Dittmar v. Alamo Nat. Co.

91 S.W.2d 781
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1936
DocketNo. 3340.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 91 S.W.2d 781 (Dittmar v. Alamo Nat. Co.) 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
Dittmar v. Alamo Nat. Co., 91 S.W.2d 781 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

This is a suit by Emmy, John, and Charles Dittmar and the Emmy Dittmar Improvement Company, a corporation, against G. A. C. Halff, Frank Wolfe, W. M. Ratcliffe and others not necessary to mention. The Dittmar Properties Company,. a corporation, intervened in the suit. The Dittmar Properties Company was incorporated by Emmy, John, and Charles Dittmar with 2,500 shares of nopar value stock. By deed dated July 1, 1930, various parcels of land, incumbered by liens, were conveyed by Emmy Dittmar to the Properties Company in consideration of $10 and 8 per cent, bonds of the company in the principal sum of $408,000 payable to bearer. The payment of these bonds was secured by deed of trust of the same date, upon the lands so conveyed to the Properties Company. The Dittmars assigned these bonds and the 2,500 shares of stock in the Properties Company to the defendants Halff, Wolfe, and Ratcliffe, who paid therefor the face value of the bonds. The defendants gave the Dittmars an option to repurchase the bonds and stock, the option terminating June 1, 1935. The option to repurchase was at an advanced price above that paid by the defendants. The repurchase price varied according to the date the option was exercised. The theory of the plaintiffs was that the transaction was not a purchase of the bonds and stock by the defendants, but was in fact a loan of $408,000 to the Dittmars, 'evidenced by the bonds; that the transaction was a device to conceal the usurious nature of the loan. If it was in fact a loan, the same was usurious for the advanced repurchase price would have exceeded interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum. The theory of Halff, Wolfe, and- Ratcliffe was that the transaction was not a loan, but constituted a purchase outright by them of the bonds and stock, with an op'tion granted the Ditt-mars to repurchase the same at the advanced price stated in the option contract.

The petition is lengthy. Its main purpose seems to be to establish the transaction was a usurious loan and Halff, Wolfe,, and Ratcliffe were holding the 2,500 shares, of stock in trust for plaintiffs rather than as outright owners thereof. The prayer was for a temporary injunction, receivership of the properties, accounting of receipts and disbursements, “judgment establishing the trust relationship under which defendants Halff, Wolfe and Ratcliffe are holding the 2500 shares of stock in Dittmar Properties Company,” and general relief. There are special prayers for relief, but they are of no present materiality.

Halff, Wolfe, and Ratcliffe answered at length. Suffice it to say they denied the transaction constituted a loan and was a device to circumvent the usury laws, or that they were holding the stock in trust. They set up a cross-action which reads: “Further answering and by way of cross-action and complaining of plaintiffs herein, these defendants aver that the claim set up in plaintiffs’ petition herein constitutes a cloud *783 upon their title to said stock of the Ditt-mar Properties Company and that these defendants are entitled to have such cloud upon their title of the stock removed, and the title decreed in them free and clear of all claims of any kind or character as asserted by plaintiffs in said petition.”

As to the cross-action, they prayed “judgment quieting their title to said 2500 shares of stock of said Dittmar Properties Co.,” and for general relief.

The Dittmar Properties Company intervened, setting up:

“That the plaintiffs in this case, Emmy Dittmar, Charles Dittmar and John A. Dittmar, on the 28th day of June 1930, as incorporators, executed the charter of the intervener, a corporation under the laws of the State of Texas, the said named plaintiffs being the incor-porators and directors named in the charter of said corporation so filed with the Secretary of State of the State of Texas on the 30th day of June, 1930.
“That on or about the first day of July, 1930, the said above named plaintiff Emmy Dittmar conveyed to this corporation by good and sufficient deeds, duly recorded in the Deed Records of Bexar County, Texas, the properties described in plaintiffs’ petition in this cause, for the consideration of the capital stock of intervener, consisting of 2,500 shares, no par value, and its first mortgage bonds in the sum of $408,000, payment of which said bonds is secured by deed of trust as of date July 1, 1930, executed by this corporation to the Alamo National Bank, Trustee, to secure the payment of said bonds, and said stocks and bonds were delivered by intervener to said named plaintiffs in payment for said prop-crty ⅜ ⅜ ⅜
“That the allegations in plaintiffs’ petition in this cause that the properties described in plaintiffs’ petition were in fact conveyed to defendants Halff, Wolfe and Ratcliffe, instead of intervener, and the title held by said parties in some kind of a trust relationship for the benefit of said plaintiffs, are specifically denied by this in-tervener. That their prayer in said petition as to said alleged trust relationship with reference to said properties and the title thereto constitutes a cloud on the title of this intervener.
“That in truth and in fact the fee simple title to said properties is in this inter-vener, subject only to the liens described in the deed of conveyance of said properties from plaintiff Emmy Dittmar to this in-tervener and the deed of trust hereinabove referred to, and by reason of the conveyance of said title to this intervener by plaintiff Emmy Dittmar herein and their acts in organizing intervener corporation, and as the officers thereof in executing the said bonds and the deed of trust as aforesaid to secure the payment of said first mortgage bond issue, and said plaintiffs, having sold the stock and bonds of this intervener to third parties, are now estop-ped to deny that the title to the real estate which is the basis of the said stock and bond issue is vested in this intervener, and to assert that the title to said property is in fact in other parties subject to some alleged trust relationship.
“In reference to sub-paragraph (b) of paragraph 19 of plaintiffs’ petition this in-tervener says that it is under no duty or obligation to plaintiffs to furnish an account of any of the receipts and disbursements made in connection with the property described in plaintiffs’ petition, but nevertheless, for the information of this court', should such information be desired, this intervener is at this time filing with the papers in this cause a full, complete, itemized statement of such receipts and disbursements.
“Premises considered, intervener prays that on hearing hereof it have judgment removing the cloud on its title to said properties described in plaintiffs’ petition, other than said 609 acres, and judgment decreeing the fee simple title in said properties to be in this intervener, subject only to the liens described in the deed of conveyance of said properties, other than the 609 acres, and the deed of trust lien to secure the payment of the first mortgage bonds issued by intervener and delivered to said plaintiffs, for costs and for such other relief, general and special, as this intervener may be entitled to in law or equity.”

To the cross-action of Halff, Wolfe, and Ratcliffe, and the plea in intervention, the plaintiffs filed no answer.

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.W.2d 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dittmar-v-alamo-nat-co-texapp-1936.