Commercial Guaranty State Bank v. Crews

196 S.W. 901, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 771
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 S.W. 901 (Commercial Guaranty State Bank v. Crews) 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
Commercial Guaranty State Bank v. Crews, 196 S.W. 901, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 771 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

KING, J.

Appellant brought this suit in the- county court of Nacogdoches county on two promissory notes executed by appellee, of date June 2, 1913, for the sum of $100 each, payable to B. F. ■ Moore and J. O. Marshall, or order, and due November 1, 1914, and November 1, 1915, respectively, alleging that it became the owner of said notes before maturity, paying value therefor. Ap-pellee answered that said notes were executed to said Moore and Marshall for stock in the Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company, and that said stock was never issued to defendant, and that therefore the consideration of said notes failed, and further that the bank was not an innocent purchaser for value without notice. Appellant, in its supplemental petition, alleged that it was an innocent purchaser and holder of said notes before maturity for value, without notice of the defenses urged by defendant. The case was tried before the court without the aid of a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of defendant. The trial court filed the following conclusions of fact and of law:

“Conclusions of Fact.
“I find that defendant, H. C. Crews, on the 2d day of June, 1913, made, executed, and delivered to B. F. Moore and J. C. Marshall his three promissory notes, payable to B. F. Moore and J. C. Marshall or order; and I further find that the plaintiff, the Commercial Guaranty State Bank of Nacogdoches, Texas, before the matui-ity thereof and for a valuable consideration paid at the time of said purchase, purchased and is now the owner of two of said promissory notes so made and executed by said defendant, Crews; said two notes so purchased and owned by said plaintiff being of the tenor and effect as follows:
“ ‘$100.00. Sacul, Texas, 6/2/1913.
“ ‘Nov. 1, 1914, after date, for value received, I promise to pay to B. F. Moore and J. C. Marshall, or order, one hundred dollars at Sacul Guaranty State Bank, to bear interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from date, and further hereby agree that if this note is not paid when due to pay all cost necessary for collection, including ten per cent, for at *902 torney’s fees. TMs note is one of a series 'of three notes given for stock in the Sacul Gin & Mfg. Oo.
“ ‘No. 2. [Signed] H. 0. Crews.’
“ ‘$100.00. Sacul, Tex., 6/2/1913.
. “ ‘Nov. 1, 1915, after date, for value received, I promise to pay to B. E. Moore and J. C. Marshall, or order, one . hundred dollars at Sacul Guaranty State Bank, to bear interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from date, and further hereby agree that if this note is not paid when due to pay all costs necessary for collection, including ten per -cent, for attorney’s fees. This note is one of a series of threo notes given for stock in the Sacul Gin & Mfg. Oo.
“ ‘Hue 11-1-1915. [Signed] H. O. Crews.
“ ‘No. 3.’
“I further find that at the time of the purchase of said two above-described notes by said Commercial Guaranty State Bank, plaintiff, that said notes were at said time delivered to said bank by said B. E. Moore and J. O. Marshall, and that said B. E. Moore and J. O. Marshall at said time duly indorsed each of said notes by writing their names across the back thereof in the following manner: ‘B. E. Moore— J. C. Marshall.’ I further find that said Commercial Guaranty State Bank, plaintiff, did not purchase the other note, which was executed by said Crews to said B. F. Moore and J. O. Marshall, and at the time of its purchase of the above two described notes knew nothing of the execution, or of the contents, condition, and due date of said other note, except such notice as appeared on the face of the two notes purchased. I further find that at the time said notes were executed and delivered by the said I-I. O. Crews to said J. C. Marshall and B. F. Moore that J. C. Marshall, one of the payees in said notes, represented to the said H. O. Crews that the Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company was an existing corporation, and that tho consideration of said notes was to be twelve shares of stock in said Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company at twenty-five dollars ($25.00) per share. I further find that it was the understanding and agreement by and ' between the said J. C. Marshall and B. E. Moore, the payees in said notes, and H. O. Crews, at the time said notes were executed, that said twelve shares of stock in the Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company was not to be delivered to said H. C. Crews until said notes wore fully paid by him, but that said stock, when made out in favor of H. C. Crews, was to be attached to and retained as security for the payment of said notes. I further find that no stock was attached to the above-described two notes when purchased by and delivered to plaintiff. I further find that no charter was ever obtained for said Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company, and the same was never incorporated,, but that said Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company, with J. C. Marshall as general manager-, operated a gin for two seasons, and procured a book that contained blank certificates for shares of stock in said company, and that it also procured a seal, which had impressed on it ‘Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company, a Corporation’; and I find that one stock certificate was made out and signed up‘in favor of one J. H. Cole, purporting to be a stock certificate in said Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company, and which certificate was signed ‘B. F. Moore, President — J. C. Marshall, General Manager and Secretary,’ and had said seal impressed thereon, and this was the only certificate of stock, shown by the evidence to have been made out and signed up in favor of any one in said Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company.
ÍT further find that said twelve shares of stock nor any part thereof was ever delivered to said H. C. Crews. I further find that at the time the defendant, H. C. Crews, executed said notes that he believed said Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company was a corporation. I further find that the plaintiff, Commercial Guaranty State Bank of Nacogdoches, Texas, on November 24, 1913, and before the maturity of either of said two notes purchased by it, became the purchaser and holder of said two notes sued on, and that said bank paid a valuable consideration therefor, and it was an innocent purchaser of said notes for value, without notice of any defense thereto, or fraud, or misrepresentations practiced or made in procuring the execution of said notes; and I find that said bank had no notice at the time it became the purchaser of said notes of any fact that would indicate that said notes were not binding and valid obligations against the defendant, unless the following clause in said notes was sufficient to give said bank such notice: ‘This note is one of a series of three notes given for stock in the Sacul Gin & Manufacturing Company.’
“I further find that said notes are wholly unpaid, and that plaintiff, since the maturity of said notes, has demanded of defendant the payment of same.
“Conclusions of Law.
“I conclude, as a matter of law, that said notes are void, and therefore uncollectible, for the reason that they recite in their face that they are given for stock in tho Sacul Gin &

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 901, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-guaranty-state-bank-v-crews-texapp-1917.