Dittmar v. Alamo National Co.

118 S.W.2d 298, 132 Tex. 44, 1938 Tex. LEXIS 215
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1938
DocketNo. 7080.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 298 (Dittmar v. Alamo National Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dittmar v. Alamo National Co., 118 S.W.2d 298, 132 Tex. 44, 1938 Tex. LEXIS 215 (Tex. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Taylor

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

This suit is by Emmy, Charles and John Dittmar, and the Emmy Dittmar Improvement Company against G. A. C. Halff, Frank Wolff, W. M. Ratcliffe, the Alamo National Company and other defendants not necessary to mention. The Dittmar Properties Company intervened. The suit was filed November 30, 1931, at which time a temporary restraining order was issued restraining a trustee’s sale of one of the items of property involved herein. On March 4, 1932, an agreed interlocutory order was entered showing that the trustee’s sale was later consummated. When the case came on for trial on final hearing on September 6, 1934, plaintiffs took a non-suit. The trial nevertheless went forward and was before the court without a jury upon the affirmative allegations and cross action filed by defendants, Halff, Wolff and Ratcliffe, and the petition of intervention of the company. All parties including plaintiffs appeared either in person or by attorneys and participated in the trial. Judgment was in favor of defendants and intervenor on their respective cross actions. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment. 91 S. W. (2d) 781. The further statement of the nature and result of the suit is supplemental to that contained in the opinion.

*46 Mrs. Emmy Dittmar, a resident of San Antonio, was the owner of nine items of property alleged by her to be of the value of $4,000,00(100, incumbered with liens ranging in amounts on the respective items from $145,000.00 to $2,-500.00. The Dittmars, the principal plaintiffs, hereafter called plaintiffs, alleged that the negotiations between them and Wolff, Halff and Ratcliffe, the principal defendants, hereafter called defendants, resulted in the organization by her of a corporation, Dittmar Properties Company, with 2500 shares of non-par-value stock, and a transfer by her of the properties to the company in consideration of the issuance and delivery to her of the company’s stock and its bonds in the sum of $408,000.00 payable in five years and secured by a deed of trust on the properties. They alleged that as a result of the transactions she and the other organizers of the company, Charles and John A. Dittmar, transferred to Wolff, Halff and Ratcliffe the said stock and bonds for the purpose of procuring from them for herself a loan of $408,000.00, and not as an outright sale.

Plaintiffs in their verified petition attack the title of defendants to the 2500 shares of stock, alleging that while the stock and bonds were transferred to defendants and the transfer was a part of an artifice to cover up a usurious loan, and allege that defendants are holding the stock in trust for plaintiffs. They further alleged that they were entitled to a bill of discovery showing whether defendants had repudiated plaintiffs’ beneficial ownership of the stock and whether a full account of the receipts and disbursements of the income and revenues from the properties had been made.

Defendants filed their verified answer and cross action in which they alleged that while the Dittmars at one time applied to them for a loan on the properties, they refused to make it. They allege that sometime thereafter plaintiffs through their attorney, B. A. Greathouse, offered to sell them the stock and bonds of a company to be incorporated to which plaintiffs were to convey the items of property above referred to, and asked defendants to make an offer to purchase the bonds and stock of the corporation; that on May 27, 1930, defendants made an offer in writing to purchase the bonds for $408,000.00, subject to approval by their attorneys, Boyle, Wheeler, Gresham & Terrell, of the form of the deed of trust and bonds proposed to be issued, and the titles to the respective properties to be conveyed to the company; that it was made a part of the offer of purchase to provide for a series of options to Mrs. Dittmar to repurchase the stock and bonds upon terms and conditions not now necessary to state. Defendants allege that their pro *47 posal was accepted in writing by plaintiffs and returned to defendants; that their offer was what it purported to be, that is, to purchase outright the stock and bonds, and was not an artifice to circumvent the usury laws; that the details of the purchase were carried out in accordance with the terms of the written contract; that on July 18, 1930, they paid the cash consideration of $408,000.00 to the various parties designated by plaintiffs in accordance with the terms of the contract of purchase, and that on said date, at the written request of the Dittmars, executed to Emmy Dittmar the option agreement above referred to. Defendants further alleged by way of cross action that the claims set up in plaintiffs’ petition constitute a cloud upon their title to the stock of the company and that they were entitled to have same decreed to them free and clear of such claims and to have the cloud on their title to the stock removed; and prayed accordingly that plaintiffs take nothing by their suit and that upon final hearing defendants have judgment quieting title to the capital stock.

Intervenor specifically denied that the properties described in plaintiffs’ petition were in fact conveyed to defendants as plaintiffs alleged, and that such allegations cast a cloud upon intervenor’s title thereto; and alleged that in truth and in fact the fee simple title to said properties was in intervenor subject only to the liens described in the deed from Emmy Dittmar to itself; and prayed that upon final hearing it have judgment decreeing the fee simple title in the properties to be in intervenor subject only to the incumbrances outstanding when the properties were conveyed to it, and for judgment removing cloud from title.

The pleadings of defendants and intervenor, it will be noted, were not defensive merely, but were such as to constitute a proper basis for affirmative relief as prayed for in their respective pleadings.

Answers were filed by other parties but it is not necessary that they be noticed.

On March 4, 1932, an interlocutory judgment was entered upon the pleadings summerized above, agreed to by all parties. It recites among other things that lien was created on the 609-acre tract (item 1 of the properties) by a deed of trust dated October 1, 1929, executed to Wm. P. Fitch as trustee, and that on January 5, 1932, the trustee under the authority of the court made a valid sale of said tract of land to Alamo National Company, trustee, in satisfaction of an unpaid balance of $80,000.00 of the principal indebtedness and interest out *48 standing against the tract. It decreed that plaintiffs take nothing against the defendants and that all relief prayed for by plaintiffs affecting the said tract be denied. The sale of the property under the deed of trust was approved as valid and as vesting title to the tract in the trustee. It further decreed that the title so acquired by the trustee be quieted and confirmed as against plaintiffs and defendants as well as against the Alamo National Bank, B. A. Greathouse, and the intervenor herein, and decreed the issuance of a writ of possession placing the purchaser in possession. The concluding paragraph of the interlocutory decree sets out an agreement of the parties that it be entered as an interlocutory judgment finally adjudicating the right and title to the 609-acre tract and that upon a final disposition of the cause it be included in the final judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 298, 132 Tex. 44, 1938 Tex. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dittmar-v-alamo-national-co-tex-1938.