Continental Nat. Bank v. Smith

273 S.W. 657, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 500
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 25, 1925
DocketNo. 6854.
StatusPublished

This text of 273 S.W. 657 (Continental Nat. Bank v. Smith) 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
Continental Nat. Bank v. Smith, 273 S.W. 657, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 500 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

BBAIR, J.

This appeal arose in the following manner: In a suit between certain shareholders and trustees of the Ocean Oil & Refining Company, hereinafter called Oil Company, filed in the district court of Coleman county, James Amyx was appointed and qualified March 17, 1923, as receiver of the properties of the Oil Company. Out of this suit an injunction was issued and served March 20, 1923, upon appellant, Continental National Bank of Fort Worth, Tex., restraining it from paying out any fund in its possession belonging to the Oil Company, except upon the receiver’s check. In the forenoon of March 20, 1923, after the service of the injunction, James Amyx called at appellant bank, in Fort Worth, and presented it with certified copies of his appointment, oath, and bond as receiver, and demanded payment of $8,830.58, the amount _ on deposit to the credit of the Oil Company at the time the injunction was served, but the bank refused payment because of the claim that it was not sure of its legal rights and duties, and requested time to consult an attorney, which was granted by the receiver. About 2:30 p. m. on the same day, the time appointed for the receiver to return after the bank had consulted its attorney, he returned and was referred to the attorney, who then advised both the receiver and the bank that the bank should pay over the fund. The receiver then went from the attorney’s office to the bank and again demanded payment of the money before closing hour of the bank, but was refused because in the meantime the bank had been informed by certain attorneys in Fort Worth that they expected to file a suit on the following day in the district court.of Tarrant county, enjoining and restraining it from complying with the orders of the district court of Coleman county, and from paying the fund to the receiver. Suit was filed on the following day, March 21, 1923, in the district court of Tarrant county, Tex., by J. R. Meeker and H. H. Fellows against James Amyx and appellant bank, out of which a writ of injunction was issued, addressed “to James Amyx,” restraining him -from taking possession of or disposing of the properties of the Oil Company, also from demanding payment of the fund in appellant bank, and the writ- thus addressed was served about 9 o’clock a. m., on the same day it was issued, upon both the receiver and the appellant bank.

The plaintiffs in that case filed a bond in the sum of $2,000,1 and appellant bank, though not duly cited, filed an answer in' that suit in the nature of a bill of inter-pleader, and asked that the money be paid by the court to the rightful owner, and that it be allowed $10Q as attorney’s fees for answering therein.

The injunction was dissolved April 21, 1923, upon the motion of James Amyx, the receiver. Notice of appeal was given but never perfected. The bank, so far as the record discloses, did not prosecute its inter- *659 pleader suit, but apparently abandoned same. Thereafter, April 26, 19.23, appellant bank deposited with the clerk of the district court of Coleman county in this cause the sum of $8,330.58, being all of the aforesaid' íund except $500, which amount it retained as attorney’s fees for the legal services rendered in the aforesaid matters concerning the fund which it held, contending in this connection that it occupied the position of a stakeholder, and was entitled to employ counsel to file a bill of interpleader in this cause, and to pay his fees out of the fund in question. It prayed that Meeker and Eel-Tows, plaintiffs in the Tarrant county injunction suit theretofore dissolved, be made parties, and that the court pay the fund to the rightful owner. Meeker and Fellows were never made parties to this suit so far as the record discloses, and no judgment was sought or entered against them in connection with appellant bank’s bill of inter-pleader herein filed.

The litigation between the shareholders and trustees of the Oil Company, parties to this suit, was settled by an agreed judgment, and the only question here is whether or not the appellant bank is entitled to retain the $500 out of the fund in question with which to pay attorney’s fees-under the facts above detailed, which are substantially the material findings of fact by the trial judge before whom the case was tried, a jury being waived. He also found that $500 was a reasonable fee for the services rendered, but that the bank did not occupy the position of a stakeholder, entitling it to employ counsel to file a bill of interpleader and pay him out of the funds in question, and upon request filed the following conclusions of law:

“(1) That the defendant Continental National Bank of Fort Worth was not such a stakeholder as would entitle it to attorney’s fee out of the funds in its hands.
“(2) Regardless of the position of said bank with reference to the fund in question, it is not entitled to any allowance out of said fund for advice with reference to whether or not it should obey and give credit to the order and judgment of this court and of the judge of the Fifty-First Judicial District duly made herein.
“(3) That at the time the receiver, James Amyx, presented to said bank the certified copies of the orders of this court and of the judge of the Fifty-First Judicial District made herein, and of the bonds made thereon and of the oath of said receiver, and at the time the writ of injunction herein was served upon said bank, the said bank was not in such position, with reference to such fund, that it was entitled to inquire of attorneys or incur an attorney’s fee at the expense of the defendant Ocean Oil & Refining Company,' or to charge same against the fund in its hands, there being at that time no adverse claimant.
“(4) That the defendant James Amyx, after having duly qualified as such receiver, represented all parties to the- suit in this county, including the defendant Ocean Oil & Refining Company, and was the ‘hand of the court,’ and that the defendant bank was charged as a matter of law with the duty of knowing its legal rights and duties in the premises, and is not entitled to charge against the fund in question for legal advice or instructions to it, either to obey or disobey the process and orders of this court, regular in all respects upon their face, and duly brought to its notice and attention, and that it was the duty of said bank and the law required of said bank to know its duty in the premises and to recognize and obey said orders.
“ (5) That the information brought to the attorneys of said bank March 20, 1923, by Phillips, Brown & Morris, whether considered as notice- to said bank or not, of the intention of said attorneys at a future time to secure an injunction against the bank’s obedience to the orders of this court, was not a _sufiicient excuse in law for the disobedience by said bank to the orders of this court, and did not at that time, nor thereafter, constitute the bank an innocent stakeholder, in such sense that it was entitled to withhold from the fund in question attorney’s fees to its attorneys for their advice with reference to its legal rights or duties in the premises.
“(6)

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Bluebook (online)
273 S.W. 657, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-nat-bank-v-smith-texapp-1925.