Cooper v. Milam

256 S.W.2d 196, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2230
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 1953
Docket3080
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 256 S.W.2d 196 (Cooper v. Milam) 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
Cooper v. Milam, 256 S.W.2d 196, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2230 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

HALE, Justice.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory order of the trial court refusing to grant appellant a temporary injunction. As plaintiff in the court below, appellant sought to enjoin the Citizens National Bank of Waco from voting 1,600 shares of stock in the Cooper- Company in favor of a partial capital liquidating dividend in the amount of $366,000. The Bank held the stock as independent executor of the estate of E. C. Barrett, deceased. Appellant also sought to enjoin the Cooper Company and its president, J. R. Milam, Jr., from counting any vote cast by the Bank as executor of the estate of E. C. Barrett in favor of such liquidating dividend, and to enjoin the Cooper Company and its president from paying such dividend. In addition to his prayer for a temporary injunction, appellant also prayed that upon final hearing the temporary injunction sought by him. be made permanent, that certain action theretofore taken by the board of directors of the Cooper Company in declaring a prior dividend 'be cancelled, set aside and held for naught and that judgment be rendered in favor of the corporation against the said J. R. Milam, Jr., in the sum of $338,832 and interest, and for damages and costs of court and for such other and further relief as he might show himself entitled to.

Appellant’s application for a temporary injunction came on for hearing in the court below on December 3, 1952 and after the evidence thereon, had. been adduced the court refused the same, appellant duly excepted, gave notice of appeal, filed appeal bond and caused a record of the proceedings to be filed in this Court on December 17, 1952. Appellant’s brief was filed here on January 2, 1953, his appeal being predicated upon the following point of error:

“The trial court erred in refusing to grant the temporary injunction in this case because the Citizens National Bank of Waco has no right as independent executor of the estate of E. C. Barrett, deceased, to vote the 1,600 ■shares of the Barrett stock in The Cooper Company in the proposed stockholders’ meeting to vote on a partial capital liquidating dividend.”

On January 6, 1953, J.-R. Milam, Jr., and the Cooper Company filed their motion herein to dismiss the cause on appeal on the ground that the acts which appellant sought to enjoin had been accomplished since the hearing in the court below and hence his application for injunctive relief had become moot. From the recitals in the verified motion of appellees 'to dismiss, it appears that on December 3,- 1952,-after the trial court had denied appellant’s application for a temporary injunction, a meeting of the "stockholders- of the Cooper" Company was had at which the Citizens National-Bank of Waco, as executor of the estate of E. C.'Barrett, Voted "the 1,600 shares of stock held by it in favor of the partial capital liquidating dividend in the amount-of $366,000. It also appears that the Cooper Company and its president, J. R. Milam, Jr., counted the votes cast by the Bank at ■the meeting of the stockholders', the proper officers and directors of the corporation certified to the Secretary of State that’the partial capital liquidating dividend had been passed by vote of more -than two-thirds of the stockholders of the corporation, and the proposed charter amendment reducing the corporation’s capital stock in accordance with the action so taken by its stockholders, was approved by the Secretary of State. The motion to dismiss has been carried along with the appealed cause which is now under submission on vyritten briefs and oral arguments of the parties..

*198 Appellant filed his original verified petition in the court below on December 1, 1952. He alleged therein, among other things, that he was the owner of 570 shares of stock in the Cooper Company; that E. C. Barrett was the owner of 1,600 shares of stock in the corporation at the time of his death on May 30, 1952, and by the terms of his will the stock was bequeathed to appellant as trustee' for the benefit of certain "other persons as set forth in the will; that on July 19, 1952, a judgment was rendered in the court below in favor of the Cooper Company against J. R. Milam, Jr., in the amount of $297,897.93 and in order to pay said judgment the said J. R. Milam, Jr., borrowed such sum from some third party and under the terms of his loan obligated himself to vote his stock .in the Cooper Company and to obtain the votes of other directors in favor of an irrevocable dividend, either ordinary or by way of partial liquidation of the corporation, and to pledge such dividend to secure his personal loan; that the said J. R. Milam, Jr., in order the fulfill his agreement and contrary to the • best interests of the Cooper Company, had the directors of the corporation to adopt a resolution declaring a dividend in the amount of $338,832 and withdrew such amount from the corporation, such action constituting a misappropriation and a conversion of the assets of the corporation; that J. R. Milam, Jr., as president of the Cooper Company had called a meeting of the stockholders of the corporation which would 'be held on December 2, 1952, for the purpose of voting a partial capital liquidating dividend and that the Citizens National Bank of Waco, as executor of the estate of E. C. Barrett, was threatening to vote the 1,600 shares of stock which it held as executor in favor of such partial liquidation and that, unless restrained, it-would do so, notwithstanding the fact that the Bank as executor had no right to vote the stock so held by it in favor of the proposed liquidating dividend. Upon presentation of appellant’s application for a temporary injunction, the court ordered that appellees be cited to appear on December 2, 1952, at 9:00 o’clock a. m. and show cause, if any they had,- why the injunction as prayed for should not be granted. '

Appellees filed an extensive answer to the application for injunctive relief in which they alleged, among other things, that the Bank, as executor of the will and estate of E. C. Barrett, was lawfully in possession of the 1,600 shares of stock which was of the reasonable value of $233,-600 and as such executor it was charged with the duty of paying all the debts of the decedent, including State - inheritance taxes and Federal estate taxes. Appellees further alleged in their verified answer as follows:

“8.
“Defendants allege that Madison A. Cooper, plaintiff herein, is acting unreasonable and arbitrary, and against the best interest of his cestui que trust, for the reason that the defendants have gone to considerable time and expense to obtain a ruling from the Internal Revenue Department of the U. S. Government to the effect that in view of the liquidation of the grocery department of said corporation, said corporation and stockholders thereof have a right to declare a partial capital liquidation, provided that two-thirds of the stockholders of the said corporation vote in favor of said partial capital liquidating dividend, and to obtain said two-thirds majority for said liquidating dividend requires a vote therefor of all of the said 1600 shares of stock now standing on the books of said corporation in the name of E. C. Barrett. That if said dividend is declared to be a partial capital liquidating dividend, the estate of E. C. Barrett and the owners of the stock in question will make a considerable saving in taxes. In fact, said estate and the beneficiaries ultimately receiving said stock will save approximately $40,000.00.

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Bluebook (online)
256 S.W.2d 196, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-milam-texapp-1953.