Cavitt v. Gulledge

255 S.W. 784, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 888
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1923
DocketNo. 6585. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 255 S.W. 784 (Cavitt v. Gulledge) 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
Cavitt v. Gulledge, 255 S.W. 784, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 888 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

Appellant’s statement of the case is substantially correct, and it is as follows:

“The appellee, J. E. Gulledge, instituted this suit against the appellant^ J. E. Cavitt, and First National Bank of McGrego^ on the 19th day of April, A. D. 19^0, alleging that about six years prior to instituting this suit, he executed his note for 84,000 to Mrs. Cavitt, mother of appellant, and that as security for the note he hypothecated with appellant one-third of the capital stock of the McGregor Dry Goods Company, and that said stock was also security for an indebtedness owing by appel-lee to First National Bank of McGregor, and *785 both bank and Mrs. Cavitt were acting in the matter by appellant; and further alleged that dividends had been paid on stock every year since it was hypothecated, and the amount of said dividends was more than sufficient to pay off and satisfy the indebtedness of Mrs. Cavitt, and that said excess amounted to about $3,000. The appellant further alleged that Cavitt had not turned said excess dividends and stock over to First National Bank of McGregor, but had retained possession thereof, and had appropriated the same to his own use and benefit, and though he had asked Cavitt to surrender said stock to himself or said bank that Cavitt had refused, and appellee prayed that appellant be required to turn over to First National Bank of McGregor the stock and surplus dividends, and that in the event that he has converted said stock and money to his own use the appellee prayed for full amount of his damages.
“The appellant answered by general denial, also pleading statute of limitation of both two and four years, and specially pleading that he had assumed payment of said note to his inother and that in consideration óf assumption of said note, the appellee sold and transferred said stock to him as his individual property. The appellant also tendered the stock into court, only in the event that the court found against him on his pleas of limitation and sale of stock to him. The First National Bank of McGregor answered that it had not sufficient knowledge to either affirm or deny the matters set out in pleadings of either appellee or appellant, and prayed the court to protect its rights and for attorney’s fees. The court submitted the case to the jury on special issues, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee, and on which verdict the court rendered judgment for appellee in the sum of $2,-627.21, and for title and possession of the 41% shares of stock, with directions that both the money and stock be delivered to First National Bank and the money applied to appellee’s debt with said bank, and the stock be retained by bank until its debt is paid. Motion for new trial was seasonably filed by appellant, and was by the court overruled, to which action of the court, appellant, in open court, excepted and gave notice of appeal and filed his super-sedeas bond, bringing the case before this court for review.”

Findings of Fact.

The proof shows: That on March 23, 1914, the appellee executed a note to Mrs. Cavitt, mother of J. F. Cavitt, appellant herein, for the sum of $4,000, payable 10 months thereafter, and appellant represented his mother as her agent in the transaction. To secure this note, appellee placed in the possession of the appellant, J. F. Cavitt, as collateral security, one-third of the capital stock of the McGregor Dry Goods Company, a corporation. The capital stock of said company was $12,600, issued in shares of $100 each. That soon after this transaction, the appellant, Ca-vitt, became the active manager or active vice president of the First National Bank of McGregor, to which institution appellee owed a considerable debt. Appellant, Cavitt, acting in his official capacity for said bank, called upon appellee relative to getting some security for the bank debt, and as a result of this negotiation a written agreement was entered into, which said written agreement was not offered in evidence, but was represented to provide, in substance, that the said stock was not only collateral to Mrs. Cavitt’s note, but was also to stand as collateral to appellee’s indebtedness to the First National Bank, and that appellant was to apply the dividends of said stock, first, to the payment of Mrs. Cavitt’s note until it was fully paid, and then to apply the same to appellee’s debt to the bank, and the stock was to be held by appellant, Cavitt, and the dividends collected for said purposes. That some three or four months after this agreement was entered into, appellee’s business firm, a private corporation of which he was the president, became seriously involved financially, and was later declared bankrupt. However, appellee, individually, was not declared to be a bankrupt. That just previous to this time, appellant, Cavitt, again called upon appellee, and requested of him a transfer on the books of the corporation of the stock so pledged as collateral, stating that this would be necessary in order that said stock might stand as absolute collateral for his mother’s note and also the bank’s note. In accordance with this request, appellee, by due assignment, transferred the stock on the 30th day of December, 1915, to appellant. On the same day the transfer was made on the books of the company, and also on the same day appellant was elected a director pf the corporation. That after this transaction, appellee became ill, suffering from a nervous breakdown, and testified that possibly for a short period of time thereafter he was not mentally able to care for his business. No further conversation was had about the matter until December, 1918, when appellee called upon appellant, at his office, and made inquiry as to how nearly the debt of Mrs. Cavitt’s lacked of being paid by the dividends on the stock pledged as collateral, and when the payments would begin on the bank’s note; to which inquiry appellant replied that he did not consider appellee had any interest ‘in the stock, or any right to ask about it, since he considered the assignment to himself a sale, as he understood he had assumed the payment of his mother’s note, in consideration of appellee’s transferring the stock to him. This was appellee’s first information that appellant was claiming the stock as his own. That thereafter, in the early part of 1919, after several conversations, appellant agreed that if appellee would, within three days, pay the balance due on his mother’s note and the bank’s note, he would turn the stock over to him without any profits to himself; and furnished figures to appellee showing a balance yet due in the sum of $5,930.47; that thereafter, on February 27, 1911, and within the three days *786 allowed, John D. Nalor executed his note to the First National Bank of McGregor, Tex., for the said sum of $5,930.47, at the request of appellee, to which note was to be attached the stock when turned over by Oavitt. The bank accepted the note, and agreed to make the loan, but appellant refused to accept the money, as was agreed, and refused to deliver the stock to either appellee or the bank; and thereafter, on the 19th day of April, 1920, this suit was filed. .

, Appellant collected the following dividends on the stock:

January 9, 1917. $1,500 00
January 25, 1918. 2,083 33
January 27, 1919. 1,041 66
January 26, 1919. 2,500 00
January 5, 1921.

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255 S.W. 784, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cavitt-v-gulledge-texapp-1923.