College Park Electric Belt Line v. A. L. Ide & Son

40 S.W. 64, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 273, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 2, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 64 (College Park Electric Belt Line v. A. L. Ide & Son) 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
College Park Electric Belt Line v. A. L. Ide & Son, 40 S.W. 64, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 273, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 45 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

RAINEY, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by the appellees A. L. Ide & Son, against the College Park Electric Belt Line to recover on an indebtedness, and to foreclose a lien on certain property; and also, against N. M. Lee, as guarantor of said indebtedness, and against the other defendants as claimants of the property upon which the lien was sought to be foreclosed. Judgment was rendered against appellant, the Belt Line, in favor of appellees, for the amount of the debt, and for a foreclosure of the lien on said property to the extent of a five-eights interest.

The evidence shows that appellees sold to said Belt Line certain machinery, the contract of sale being in writing, and containing, among others, the following clause,—“The title to this machinery to vest in you only on full compliance with the above terms and conditions.”

Subsequently, on May 17, 1890, to prevent appellees’ agent, C. W. Post, from having said agreement recorded, N. M. Lee, the president and general manager of said Belt Line, agreed with the said Post to guarantee the payment of said indebtedness, if the latter would permit the account to stand open until June 10, 1890, and not record said contract of sale. This proposition was accepted.

On March 8, 1890, said Belt Line, through its proper officers, borrowed §12,000 in money from the Merchants and Planters National Bank, for which sum a note was duly executed by N. M. Lee, president and general manager, and signed by the other appellants, as sureties. To secure said note, a deed of trust was duly executed by N. M. Lee, as president and manager, conveying to D. E. Bryant, trustee, the property of said Belt Line Company; and was conditioned, among other things, that it was executed to save, secure and keep harmless the sureties on said note.

Afterward, said Belt Line borrowed $5000 from said bank, for which it executed its two separate promissory notes for $2500 each. On August 14, 1890, said Belt Line, by its vice-president, D. A. Simmons, executed another deed of trust to H. O. Head, conveying the same property as the former deed of trust, and was executed to secure said note for $12,000, and also the two notes for $2500 each; and contained clauses similar to the original deed of trust, and further, that it was an *276 additional security to said instrument, etc. These instruments were duly recorded.

The money which the deeds of trust were given to secure was borrowed by said Belt Line to pay an indebtedness than existing against the concern, and it was reasonably expected at the time it was so borrowed that said Belt Line would be able to continue its business; but at that time its liabilities exceeded its assets.

Said Belt Line failed to pay said notes at maturity, and in January, 1891, H. O. Head, trustee, by virtue of said deed of trust, sold all of the property named in said deed of trust, and the same was bought in by W. M. Scott for the sum of $10,000, for the benefit of the sureties on said note; and said sureties then formed another corporation and paid the amount of the bid and all of the balance on the notes, with interest, amounting to about $18,000. Six of said sureties, at the time of the transactions heretofore mentioned, were directors of the College-Park Belt Line, which was a private corporation.

The appellant contends that the trial court erred in instructing the jury that the directors of the College Park Electric Belt Line, who were beneficiaries in the deed of trust, and who bought in the property at the-sale under said deed of trust, were chargeable with notice of appellees’ lien on the property sold by appellees to said Belt Line, and on which the lien is sought to be foreclosed, because said directors did not have actual knowledge of said lien, and said lien not having been recorded, at the time of the execution of the trust deed, said directors, by virtue of their office, were not chargeable under the law with notice.

There was some evidence tending to show that the directors had actual notice, or were in possession of such facts as to put them on inquiry, but not sufficient to authorize the court to assume they had notice; - and such charge is erroneous, unless they are under the law chargeable with notice by reason of their relation to the corporation as directors. One of the terms upon which the property was purchased by the Belt Line-from Ide & Son, was that they should have a lien upon the property to secure the payment of the purchase money remaining unpaid. The directors knew that the property was purchased from appellees, Ide & Son, and it was their duty to know the terms upon which the purchase-was made. “It is the duty of directors to know the condition of the corporation whose affairs they voluntarily assume to control, and they are presumed to know that which it is their duty to know and which they have the means of knowing.” Seale v. Baker, 70 Texas, 290.

In Morse on Banks and Banking, 131,, et seq., it is said, “Whatever knowledge a director has or ought to have officially, he has, or will be conclusively presumed at law to have, as a private individual. Thus a. director is affected with notice of the conditions and transactions of the bank.”

Directors are personally liable to those who are damaged by then-false representations; though ignorantly made, if it concerns matters pertaining to the corporation of which they should have been officially *277 cognizant. Seale v. Baker, supra, and Kinkler v. Junica, 84 Texas, 116.

We think the appellants, being directors of the Belt Line, should have known the terms of the contract of purchase of the property in question; and if they did not know, they were derelict in duty, and they cannot interpose such dereliction in bar of Ide & Son’s right to foreclose their lien upon the property.

We are of the opinion that there was no error in the court charging the jury that the directors were chargeable with notice of plaintiffs’ lien.

We think the court erred in the fifth paragraph of its charge in using the following language relating to notice, namely, “that such facts or circumstances had reached their knowledge as would make a reasonably prudent man suspect its existence.”

This is too restricted in defining what constitutes actual notice. “Actual notice exists when knowledge is actually brought home to the party to be affected by it, or where he might by the use of reasonable diligence have informed himself of the existence of certain facts.” Any fact or circumstance that is sufficient to put a prudent man upon inquiry and is of such a character that he might ascertain the fact by the exercise of proper diligence, will be regarded as notice. Notice is a question of fact to be determined by the jury from all the facts and circumstances in evidence before them. It is not sufficient that the facts or circumstances brought to the knowledge of the party are such as to cause a reasonably prudent man to suspect their existence, but they must be such as to put a reasonably prudent man upon inquiry, and of such a character as to lead to the discovery of the main fact by proper diligence in pursuing the inquiry. Sickles v. White, 66 Texas, 178; Goldman v. Blum, 58 Texas, 630; Webb, Record of Title; secs. 219, 223.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 64, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 273, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/college-park-electric-belt-line-v-a-l-ide-son-texapp-1897.