Exline-Reimers Co. v. Lone Star Life Ins. Co.

171 S.W. 1060, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1378
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 7, 1914
DocketNo. 7117.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 1060 (Exline-Reimers Co. v. Lone Star Life Ins. 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
Exline-Reimers Co. v. Lone Star Life Ins. Co., 171 S.W. 1060, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1378 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

RASBTJRY, J.

This suit was instituted by M. P. Exline Company against appellee, but, pending its determination, appellant, Ex-line-Reimers Company, acquired the former company’s assets and prosecuted the case in its name. The suit was to recover a balance on an account for certain items of stationery, office furniture, supplies, etc., for which ap-pellee was alleged to be liable. Appellee denied by proper pleading all liability for the items of account. No further statement of the pleadings are necessary, since no question of their sufficiency arises.

The rights of the parties on this appeal depend upon the law arising upon practically undisputed facts; the following, supported by the record, being those essential to a disposition of the case: The articles specified in the account sued on were articles necessary to the conduct of the business of life insurance companies and were purchased on requisitions signed Lone Star Life Insurance Company, by J. M. Dawson, who represented L. H. Morgan, to whom the supplies, etc., were delivered. Morgan, claiming to represent the Lone Star Life Insurance Company, promised the account would be paid by the company, and upon such representations appellant relied without other inquiry or investigation. At the time the requisitions were made upon appellant for the supplies, etc., and at the time the same were delivered' to Morgan, he was attempting to organize said Lone Star Life Insurance Company, and in pursuance of that object had, on February 2, 1909, interested Messrs. Worsham, Keating, Slaughter, Gannon, Reardon, Baker, Green, Hamilton, and Edwards, all of Dallas, Tex., except the first named, to the extent that they signed articles incorporating the proposed company under certain statutory provisions then existing and delivered same to L. H. Morgan.' Morgan retained possession of the articles of incorporation until May 28, 1909, at which time same were filed in the office of the commissioner of insurance, etc., and approved by tha.t official. All the articles covered by the account sued on, except certain items hereafter referred to, were purchased by Morgan, claiming to represent the company, prior to the time of filing the articles of incorporation in the office of the commissioner of insurance. Those who signed the articles of incorporation, learning that Morgan had filed same with the commissioner, called a meeting June 7, 1909, of the incorporators for the purpose of dis *1062 cussing the status of the company. Morgan attended the meeting. The' result of the meeting was that the project was abandoned, and it was agreed that each incorporator should be released from prior tentative subscriptions to the stock of the company; the cause of the abandonment being the inability or refusal of any one of the incorporators to assume direction of the affairs of the proposed company. At this time Morgan requested that the incorporators assign the charter to him if they intended to abandon the matter,- since he had spent much time and money inj attempting its promotion, and since he believed he could organize same without reference to the participation therein of those present. This the incorporators agreed to do, and by direction of counsel for Morgan, in writing, assigned to him all their respective rights, title, and interest in the charter, on condition that the assignors should be released absolutely from all liability to the proposed company on their proposed subscriptions to stock, and giving to Morgan by the assignment the further right to assign to other persons the interests so assigned to him, as well as the right to constitute a board of directors for the company. Thereafter, on June 11, 1909, in pursuance of the authority contained in said assignment, a meeting of certain gentlemen claiming to be stockholders of the company was held; those present being Messrs. Morgan, Swain, Dawson, and Clark. These purported stockholders by their recorded minutes of the meeting, recited that L. H. Morgan had contributed $6,000 in money to the company, and directed that in lieu thereof stock in the company be issued to him in the sum of $4,000; the remainder so contributed to be subject to future adjustment. By direction of Morgan those acting as stockholders further directed that one share of stock directed to be issued to him be issued in turn each to Swain, Clark, Anderson, and Hannah, and 36 shares to J. M. Dawson. The assignment of the charter to Morgan by the incorporators of the company was acknowledged and ratified at said meeting, and all liability on the part of the incorporators to the company on account of their subscriptions declared canceled.

The individuals above named, acting as stockholders, also elected themselves a board of directors, and adjourned, and immediately convened as directors and elected Swain president, Hannah vice president, Dawson secretary and treasurer. This action was in turn approved, and the president authorized to make such contracts for stock subscriptions and to transact such other business as1 the interests of the company should require. Neither Morgan nor those to whom stock was directed to be issued at the time of the related stockholders’ and directors’ meetings were actual subscribers to the stock of the Lone Star Life Insurance Company. A few days after the meetings just mentioned, and on June 15, 1909, the gentlemen who had signed the articles of incorporation and executed the assignment of the charter to Morgan individually and collectively signed letters addressed to L. H. Morgan & Co., indorsing the proposed company, referring to themselves as charter members, and in some instances as subscribers to the stock or as intending to subscribe thereto. Subsequent to all the transactions detailed, and in December, 1909,. or January, 1910, the incorpora-tors, due to complaints of those who had subscribed to stock at the solicitation of Morgan, concluded that liability attached to them as incorporators, notwithstanding the assignment of the charter and the attempted cancellation of any liability on their part by those nominated by Morgan at the claimed stockholders’ meeting of June 11,1909, whereupon they assumed control of the corporation without objection, so far as the testimony discloses, on the part of Morgan and the officers selected by him, subscribed enough stock or secured subscriptions for enough stock to comply with the laws in that respect, as well as other things necessary to place the company in a position to commence operations, which was accomplished about March, 1910, at which time all connection of the directors and oifieers selected by Morgan with the company ceased. The directors and officers selected as last detailed promptly denied all liability for appellant’s debt when presented for payment, and repudiated the acts of Dawson in accepting the articles and promising payment.

At the conclusion of the trial and upon the evidence as adduced, the substance of the essential features of which we have related, the trial judge instructed verdict for the defendant, and in accordance with which judgment was entered.

[1] The controlling question in the case, and the one upon which the final disposition of the case depends, is whether appellee is liable for the debt sued on by reason of the related acts of the corporators and the subsequent acts of the officers of the corporation claimed to have been elected by the directors of the corporation at the meeting of June 11, 1909, and for that reason we shall not discuss the assignments seriatim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 1060, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exline-reimers-co-v-lone-star-life-ins-co-texapp-1914.