Davis v. Alwac International, Inc.

369 S.W.2d 797, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 2276
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 2, 1963
Docket6545
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 369 S.W.2d 797 (Davis v. Alwac International, Inc.) 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
Davis v. Alwac International, Inc., 369 S.W.2d 797, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 2276 (Tex. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

McNEILL, Justice.

Monorail, Inc., was organized in Houston in 1955 to develop monorail transportation. Its three moving spirits from mid 1955 through September, 1959, were Murel Good-ell, president, Weldon Appelt, a vice president, and appellant Felix A. Davis, a vice president, director and member of the company’s executive committee. By 1957 Mon *799 orail, Inc., was in financial straits. Knowing that the Swedish international financier, Dr. Axel Wenner-Gren was also very interested in monorail transportation, the three, Goodell, Appelt and Davis, visited him in Mexico City on January 7, 1957. As a result of that visit the Wenner-Gren interests invested $300,000.00 in Monorail, Inc., stock and advanced Monorail, Inc., $400,000.00 over the period of a year or more.

The present suit by appellant Davis was also a result of the meeting with Dr. Wen-ner-Gren. Davis sued appellees, Alwac International, Inc., Wegematic Corporation, Alweg Corporation and Monorail, Inc., insofar as now material, upon two causes of action. The first was for past due salary of $51,550.00 @ $3,000.00 per month which he claimed appellees owed him based upon a contract of employment made originally in 1956 between him and Monorail, Inc., and also upon an alleged agreement which was made when he, Appelt and Goodell visited Wenner-Gren in Mexico City on January 7, 1957. In addition, appellant alleged that Dr. Wenner-Gren, at that meeting, undertook to and did agree to pay him, Davis, through corporations controlled by Wen-ner-Gren, the salary which Monorail, Inc., had contracted to pay; that the four companies sued were controlled by Wenner-Gren and were a part of the Wenner-Gren interests. The other count in appellant’s suit was one sounding in tort based upon the allegation that the termination on September 27, 1959, of his employment with Monorail, Inc., under the written employment contract made by the board of directors of said company with him was the result of a conspiracy to discharge him made prior to June 1, 1958, between the four companies sued. Appellees answered the suit and pleaded, among other defenses, Subsection 2 of the Statute of Frauds. In addition, Monorail, Inc., filed cross-action against appellant to recover certain inventions or improvements made by appellant upon that company’s equipment while he was connected with it.

The case was submitted to the jury upon 51 issues. In response to Issue No. 5, the jury found that Axel Wenner-Gren on January 7, 1957, agreed to pay appellant’s salary “through corporations controlled by him”. In response to Issue No. 24, the jury found that on said date appellant refused direct employment by the Wenner-Gren interests and in response to Issue No. 25, they found that the “main purpose and object” of the agreement made by Dr. Wenner-Gren, was to guarantee payment to Davis of his salary if Monorail, Inc., did not pay the same. While Dr. Wenner-Gren testified in this cause by deposition, he was never made a party thereto. After verdict, appel-lees filed their motion for judgment, or alternatively, motion for judgment, n. o. v., or alternatively, motion to disregard certain issues. In accordance with the prayer of this composite motion, the court gave appellant judgment for exactly the amount prayed for by appellant in his motion for judgment but limited his recovery to ap-pellee, Monorail, Inc. Since Monorail’s position is different on this appeal from that of the other three appellees, when referring herein to the latter three, they will be called Alwac, Alweg and Wegematic.

Appellant attacks this judgment upon numerous grounds, none of which we conclude are sound. First, he says that since appellees, including Monorail, Inc., moved the court to render judgment in appellant’s behalf against Monorail, Inc., for the amount recovered, this necessarily established three things: (1) the amount of salary due $51,550.00; (2) that appellees adopted the jury’s answer to Special Issue No. 5 which found that Wenner-Gren on January 7, 1957, agreed to pay Davis’ salary through corporations controlled by him; and (3) in answer to Special Issue No. 7, the jury found appellant’s attorneys fees to be $14,000.00. Appellant then reasons from this premise that having recognized Wen-ner-Gren was to pay Davis’ salary through controlled corporations, and asserting Al-wac, Alweg and Wegematic were controlled by Wenner-Gren, they cannot escape the *800 same judgment. In answer to this proposition, it appears that at no place in the judgment rendered by the court does the court or Alwac, Alweg and Wegematic, or Monorail, Inc., for that matter, approve, recognize or adopt Issue No. 5. The judgment recites that appellant’s motion for judgment was overruled and then states :

“and the Court having heard and granted the defendant’s motions for judgment, or alternatively motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, or alternatively motion to disregard certain special issues, and alternatively objections to plaintiff’s motion for judgment, and plaintiff’s attorney having been served with the same and having appeared in answer thereto; and the Court being of the opinion that Special Issues Nos. 24 and 25 and the answers thereto are proper and are supported by the evidence and that they constitute a defense in law as to the defendants Alwac International, Inc., Wegematic Corporation, and Alweg Corporation, and the Court being of the further opinion that judgment should be rendered for the plaintiff Felix A. Davis against only the defendant Monorail, Inc., for $73,256.04 on plaintiff’s cause of action for salary (said sum of $73,256.04 consisting of $14,000.00 found as attorney’s fees and the agreed sum of $51,550.00 as salary, with interest at 6%' per annum. * *)”

In view of the alternative sections of ap-pellees’ motion, it cannot be said that the sufficiency of Issue No. 5 was recognized or approved. 4 McDonald, Tex.Civ. Practice, Sec. 17.32, p. 1414. And it was stipulated that the balance owing in salary to appellant was $51,550.00. The judgment for the salary, interest and atty’s fees went against Monorail, Inc., only. There is no rule that one (Monorail, Inc.) actually acknowledging owing the money may not, either by admission or confession, or on one of several causes of action, allow a party to recover judgment without helping him create a theory against other defendants who are differently situated. The fact that Monorail, Inc., is willing to acknowledge responsibility for a debt it admits owing does not bind the other appellees to accept the loosely knit terms of Special Issue No. 5.

In this connection, Alwac, Alweg and Wegematic assert that Special Issue No. 5 is too indefinite upon which to establish any liability against them for several reasons. First, there is no finding by the jury as to the identity of the “so-called” controlled corporations. Second, there is no finding that these corporations were the alter ego of the Doctor, nor that the Doctor was the alter ego of these corporations. Third, there was a failure upon the part of appellant to establish that Dr. Wenner-Gren was authorized by any of the appellees to speak for it. We think these points pose serious problems in connection with appellant’s proof. However, we think it unnecessary to pass upon the points as it is our opinion that the defense urged by Alwac, Alweg and Wegematic that the promise of Wen-ner-Gren, if made, was one to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another is sound and defeats appellant’s recovery as to the three.

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Bluebook (online)
369 S.W.2d 797, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 2276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-alwac-international-inc-texapp-1963.