Davis v. Watertown Nat. Bank

178 S.W. 593, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 772
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 12, 1915
DocketNo. 7349.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 178 S.W. 593 (Davis v. Watertown Nat. Bank) 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. Watertown Nat. Bank, 178 S.W. 593, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 772 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

The record in this cause contains no statement of facts, in fact appellants state that no evidence, other than an agreement between certain of the parties which will be hereafter referred to, was introduced. Nor does the record contain briefs on behalf of appellees. Accordingly, we will found our decision of the case upon the issues presented in appellants’ brief and assume appellees’ acquiescence in all statements contained therein, as we are authorized to do by rules 40 .and 41 prescribed for the guidance of this court by the Supreme Court (142 S. W. xiv).

From appellants’ brief it appears that the pleadings in the court below disclosed the' following facts: Appellee Glen Rose & Walnut Springs Railway Company issued a series of four notes, each for $2,500. Three of the notes were acquired by appellants, Sara Ida Davis, Woodford M. Davis, and Dr. Francis M. Johnson, and one was acquired by appellee Watertown National Bank. Payment of the four notes was secured by trust deed and trust agreement, without preference to either note, upon the right of way and other property of the railway company. The notes were all indorsed by J. H. Farr and W. D. Morton. When issued the notes did not in fact represent a present consideration, but were negotiated with appellants and appellee Wa-tertown National Bank before maturity, and for valuable consideration. The notes were in the usual form of negotiable promissory notes and recited that their payment was secured by pledge of all the personal and real property described in the trust deed and should be invalid unless a certificate attached to the notes was signed by the Guaranty State Bank & Trust Company, trustee. The certificate was so signed. The notes were not paid at *595 maturity. Thereupon appellee! Watertown National Bank sued on the note acquired by it, asking appropriate relief against the Glen Rose & Walnut Springs Railway Company, as maker, and Farr and Morton, as indorsers, and joining appellants therein on the ground that they were the owners of the remaining three notes and entitled to participate in the proceeds of the sale of the security. Others were made formal parties to the suit, but it-it not necessary to detail them, nor the disposition made of them by the final judgment. Appellants adopted the pleadings of the Wa-tertown National Bank, and declared, as well, independently upon their notes against the maker and asked also for appropriate relief against the indorsers. Appellees Glen Rose & Walnut Springs Railway Company and Farr and Morton, among other pleadings, demurred to appellants’ plea for affirmative relief on the notes, upon the ground that it appeared that the notes were secured by lien on the property of a proposed railroad, the issuance of which was not shown to have been approved by the state railroad commission failing in which they were, by law, void. In avoidance of the plea so urged appellants, by supplemental plea, averred that the Glen Rose & Walnut Springs Railway Company was a suburban short line of about 10 miles and, by law, exempted from the control and regulation of the railroad commission. The same defenses that were urged against appellants’ notes were also urged by appellees Glen Rose & Walnut Springs Railway Company and Farr and Morton to the note and lien of the appellee Watertown National Bank, but were subsequently withdrawn, as will immediately appear. At trial the district judge sustained the demurrer to appellants’ cause of action and dismissed same. Judgment was rendered for appellee Watertown National Bank against appellees Glen Rose & Walnut Springs Railway Company and Farr and Morton, for the amount due on its note, together with foreclosure of lien upon the securities named in the deed of trust. This judgment was based upon an agreement between said appellees that the defenses on the one side would be withdrawn in consideration that the parties on the other side would extend the time of payment.

The first assignment of error is that the court erred in sustaining appellees’ special exception to appellants’ petition, because those provisions of the statute (chapter 10, arts. 6717-6732, vol. 4, Vernon’s Sayles’ Stats. 1914, popularly known as the stock and bond law), which invalidate every evidence of debt operating as a lien upon the property of railroad companies when unaccompanied by the certificate of the secretary of state showing the approval of the railroad commission of such indebtedness, are unconstitutional, because in conflict with section 19 of the Bill of Rights, declaring that no person shall be deprived of his property without due course of law, and are unconstitutional for the further reason that they are in conflict with article 12, section 6, of the state Constitution, declaring that “no corporation shall issue stocks or bonds except for money paid, labor done, or property actually received,” etc. Discussing the issues in inverse -order, we fail to see any conflict between that portion of the Constitution just quoted and the provisions of chapter 16 of the statutes. It was said in O’Bear-Nester Glass Co. v. Antiexplo Company et al., 101 Tex. 431, 108 S. W. 967, 109 S. W. 931:

That the purpose of the constitutional convention in enacting section 6 of article 12 “was to secure creditors, as well as stockholders, of corporations against the practice, which was too common, of corporations issuing fictitious stock and stock upon an insufficient consideration, whereby the actual capital was much less than the amount represented by the shares issued and sold by the corporation. The terms in which this section of the Constitution is expressed indicate the purpose that the assets of the corporation, should be something substantial and of such a character that they could be subjected to the payment of claims against the corporation as well as to secure the shareholders in their rights in the capital stock.”

The word “bonds,” it will be observed, appears in the provision in the same relation as does “stocks,” discussed in the foregoing case by the Supreme Court. Consequently the purpose of the section as construed by the Supreme Court as applied to stocks is necessarily the same as applied to bonds, that is, that they be not fictitious, but represent something substantial, i. e. “money paid, labor done, or property actually received.” Such being the purpose of the constitutional provision, it occurs to us that the provisions of chapter 16 are not only not in contravention thereof, but in entire harmony therewith, and are an almost necessary supplement to the constitutional provision in order to make it effective. While the constitutional provision directs that corporations, which include railroad corporations, shall not do the things therein prohibited, it contains no regulations or formalities relating to the issuance of stocks and bonds which will put upon notice and protect the prospective stockholder or creditor in ease the corporation has not in fact observed the constitutional injunction. That is precisely what the provisions of chapter 16 do when they direct that stocks and bonds (notes) of railroad corporations not approved by the railroad commission and certified to in that respect by the secretary of state upon the bond shall be void. And whoever purchases the bond of a railroad company not properly certified has constructive notice of its invalidity. The effect of the rule is not dissimilar to the statutory rule with reference to one who purchases a negotiable note after maturity, or of one who purchases before maturity with actual notice.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.W. 593, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-watertown-nat-bank-texapp-1915.