Development Investment Corporation v. Diversa, Inc.

393 S.W.2d 653
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 24, 1965
Docket7655
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 393 S.W.2d 653 (Development Investment Corporation v. Diversa, 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
Development Investment Corporation v. Diversa, Inc., 393 S.W.2d 653 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

DAVIS, Justice.

A summary judgment case. Plaintiff-appellant, Development Investment .Corporation, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, or DIC, sued defendant-appellee Diversa, Inc., hereinafter referred to as defendant, or Diversa, for the value of services rendered by plaintiff to defendant pursuant to an oral contract; or, for compensation, or a so-called “Finders Fee” allegedly due plaintiff in connection with the purchase by defendant of the stocks in three insurance companies from the Blakley-Braniff Foundation.

According to the pleadings, during the latter part of the year of 1961, Blakley-Braniff Foundation, hereinafter referred to as the Foundation, the owner of all the capital stocks of Girard Life Insurance Company, Girardian Insurance Company, and Guardian Underwriters Insurance Company, and their assets, advised Edwin T. Slaughter, Superintendent of DIC, that it was interested in disposing of the stocks. Slaughter secured from the Foundation and from the three insurance companies information concerning the stocks and assets of said insurance companies, their financial status, and other similar facts which would be of interest to a prospective purchaser. Slaughter then contacted Ernest D. Wright, Vice President of Diversa, along with many other prospective purchasers, advising them of the availability of the stocks for sale. Gerald C. Mann was Chairman of the Board and President of Diversa until November, 1962, and then was Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer. The information acquired by plaintiff was submitted to defendant. This included an appraisal of the real estate which valued the assets at approximately $60,000,000.00. They were trying to sell the three insurance companies’ stocks and assets to defendant for about 25 million dollars to 27 million dollars. Defendant, through Wright, advised the plaintiff on or about March 15, 1962, that they were not interested in the purchase.

A group of the plaintiffs immediately formed a new corporation known as Consolidated Exchange Corporation. Immediately after March 15, 1962, plaintiffs commenced to try to borrow $4,500,000.00 from defendant. Later, on April 29, 1962, they wrote a letter to Wright in which they sought a $6,500,000.00 loan. The loan was refused.

In March of 1963, Senator William A. Blakley contacted Gerald C. Mann for the purpose of selling him the stocks in the three insurance companies. Blakley made Mann an offer in which Mann, personally, was interested. Mann secured certain help to make an investigation of the overall condition of the three insurance companies. The information secured in 1963, and the price offered were so interesting that Gerald C. Mann, personally, signed a “Stock Purchase Agreement” on April 10, 1963, and put up a forfeit of $100,000.00. The Stock Purchase Agreement further provided that if the contract was not closed within 120 days that Gerald C. Mann would put up another $150,000.00, which he did. Although Gerald C. Mann signed the Stock Purchase Agreement, the Diversa, Inc. later made the purchase in July of 1963.

Plaintiff became a dormant corporation in November or December of 1962. Plaintiff filed this suit in the name of the corporation and took the deposition of Edward T. Slaughter. He testified that he was the President during the years 1961 and 1962, and submitted the stocks and assets for sale to defendant on a “look-see” basis; that defendant was not interested in the purchase, and returned all the information to plaintiff on or about March 15, 1962; that he, Edward T. Slaughter, did not have any interest in any remuneration from the deal, and did not feel like plaintiff did either. Edward T. Slaughter was the man that did most of the contacts with the defendant.

*655 Defendant filed a second motion for summary judgment in which it alleged, in part, as follows:

“1. Neither defendant nor anyone acting for defendant entered into any agreement, contract, or understanding, such as is alleged in plaintiff’s petition or otherwise, whereby there was imposed on defendant any duty owed to plaintiff which has been breached by defendant.
“2. (a) No officer, agent or employee of defendant had, or exercised, or displayed, any actual or apparent authority to make any contract, agreement or understanding of any character whatsoever with plaintiff on behalf of defendant. Neither defendant nor any officer, agent or employee of defendant did anything which would induce plaintiff or any representative of plaintiff to believe that any such officer, agent or employee possessed such authority or appeared to possess such authority.
“(b) Moreover, plaintiff’s representatives dealt with a vice-president of defendant, and such representatives of plaintiff actually knew that defendant’s vice-president had no authority to commit defendant to or assume or undertake for defendant, any obligation to plaintiff of any character whatsoever.
“3. A representative of plaintiff first presented the stock_of the three insurance companies referred to in plaintiff’s petitions, to a vice-president of defendant, stating and representing to him that defendant could examine into the companies and their assets without obligation, and upon the express representation, condition and understanding that if (and only if) defendant were preliminarily interested in pursuing further the possibility of acquisition of the stock_of the three insurance companies would plaintiff expect defendant to negotiate with plaintiff as to compensation to be paid plaintiff in connection with any acquisition of the stocks by defendant should defendant thereafter undertake to negotiate for the purchase of the stock_
“Such a condition and express understanding was ever fulfilled. Defendant neither had nor ever developed any interest in the deal presented for the stocks and so advised plaintiff, ending whatever the duty or responsibility there then was to plaintiff, if any.
“4. Plaintiff itself thereafter completely abandoned any proposal whereby it hoped to induce or interest defendant in considering a purchase of the insurance companies’ stocks, on any terms. Plaintiff did make one other approach to defendant, trying to get defendant to lend plaintiff or a corporation formed by plaintiff several million dollars so plaintiff or such corporation could buy the insurance companies’ stocks. Defendant had no interest in lending any sum of money to plaintiff, and refused such proposition. Defendant does not owe plaintiff anything for listening to plaintiff’s representatives try to induce defendant to lend a large sum of money to plaintiff or for plaintiff’s benefit.
“5. Months after all the foregoing, and having long abandoned any and all contact with defendant or defendant’s representatives with regard to the insurance companies’ stocks, plaintiff abandoned any interest in the stocks of the three insurance companies. Plaintiff became an inactive and dormant corporation, and long before defendant ever began to have any interest in acquiring the stock_of the three insurance companies plaintiff had gone out of business, and its officers, directors and shareholders had taken up other and outside endeavors and were no longer attempting to interest defendant, or any of the others they had meanwhile tried to interest, in the *656 stocks of the three insurance companies.

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393 S.W.2d 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/development-investment-corporation-v-diversa-inc-texapp-1965.