Connellee v. Nees

254 S.W. 625, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 540
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1923
DocketNo. 2163. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 254 S.W. 625 (Connellee v. Nees) 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
Connellee v. Nees, 254 S.W. 625, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 540 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

KLETT, J.

This suit was instituted by G. L. Nees against the defendants, Massie Drilling Company, T. W. Connellee, Miss L. D. Connellee, Joe M. Collins, H. T. Pang-burn, and T. O. Massie. The defendant Joe M. Collins died while the suit was pending, and the executors of his estate, G. Morton and W. R. Edrington, were made parties defendant by an amended pleading. The plaintiff sought recovery of damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him in the course of his employment on August 19, 1920, while working as a “derrick man” on a drilling rig negligently operated by defendants in the oil fields .of Wichita county. The Massie Drilling Company was alleged to be a joint-stock company and also a partnership composed of and owned by the defendants named. Appellants denied under oath the partnership alleged. In answer to special issues the jury found: (1) That the defendants, their agents, servants, or employees, were negligent in the manner in which they operated said machinery and the manner in which they discarded said joint of casing at the time of plaintiff’s, injury ; (2) that such negligence was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury; (3) that the defendants Pangburn, Massie, Collins, and Connellee were engaged in a joint enterprise known as the Massie Drilling Company prior to August 19, 1920; (4) that they were so engaged on August 19, 1920; and (5) that the sum of $10,000, if paid now, would fairly and reasonably compensate the plaintiff for the injury he received. A verdict was directed in favor of Miss L. D. Connellee on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to show her liability. Judgment was rendered upon the answers of the jury in favoi of plaintiff against the other defendants fop the sum of $10,000. From this judgment the defendants T. W. Connellee and H. T. Pang-bum have appealed.

The sufficiency of the evidence to show partnership having been attacked by the appellants, a 'brief statement of the material facts is here submitted: G. L. Nees, 27 years of age, was employed by T. O. Massie “to work for a concern operating under the name of Massie Drilling Company,” and he “worked for that company from the 26th of May until the 19th of August .of the same year, 1920,” when he' was injured. T. O. Massie testified that he “was supposed to be working for the Massie Drilling Company”; that he was employed by Joe M. Collins; that Collins stated “that he was acting for the Massie Drilling Company”; that Massie “was superintendent of the field work for the Massie Drilling Company on August 19, 1920”; that he was ■"the only one in Wichita county that had charge of the field work for the company; that “this company deposited moneys in the banks here, to be used in paying off these men, at the beginning, but later on they did not” ; that later on he looked after the whole affair, which was in his own name; that the funds he used was money taken down on his contract; that he had made contracts for drilling wells; that he did not remember whether they were in his name or in the name of Massie Drilling Company; that he *626 did not remember whether he told the parties whom he was representing; that the office of the “Massie Drilling Company is supposed to be in Joe M. Collins’ office, Port Worth, Tex.”; that he' had been in the office ; that he was not a member of the Mas-sie Drilling Company; that he was supposed to be, but never had anything to show that he was; that they did tell him they were issuing him stock in the Massie Drilling Company, should it ever be organized; that he did not know, whether the Massie Drilling Company was ever organized or not; that Joe M. Collins made him that promise; that Joe M. Collins was “claiming to be acting at that time for the Massie Drillng Company as secretary and treasurer”; that he saw literature in the office of the Massie Drilling Company in Port Worth, Tex., relative to the operation of the company, being the prospectus and stock certificate marked Exhibits 1 and 2; that he was in the office when J. M. Collins signed and mailed the stock; that he “met Mr. Connellee in Mr. Collins’ office”; that he did not realize any profit from the well on which plaintiff was injured; that under the employment with Collins they realized profits from the wells drilled on Burk-Northern, but the profits were never paid; that he does not know why they were never paid; that they realized something like $5,-000; that he was never paid for the contract ; that the balance is still owing; that he did not know that Pangburn or Connellee was ever connected with the Burk-Northern; that he never saw any great quantity of this literature, which was introduced in evidence before the jury, prepared for mailng in the office of Mr. Collins; that he saw some of it in Merriam Brokerage Company’s office; that some of it was in envelopes; that this “rig was supposed to have been in use by the Massie Drilling Company on August 19,1920, at the time Mr. Nees was injured”; that the reason for saying “supposed” is that he did not know whether the company was ever organized; that it was his understanding that the name of the concern that was using this rig at the time was the Massie Drilling Company; that Joe M. Collins turned the rig over to him, and that well supplies were charged to the Massie Drilling Company.

The literature referred to by the witness and introduced in evidence reads as follows:

Exhibit No. 1.
“Massie Drilling Company. Capitalization, $100,000.00, a sound security. General office, 202-203 Bone Building, Port Worth, Texas. Fiscal agents, Merriam Brokerage Company, 205-206 Bone Bldg., Fort Worth, Texas.
“Cornerstone of Expectations. Massie' Drilling Company. Joint-stock association; capitalization, $100,000. Officers and directors: President, T. W. Connellee, Fort Worth, Texas, secretary and. treasurer, Joe M. Collins, Fort Worth, Texas, director and general superintendent, T. O. Massie, Fort Worth, Texas, director, Miss L. D. Connellee, Fort Worth, Texas, director, H. T. Pangburn, Fort Worth, Texas, attorneys, McLean, Scott & McLean, Fort Worth, Texas. Depositary, National Bank of Commerce, Fort Worth, Texas.
“Introduction. Oil, the greatest money-making commodity of the commercial world, needs no introduction. The wonderful development in the vast fields of proven territory in the state of Texas is the subject of discussion you hear on every hand, yet the demand is by oil companies and lease owners, greater production, more wells, regardless of cost. The following ad in local papers explains the situation: ‘$100.00 Reward. For information where I can get a driller with a rig.’ Drilling companies are paying enormous dividends regardless of wells drilled being large or small producers. Xou want a safe investment with enormous profits, where risk is eliminated. This we offer in the Massie Drilling Company, where science is applied and honesty of purpose prevails. In presenting this prospectus, we ask you to investigate the personnel of our company and the security, we offer, a proposition that is strictly business, fair and square. An investment where handsome profits are n'ot in doubt.
“Organization. Massie Drilling Company is associated under the laws of the state of Texas in the amount of 100,000 shares, par value $1.00 each. Fully paid and nonassessable. Control of the company is vested in a board of directors who pledge all assets for payment of liabilities and exempt the shareholders, officers, and directors from personal liability.

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Related

Sturm v. Ulrich
10 F.2d 9 (Eighth Circuit, 1925)
Connellee v. Nees
266 S.W. 502 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1924)
Reeves v. Powell
267 S.W. 328 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)
Massie Drilling Co. v. Nees
254 S.W. 629 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W. 625, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connellee-v-nees-texapp-1923.