Central Nat. Bank v. Dallas Bank & Trust Co.

66 S.W.2d 474
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1933
DocketNo. 11575.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 S.W.2d 474 (Central Nat. Bank v. Dallas Bank & Trust 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
Central Nat. Bank v. Dallas Bank & Trust Co., 66 S.W.2d 474 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

JONES, Chief Justice.

Appellee, the Dallas Bank & Trust Company, trustee, instituted this suit in a district court of Dallas county, as trustee for the estate of Belle 0. Shumard, deceased, against appellants, Central National Bank and Central Trust & Savings Bank, to recover an alleged default on a rental contract, and also for an immediate appointment of a receiver, to take charge of the properties owned by appellants. After due notice and hearing, a receiver was appointed, but a supersedeas bond was allowed by the court, and executed by appellants, for which reason the receiver will not operate, pending this appeal. Appellants have duly perfected an appeal to this court. The following are the necessary facts:

On May 8, 1914,- a lease contract was duly executed between Mrs. Belle C. Shumard, as owner and lessor of business property, in the city of Dallas, and known as numbers 1513-1515 Main street, and Central State Bank & Trust Company, a banking corporation, as lessee. The lease was to become effective on September 1, 1914, and was to run for a period of twenty-five years from said date, ending on September 1, 1939. The total consideration for the lease is the sum of $290,000; for the first ten years, the lessee was to pay $11,000 per year, in equal monthly installments, and, for the remaining fifteen years, the sum.of $12,000 per ye.ar, in equal monthly installments; each monthly installment was to be paid, in advance, on or before the 10th day of each succeeding month. As additional, the lessee was to pay, promptly, “all taxes and assessments, water rents and all governmental charges, of every kind, which may be levied, charged and imposed upon the demised premises, or any part thereof, or any improvements thereon, for and during each and every year after September 1st, 1914, and during the continuance of the lease.” The fifth paragraph of the lease contract reads:

“The Lessee shall have the right to assign this lease or to convey any estate or portion thereof herein granted, the assignee, or assignees, either of the entire lease or any purchaser of any estate granted hereunder becoming automatically substituted for the Lessee as to its rights upon the making of any such conveyance or assignment or lease, and shall thereby as between Lessee and such party be bound by all the terms, conditions and convenants of this instrument. Lessee may also sub-let any or all of the demised premises as it may deem proper. Each as-signee or sub-tenant or grantee, immediate or remote, shall have like power of assignment and sub-letting. It is distinctly understood, however, that no sub-letting of a part or the whole of said premises and no sale by Lessee of its interest therein shall release or in any way affect Lessee’s obligations to Lessor as herein set out.” .

The twelfth paragraph of the lease contract, reads:

“This lease, with its provisions, shall bind and inure to the benefit of the immediate parties hereto, and their respective heirs, assignees, executors and administrators, whether or not other than immediate parties are named elsewhere in any portion of the contract.”

In 1923, Mrs. Belle Shumard died, testate, and by her will made the Dallas Trust & Savings bank executor and trustee, for the benefit of certain relatives. Dallas Trust & Savings Bank qualified as such trustee, and has since continuously administered the trust. Its corporate name was changed in January, 1930, to Dallas Bank & Trust Company, and, since said date, has administered the trust under such name. In 1916, Central State Bank & Trust Company changed its name to Central State Bank, and continued to execute the terms of the lease under such name until, in 1925, it ceased to do business under that name, and there were organized two successor corporations, with substantially the same stockholders and directors, to carry on its business with its assets, the names being, respectively, Central National Bank in Dallas and Central Trust & Savings Bank, appellants herein.

The capital stock of Central State Bank was $1,000,000. By a proper procedure, this capital stock was reduced to $700,000, about the time of, and incident to, its reorganization into two corporations, $500,000 of this capital stock was transferred to the Central National Bank in Dallas, and became its capital stock. The remaining $200,000 of the capital stock of the Central State Bank was transferred to, and became the capital stock of, the Central Trust & Savings Bank.. The assets of the Central State Bank were transferred to the successor banks in the same proportion. No consideration passed to the stockholders of the Central State Bank in this reorganization, other than the stockholders of said bank were issued stock, either in the one or the other of the two successor corporations. No conclusion can be drawn other than that appellants, the two successor corporations, were organized to continue the business of the Central State Bank, which immediately ceased as a banking cor *476 poration on tlie completion of the organization of the two successor banks.

At the time this lease contract became effective, the lessee was occupying the Shum-ard property as a bank building. Some time thereafterwards, the occupation of this property for use of the bank ceased, and another building, on the opposite side of Main street, became the domicile of the Central State Bank, and, likewise, the domicile of appellants, after their organization. In 1925, when appellants came into existence, as successors to the Central State Bank, the Shum-ard property was drawing from subleases a materially larger rental than was being paid under the lease contract. In consequence thereof, this lease contract became, and was carried as an asset, rather than a liability. Eater, when the present depression came to be felt, the subtenants in the Shumard property paid an amount materially less than provided for in the lease contract and it was carried as a liability.

When appellants were organized, as successors of the Central State Bank, Central National Bank in Dallas purchased the building that had been occupied by the Central State Bank, and, by an agreement between the two corporations, Central Trust & Savings Bank assumed the obligation of the Shumard lease, and the rentals thereafter paid to appellee on the Shumard building were paid by Central Trust & Savings Bank. Appellee was not a party to this agreement, and did not know, until after default in the rent contract, shortly before this suit was filed, that Central Trust & Savings Bank alone had assumed this obligation, and that an effort was thereby made to release Central National Bank in Dallas from such obligation. When informed of this status, in respect to the obligation of the lease, appel-lee declined to be bound by the contract between appellants, and informed the Central National Bank in Dallas that it would hold appellants to the lease contract.

The record shows that the organization of appellants, the two successor banks, with the assets of the Central State Bank, was regular, and that the proper procedure to effect such a result was duly carried out. In this organization, the Central National Bank assumed approximately $3,500,000 in deposits of the Central State Bank, and the Central Trust & Savings Bank assumed approximately $1,000,000 of the deposits of such bank.

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66 S.W.2d 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-nat-bank-v-dallas-bank-trust-co-texapp-1933.