Dollar v. Lockney Supply Co.

164 S.W. 1076, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1294
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 164 S.W. 1076 (Dollar v. Lockney Supply 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
Dollar v. Lockney Supply Co., 164 S.W. 1076, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1294 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

HUFF, C. J.

This suit was instituted by appellant, J. F. Dollar, against the Lockney Supply Company, C. R. McCollum, H. Z. Pennington, A. R. Merriwether, R. E. Hadley, O. R. McCollum, and R. I. Wallingford. In his petition appellant alleges the Lockney Supply Company was duly incorporated as a private corporation, under the laws of Texas, on the 26th day of March, A. D. 1912, the purpose of said corporation being to conduct a general mercantile business in buying and selling goods, wares, and merchandise of all descriptions, with a capital stock of $25,000; that all of the named appellees were stockholders and directors in the corporation, except the appellee R. I. Wallingford; that the» corporation opened up a large stock of merchandise at Lockney, in Floyd county, and that on the 12th day of February, 1913, the corporation executed its deed of trust to R. I. Wallingford, trustee, for the benefit of its creditors, conveying all its personal property, real estate, chose in action, etc.; that the said directors were actively directing and controlling the affairs of said corporation and well knew, and ought to have known, and with the use of ordinary care and of such as it was their duty to have exercised might have known, all and singular the particulars and conditions of said corporation in respect to the matters set out in the petition; that the directors held out to this public that the corporation was of undoubted financial ability and deserving public confidence, advertising in various ways the value and character of its business, which was estimated at the value of $25,000. In fact, while the corporation purported to have a capital stock of $25,000 and its reputation of solvency, it did not have that sum, and long before the transactions mentioned it owed more money than the value of its assets and was to all intents and purposes in an insolvent and failing condition. It is alleged that the corporation, through its acting manager; A. W. Tanner, received from appellant seven bales of cotton October 8, 1912, for shipment on account of appellant with the understanding and agreement that the appellant would draw on said cotton the sum of $350, which he did, and it was further agreed that when said cotton was sold, if there was any money in excess of said sum from the proceeds of said cotton, it would pay the sum to appellant, and, if there was any loss when the cotton was sold, the appellant would make the loss to the company, meaning thereby that if said cotton sold for a less amount than the sum of money advanced to him, together with the commissions and costs of handling 'the same, appellant should pay the difference to the Lockney Supply Company. Under a like agreement the appellant, on December 25, 1912, delivered to the company nine bales of cotton, and on that day the company received from J. F. Gilly two bales; November 7, 1912, it received from C. É. Wells two bales, December 13, 1912, one bale, and October 16, 1912, eight bales. On November 8, 1912, R. C. Covington delivered one bale, and on October 10, 1912, S. J. Yerden delivered three bales; on October 10, 1912, W. H. Pope delivered five bales. J. W. Underwood delivered to the company during the fall of 1912, and up to February 12, 1913, eleven bales. The parties delivering cotton to the company, other than appellant, are alleged to have assigned to appellant their claim for the money due them by the company. The appellant sets out the number on the respective bales, the weight, the amount advanced, and the amount for which they sold. It is alleged in the petition that the Lockney Supply Company shipped all of said cotton to W. D. Cleveland & Son, commission merchants, at Houston, Tex., which said firm sold, and the proceeds of which they accounted for to the Lockney Supply Company. That, after deducting all charges and money advanced on the cotton, there was a difference due on all the cotton, which was itemized in the pleadings separately, aggregating the sum of $942.28. It is alleged the proceeds from the sale of the cotton were received by the supply company before the deed of trust was executed, and that demand for the amount due had been made of the company both before and after the deed of trust, and also from the trustee, R. I. Wallingford. It is alleged that the relation of debtor and creditor did not exist between appellant and his assignors and the supply company, but in receiving said cotton for shipment the supply company acted as commission merchant and agents for appellant and his assignors and bound itself to account to them for the proceeds of the sale of the cotton, but, instead of doing so, embezzled the proceeds from the sale of said cotton over and above the amount advanced. It is alleged the money was used by the Lockney Supply Company in its business and so intermingled with the assets of the corporation that the particular sum and sums due appellant and others on account of the cotton that the same could not be identified. It is further averred that the appellees, except Wallingford, who are denominated trustees in the charter incorporating the Lockney Supply Company, had knowledge of the facts of the misapplication and appropriation by said company of the said sums of money, or, if they did not have actual knowledge of said facts by reason of their office, they were chargeable with the knowledge of the embezzlement and misap *1078 plication of tlie several sums of money which the cotton owners were entitled to receive, and that each are jointly and severally liable to appellant therefor. That R. I. Wallingford, by virtue of the deed of trust, did not take title to said assets as against appellant’s demand,, and that the money derived from the sale of the cotton belonging to appellant having been merged and intermingled with the assets of the skid Lockney Supply Company, and a large portion of which is now in the possession of the said trustee Wallingford, appellant in equity is entitled to have his demand paid and satisfied out of said assets so in the hands of said trustee. It is also alleged that the supply company used the proceeds from the sale of the cotton to increase the assets of the company in connection with the mercantile business to the amount, of appellant’s demands, and that Wallingford, its trustee, has in his possession enough to cover the trust fund claimed by appellant, and that appellant is entitled to be preferred and should have priority of payment as against the general creditors.

. The appellees, the directors, answered by general and special exceptions and general and special answer, and appellee R. I. Wal-lingford answered by general and special exceptions and general and special answer. The court sustained the directors’ general and first special exception to the plaintiff’s petition, and, the appellant declining further to amend such, appellees were discharged by the judgment of the court rendered in their favor. Judgment was . taken against the Lockney Supply Company by default, and, upon issues joined between the appellant and R. I. Wallingford, the court .rendered judgment that appellant was not entitled to a preference lien in payment out of the proceeds, but had established a right to recover from the supply company the sum of $1,-008.12; that Wallingford go hence without day, .but that appellant recover said sum against the supply company. Appellant dismissed A. R. Merriwether from the suit. Appeal is prosecuted from this judgment. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and the case is in this court on the pleadings and findings of the trial court and without a statement of facts.

. The first assignments Of error complain at the action of the court in sustaining the general and first special exception of C. R.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W. 1076, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dollar-v-lockney-supply-co-texapp-1914.