Cowboy State Bank & Trust Co. v. Guinn

175 S.W. 813, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 442
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 1915
DocketNo. 745.
StatusPublished

This text of 175 S.W. 813 (Cowboy State Bank & Trust Co. v. Guinn) 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
Cowboy State Bank & Trust Co. v. Guinn, 175 S.W. 813, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 442 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HUPP, C. J.

This is the second time this case appears in this court by appeal (160 S. W. 1103). Originally appellant bank instituted a suit against appellees, J. O. and J. *814 A. Guinn, on a note for $2,693.90,. dated December 17, 1911, and due March 17, 1912, with interest from maturity at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum, and 10 per cent, attorneys’ fees, payable to the order of the bant. The Guinns pleaded fraud and failure of consideration, and that the bank stock for which the note was given was in fact owned by the bank and was in the name of Arlon B. Davis, its then president, for sale, and further alleging that the original note, of which the note sued on is a renewal, was for $2,352, setting out the renewals. The admission of appellant in its brief will be sufficient without further setting out the ap-pellees’ answer, as follows:

‘Tn other words, a case of fraud, so far as the sale of the capital stock by Davis to the plaintiffs is concerned, was made out in the pleadings.”

Appellant answered by supplemental petition, that it acquired the note in the regular course of business for a valuable consideration, without notice of any of. the alleged misrepresentations, inducing the execution of the note; that the sale of the stock and taking of the note therefor was a personal transaction of Davis with the appellees, and not by him as president of the appellant bank, and that he was without authority in any event as president to make the representations relied upon; that at the time of the alleged sale the entire stock of the bank had been sold, and that it was not the owner of any of its capital stock and had none for sale. The case was submitted to a jury, who returned special findings, upon which the trial court rendered judgment for the appel-lees.

The appellant makes the following commendable statement:

“In view of the findings of the jury, to the effect that Arlon B. Davis made to J. O. Guinn the representations alleged in the answer with regard to the value of the stock in the Cowboy State Bank & Trust Company, and that these representations were false and were material inducements to the defendants, J. O. Guinn and J. A. Guinn, in signing the note sued on in this cause, being answered in the affirmative, and in view of the further fact that the jury, in answer to special issue No. 5, found that J. O. Guinn and J. A. Guinn relied upon the representations made by Arlon B. Davis, we shall omit from this statement any reference to these matters, and shall assume, as we are bound to do, that the representations made by Arlon B. Davis to the appellees were false and were material, and acted upon by appel-lees to their prejudice.”

The brief of appellant is to be commended, also, in omitting the assignments with reference to the charge and the refusal to give special charges because no bill of exceptions was taken, as required by law, and for that reason could not properly be considered, and it therefore presents but one assignment, to wit:

“Because the vei’dict of the jury and the judgment of the court is contrary to the law and the evidence, and is not'supported by the evidence, in this: There is no evidence in this record to warrant the jury in finding that the bank stock in controversy was the stock of the Cowboy State Bank & Trust Company, or that Ax-lon B. Davis, in the transaction with the defendants, was acting for the bank and as the bank’s agent.”

[1, 2] The court submitted to the jury special issue No. 1:

“(a) Was the transaction between Arlon B. Davis and J. O. and J. A. Guinn an individual transaction on the part of Arlon B. DaviS;' whereby in consideration of the note sued on in this case he was selling to the defendants Guinn 20 shares of his stock in the Cowboy State Bank & Trust Company; or (b) was said transaction a transaction had by Davis as agent or representative of the bank for the bank in the sale of stock belonging to the bank?”

The jury answered question No. 1, “As agent for the bank.” The parties on the trial entered into the following agreement, which is copied into the record:

“It is agreed by and between the parties to this suit that at the time of the Guinn transaction in controversy, Arlon B. Davis was president of th'e Cowboy State Bank & Trust Company, and that W. B. Eoy was the cashier of the Cowboy State Bank & Trust Company, and both were acting as such at the time, and that they and each of them were familiar with the entire transaction in controversy.”

J. O. Guinn testified to the representations as set out by him and as having been made by Davis. This witness .testified, further, that Davis, in the first conversation he had with him, said that it would be against the banking laws of the state for the bank to loan its own money to buy its own stock, and that if he closed the deal he would have to arrange the details of the transaction so as to make it conform to the banking laws of the state. If he did not, and the state banking inspector—

“got hold of it, that he would raise cane with him' and' would make it hard for him [Davis] if he [the inspector] caught it, but that he [Davis] would have to arrange the details of it so that it would conform to the banking laws of the state so as to avoid the banking laws.”

Davis told the witness, so he testified, that the moment he signed the note he would become a stockholder in the bank, and that his name would be entered on the register and kept in the vaults and, further, there was no such thing as bank stock. He testified he (witness) was ignorant in such matters, and accepted Davis’ statement as true. He testified that after getting uneasy about the matter he went to the bank and inquired of the cashier, Mr. Eoy, to ascertain if he was a stockholder. He then said to him, “Mr. Guinn I am a friend to you hoys, and you have not been treated right”; that he did not examine at that time the books. After-wards Foy said, in order to satisfy his mind, he would show him that he was not a stockholder, and would show him the register, and upon examining the register he found his name was not on the register, and that when he found out he was not a stockholder, he refused to further'renew his note; that Eoy told him if he would renew the note and secure it with a deed of trust on land he *815 would try to get his stock for him; that Dr. Callan, who succeeded Davis in the presidency of the bank, when Guinn called upon him for the stock, told him to be easy for two or three weeks, and he thought he could get the stock; that he was trying to get Davis down there to straighten up his crooked business; that he afterwards called upon the bank with his attorney and demanded to see the books, and was again told he was not a stockholder. On cross-examination witness testified Davis, in offering the stock for sale—

“said he wanted to place it with me, but the stock belonged to the bank, was the way I understood it.

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Related

General Bonding & Casualty Ins. Co. v. Mosely
174 S.W. 1031 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1915)
Cowboy State Bank & Trust Co. v. Guinn
160 S.W. 1103 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1913)
American National Bank v. Cruger
44 S.W. 278 (Texas Supreme Court, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 S.W. 813, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowboy-state-bank-trust-co-v-guinn-texapp-1915.