look, to and lean upon the said D. C. Lowe for advice, counsel, and direction in all weighty business matters, and had for many years known and respected and had great confidence in the father of the said R. L. Underwood, which fact inclined him, especially in his said weakened mental and physical condition, to have great confidence in the statements, representations, and promises of the said R. L. Underwood.
“(13) That about August, 1912, the said Brown approached this defendant and represented to him that said Bankers’ Trust Company of Amarillo, Tex., was already organized and a going concern. doing a great volume of business, and that it had on hand an almost unlimited amount of money which it was already ready, willing, and able to loan and was loaning to various parties and for various enterprises in the Panhandle and Plains of Texas, and that it was already in shape to pay large dividends to its stockholders and was in a present financial condition as to enable it to pay and guarantee to all stockholders immense dividends upon its capital stock in the future, and thereupon solicited this defendant to give said company his note in some amount, either for stock in said company or to share in the privileges of its loaning money to him thereafter, but the -exact nature of which this defendant did not then and does not now understand, but that this defendant was not then wholly taken in by said proposition and steadily refused to do so .until time hereinafter mentioned.
“(14) That thereafter and before November 15, 1912, the said R. L. Underwood, another agent of the companies hereinbefore named, came, to this defendant’s house and made substantially the representations hereinbefore alleged as having been made by the said Brown, and in addition thereto represented to this defendant that said company already had on hand enough money to supply the whole Plains country and was ready, willing, and anxious to loan the same to citizens thereof, including this defendant. That this defendant then owed a note for several thousand dollars which was soon to become due, and the same was secured by a lien on the cattle of this defendant, and the said R. L. Underwood, knowing the same that this defendant was anxious to find sufficient money somewhere to take up said note, then and there proposed to this defendant that if he would only execute a small note to said Bankers’ Trust Company, simply to be held by it as collateral, as soon as this defendant’s said note matured said Bankers’ Trust Company would loan him sufficient money to take up said note, and on such occasion repeatedly urged this defendant to do the same, and informed this defendant that he could within a few hours after executing said note obtain any amount of money from said Bankers’ Trust Company which he might care for, and when this defendant demurred and hesitated, he, the said R. L. Underwood, urged this defendant to consult the said D. O. Lowe.
“(15) That at the suggestion of the said R. L. Underwood, and because of the aforesaid confidence he had in the said Lowe, and because of his habit and practice of following the advice of the said Lowe, he soon thereafter did consult the said D. C. Lowe, and the said D. C. Lowe informed him, this defendant, that the said Bankers’ Trust Company was a great enterprise, and that he, the said Lowe, had such confidence therein that he had invested several thousand dollars cash therein, and that many others of the best business men of the Panhandle and Plains country had also invested their property and money therein, and then and there advised this defendant to accept the proposition of the said Underwood as hereinbefore set out.
“(16) This defendant further shows to the court: That by reason of his confidence in the said Lowe and said Underwood, and by reason of his weakened mental and physical condition, and by reason of his aforesaid desire to find a place to get the money aforesaid to take the note up aforesaid, he was overreached, over-persuaded, and his will was overcome, and his good judgment beclouded to such an extent that he believed all of said representations to be true, and that he implicitly relied upon all of the statements of the said Underwood and the said Lowe and placed himself under their control and direction.

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Reasoner v. Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co.
203 S.W. 592 (Texas Supreme Court, 1918)
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198 S.W. 1047 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.W. 842, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-davis-texapp-1915.