Chapman v. Reid

260 S.W. 955, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 324
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1924
DocketNo. 1090.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 955 (Chapman v. Reid) 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
Chapman v. Reid, 260 S.W. 955, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 324 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

The Tyler County State Bank, a banking corporation organized under the laws of the state of Texas, doing business at Woodville, in Tyler county, Tex., on March 28, 1921, ceased to do business and was taken in charge by the state banking commissioner. This is a suit by J. L. Chapman, as commissioner of banking and as receiver of said bank, against S. H. Reid, president, E. A. Dismuke, cashier, and J. T. Crumpler, J. D. Wickline, C. M. Davis, C. W. Swearingen, O. B. Crumpler, J. H. Fain, M. M. Reese, and C. B. Goolsbee, directors of said bank, and who constituted the board of directors of said bank. This action was brought against the board of directors of said bank for damages alleged to have been suffered by said bank, its stockholders and creditors, directly and proximately caused by the action of said board of directors in knowingly and willingly assenting to, permitting, and suffering to be made, directly and indirectly, loans to individuals and corporations in excess of the amount allowed by law, to wit, 25 per cent, of the capital stock and surplus of said bank, in violation of article 539, Revised Statutes, plaintiff alleging that any sums loaned to any individual or corporation in excess of said amount and in violation of said law were “unlawful, illegal, and a breach of duty, and that the directors of said bank thereby became liable, jointly and severally, for the amount so loaned and lost to the said bank, its stockholder and creditors.” The petition set out many such alleged loans, and charged that “said loans are excessive in the following amounts, respectively: Eleanor Oil Go., $32,079; S. H. Reid, $15,000; J. W. Broadhagen, $15,000; T. H. .Thomas & H. M. Tippett, $15,000; Gandy-Garrett Oil Co., $22,500; Farmers’ Implement Co. and East Texas Garage, $15,000; East Texas Band & Lumber Company, $19,000; Liberty Motor Company and Smith-Minter Realty Company, $9,500; Zavalla Lumber Company, $47,000; making a total of $190,000” — which would probably be credited to collections amounting to the sum of $11,925.80, by reason of which plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $250,000.

Plaintiff’s allegations of negligence were limited to specific allegations as to making (1) loans in excess of the legal limit, and' (2) loans to insolvent and improvident persons and firms, without adequate security.

In the alternative, appellant alleged:

“Plaintiff further avers that, in the event he is mistaken as to the liability of the said directors on the above loans, as set out in the preceding paragraph of this petition, that defendants, as agents and trustees for the bank, its *956 stockholders and its creditors, owed the duty to faithfully and diligently administer the affairs of said bank, and to refrain from permitting loans in excess of the legal limit. That he is entitled to recover from the defendants by reason of carelessness and negligence with which the above loans were made and approved, in that the defendants knew, or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care, that said loans were in excess of the limit authorized by law; that the persons' to whom they made the said loans were insolvent, improvident, and irresponsible, and that they made and permitted the same to be made with no security or grossly inadequate security. Further, that they either carelessly and heedlessly or knowingly and willingly permitted the cashier of said bank, and a minority of the board of directors, to make the above loans to their personal friends, kinfolks, and business associates, without security, to be used in perilous and hazardous undertakings, all of which they well knew, or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care. The loans to the Eleanor Oil Company, Gandy-Garrett Oil Company, Columbus Oil Company, Sour Lake ^Production Company, Sabine Oil Company, set forth above, in which the directors of the bank were interested, we're made with knowledge that the funds were to be used to wildcat for oil in wildcat territory, without any security whatever, and were so negligently and carelessly made that the making of such loans under such facts and circumstances constituted a breach of trust and duty which defendants owed to the bank, its stockholders and creditors. The making of all these said loans under the facts and circumstances above set out, without any security or with inadequate security, and in excess of the lawful limit, was so foreign to safe banking and sound business principles and was attended with such gross neglect, carelessness, and in violation of the criminal and civil statutes of the state of Texas, that the defendants became liable for the damage to said bank, its creditors and stockholders, as a direct and proximate cause of said loss, which would have been averted had it not been for the negligence and carelessness aforesaid, all of which is to the damage of plaintiff in the sum of $250,000.”

The prayer was for judgment against all the defendants in the sum of $250,000, costs of suit, etc.

The case was tried to a jury on special issues, upon the answers to which judgment was rendered against defendants Reid and Dismuke, jointly and severally, for $149,518.-97, and against defendants Reid, Dismuke, and Wickline, jointly and severally, in the further sum of $30,500, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent, and all costs, and judgment was rendered in favor of all the other defendants, directors, from which latter judgment Chapman prosecutes this appeal.

When this ease was submitted, on motion of appellees we struck out appellant’s briefs, because they were not filed in time to give appellees an opportunity to thereafter prepare and file their brief by the day on which .the cause was set for submission in this court. We did not dismiss the appeal, because appellant urged what he claims to be fundamental error apparent upon the face of the record, and we have considered the appeal and examined the record for the purpose of determining whether appellant’s claim of fundamental error can be sustained.

Appellant in his written argument bases his contention of fundamental error upon the following propositions:

First proposition: “The fact that the directors of a failed bank used ordinary care in the selection of the managing officers of the bank does not relieve them of liability for excessive and.unsecured loans made by such officers and approved by the board of directors.”

This proposition grows out of the court’s giving the following special charge:

“Gentlemen of the Jury: At the request of the defendants, you are given this special issue. Sp. No. A. Did the defendants, as directors of the Tyler County State Bank, exercise ordinary care, as that term has been heretofore defined to you, in the selection of the executive officers of said bank?”

The jury answered this special issue: “Xes.”

Appellant asserts that the giving of this charge was fundamental error, for the reason urged that the exercise of ordinary care by the directors of a failed bank in the selection of its managing officers does not relieve them of liability for excessive and unsecured loans mdde by such officers and approved by the board of directors. Whether the managing officers of the bank made either excessive or unsecured loans, and whether the board of directors approved such loans, are questions of fact.

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Related

Bryan v. Sinclair Oil & Gas Co.
1 S.W.2d 917 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 S.W. 955, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-reid-texapp-1924.