Cisco Banking Co. v. Keystone Pipe & Supply Co.

277 S.W. 1060
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1925
DocketNo. 559-4302
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 1060 (Cisco Banking Co. v. Keystone Pipe & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cisco Banking Co. v. Keystone Pipe & Supply Co., 277 S.W. 1060 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

SHORT, J.

The Vacuum Oil Company, a foreign corporation, brought this suit against the Liberty Refining Company to recover certain damages based upon the alleged breach of a contract and for the appointment of a receiver. In compliance with the application of the original plaintiff, receivers were appointed, and a master in chancery also, to pass upon the validity of claims and priority of liens asserted by the creditors of the Liberty Refining Company, among which were the plaintiff in error, Cisco Banking Company, and the Keystone Pipe & Supply Company, the defendant in error herein.

The claim of the banking company was based on a note for the sum of $52,486.98, dated April 8, 1920, due July 7, 1920, with 10 per cent, interest from maturity, and providing for 10 per cent, attorneys’ fees. It was the contention of its owner that it had priority in payment over all other claims by reason of the fact that the Liberty Re-, fining Company on June 2, 1919, executed a deed of trust on all of its property, including certain lots and tracts of land and the buildings and machinery located thereon and used in the operation of the plant, to secure the paymént of a note of $25,000 of even date with the deed of trust, due six months after date, and certain additional advancements mentioned therein.

The claim 'of the Keystone Pipe & Supply Company for priority in the payment of its claim was based on a materialman’s lion for material alleged to have been furnished the Liberty Refining Company for making “bet-terments, additions and extensions to and improvements on its oil refining plant and increasing the capacity thereof; the effect of which was to enhance and increase the security of all prior lienholders.”

In the report made by the master in chancery, the claim of the banking company was allowed in full and was given priority in the order of payment over the claims of all other interveners, including the defendant in error, except certain labor claims, about which there ^s no contest. The claim of the defendant in error was allowed for $1,-469.19, but payment thereof was made sub-[1061]*1061jeet and subordinate to the payment of tbe claim of the banking company and that of one other company, about which there seems to be no contest here, which report was duly excepted to by the defendant in error in ,so far as it denied preference in the payment of its claims over the claims of the plaintiff in error, notwithstanding which exception the trial court approved the report of the master in chancery and made it the basis of the final judgment rendered. Upon appeal by the defendant in error to the Court of Civil Appeals, upon a consideration of the issues presented, the judgment of the trial court was reversed and judgment rendered giving priority to the lien of the defendant in error on the proceeds of the trustee’s sale in excess of $26,000, on the ground that it affirmatively appeared that the 'Liberty Refining Company, a private corporation, had not fixed its lien on its property in favor of the banking company to secure the payment of any sum in excess of $25,000. 265 S. W. 749.

The deed of trust executed by the refining company to the banking company in pursuance of the resolution authorizing its executive officers to execute a deed of trust oñ its property to secure the payment of $25,000 contained the following clause:

“Whereas, it is contemplated that said party of the first part may hereafter become indebted to the bank in further sum or sums, which said indebtedness now accrued or which may hereafter accrue, it is agreed shall be payable in Cisco, Tex., * * * and this conveyance is made for the security and enforcement of the payment of said present and future indebtedness.”

The difference between the $25,000 and the amount allowed by the trial court evidently represents the further sum or sums of indebtedness mentioned in this clause, and in fact there is no question made about the validity of the indebtedness, since the note executed ■by the Liberty Refining Company, through its president, heretofore mentioned, contained the following clauses:

“This note is given in renewal and extension of note of date June 2, 1919, for the sum of $25,000.00 and account for money advanced to us and carried as overdraft by said bank.”

The materials furnished by the defendant in error were furnished after the execution of the deed of trust. No question seems to have been made as to the validity of the lien claimed by the defendant in error, nor the validity of the lien claimed by the plaintiff in error except as to the additional sums not represented by the note given for $25,000.

Upon due application, all the property of the refining company was sold for $65,000, and it is apparent that the debts so far exceeded this sum, and the priority of other claims amounted to so much, that nothing would be left to be appropriated upon the claim of the defendant in error if the judgment of the trial court should be sustained. The plaintiff in error having presented to the Supreme Court its application for writ of error, the same was granted, and the case has been referred to this section of the Commission of Appeals for disposition^

The first assignment of error assails the correctness of the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals in holding that inasmuch as the deed of trust in favor of appellee (banking company) “upon its face discloses the authority which the board of directors conferred upon the president to be to mortgage the plant for $25,000 only; therefore the attempt to secure future advances were unauthorized.” However, the Court of Civil Appeals very correctly says that “ordinarily, the authority to execute the mortgage would be presumed and the, burden is upon the appellant to show want of authority.” But it further holds that since the deed of trust upon its face disclosed the authority which the board of directors conferred upon the president to be to mortgage the plant for $25,000 only, the attempts to secure' future advances were unauthorized, and in support of this holding the case of Fitzhugh et al. v. Franco-Tex. Land Co., 81 Tex. 306, 16 S. W. 1078, is cited. An examination of that case discloses that it was a suit by the Franco-Texas Land Company, a corporation, to cancel certain conveyances of land made by its former president, on the ground that the execution of these conveyances was unauthorized as well as fraudulent; whereas, in this case the validity of the deed of trust executed by the president of the corporation is assailed by a stranger to the priginal transaction. The corporation whose deed of trust is assailed, while a party to the suit, has not seen fit to question the validity of the instrument. In Thompson on Corporations, p'. 630, it is stated that — ■ ,

“In general it may be said that one whose rights are not injuriously affected by reason of the fact that a corporation is acting in excess of its powers or beyond the warrant of law has no standing in court to complain of the same.”

In the case of Gulf Pipe Line Co. v. Lasater (Tex. Civ. App.) 193 S. W. 777, a quotation from, the case of Eno v. Crooke, 10 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cisco-banking-co-v-keystone-pipe-supply-co-texcommnapp-1925.