First National Bank v. Greenville Oil & Cotton Co.

60 S.W. 823, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 645, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 7
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 60 S.W. 823 (First National Bank v. Greenville Oil & Cotton 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
First National Bank v. Greenville Oil & Cotton Co., 60 S.W. 823, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 645, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 7 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

BOOKHOHT, Associate Justice.

This is a suit instituted by appellee, as plaintiff, in the District Court of Hunt County against the First National Bank of Greenville, a banking corporation organized under the national banking act, to recover the sum of $604.58, with legal interest thereon. The pleadings are sufficiently set out in the opinion, and hence are here omitted. There was a trial before the court, without a jury, which resulted in a judgment for plaintiff against the bank for the sum of $415, with interest thereon. Defendant . has prosecuted an appeal to this court.

Appellant’s first assignment of error complains of the action of the trial court in overruling its general demurrer to the petition. Under this assignment the appellant contends: “That the defendant, a national banking corporation, did not possess the power to guarantee or become surety for the payment of feed bills created by Ingram with plaintiff, and such an agreement as alleged by plaintiff is ultra vires, void, and not capable of being ratified; and as the feedstuffs were not furnished to or received by defendant, but were furnished to and received by Ingram, the owner of the cattle, the defendant was not liable as on a quantum meruit.

The petition, in substance, alleges that plaintiff was engaged in the manufacture and sale, at Greenville, Texas, of cotton seed meal and hulls, and that one J. R. Ingram, either alone or in connection with his son, was engaged in the feeding of a herd of cattle at Greenville;' that Ingram desired to purchase from plaintiff on credit, cotton seed meal and hulls for the fattening of said cattle. Plaintiff refused to sell him on credit. Thereupon Ingram made some character of arrangement with the First National Bank of Greenville by which said bank was to pay plaintiff for such feed; and thereafter the bank verbally informed plaintiff that if it would furnish Ingram such amount of cotton-seed meal and hulls as might be necessary to prepare his cattle for market at the prices agreed upon between the plaintiff and Ingram, the defendant bank would pay the plaintiff for the feed so furnished and delivered; that this offer was accepted by plaintiff, and in pursuance thereof plaintiff delivered to Ingram during the months of November and December, 1898, cotton seed meal and hulls to the amount of $1137.34, of which amount defendant paid plaintiff $533.76, and.re *647 fused to pay the balance. The petition further shows that under the arrangement made between Ingram and the bank, Ingram was to open an account with the bank and to remove his deposit from the Greenville National Bank to the defendant bank, and also pay interest to the bank on the money advanced by the bank to pay feed bills for Ingram, and .that he was to execute a mortgage on bis cattle to the bank to secure it in the moneys advanced by it, and when the cattle were sold the bank was to be reimbursed out of the proceeds of the cattle for all advances made; that in pursuance of said arrangement Ingram and his son did execute a mortgage to said bank on said cattle and certain real estate. The petition' alleges that the feed furnished by plaintiff was used in the fattening of said cattle, and that by means thereof their value increased $3000, and that without such feed the cattle could not have been placed on the market. It was alleged that Ingram had sold the cattle and paid the proceeds thereof to defendant bank, which the bank applied in extinguishment of a debt due by Ingram to it for moneys advanced for other purposes. By supplemental petition it was further alleged by plaintiff that it acted in the utmost good faith in accepting the proposition to it for said feed by defendant’s officers, the same being officers in actual charge and control of said business and acting within the scope of their authority; that it believed the officers of the defendant acted in good faith, and that they had authority to make the contract or agreement; that defendant knew all along while the feed was béing furnished that plaintiff was relying upon defendant’s promise to pay, and it knew that Ingram was feeding the feedstuffs to his cattle, and knew that he was unable to procure the feed from plaintiff without defendant’s aid, and never informed or intimated to plaintiff that it had no intention of paying for said feed until long after the cattle were sold and-it had received the proceeds. Plaintiff claimed that defendant is now estopped from denying its liability.

It is not contended by the appellant that the bank was prohibited by the law from making the contract. The contention is, that the contract, as alleged, is in excess of its charter powers, and therefore ultra vires. Contracts of a corporation are said to be ultra vires when they involve some adventure or undertaking not within the scope of their charter. Its act when ultra vires may be taken advantage of by the State, a stockholder, the corporation, or the person contracting with,the corporation. When the corporation, or the party contracted with, seeks to defeat the contract because it is ultra vires, the courts are reluctant to grant relief, it being an attempt to evade a contract which both parties have violated. 2 Cook on Corp., sec. 681.

The case of American National Bank v. National Wall Paper Company, 77 Federal Bepprter^. 85, was a case where the cashier of the bank guaranteed the debt of the Gauthier Decorating Company, to the wall paper company. The bank owned the stock of the decorating company and thereby received a benefit by the sale made to that company by the paper company. The decorating company failed, and in a suit *648 by the wall paper company against the bank to recover on the promise made by the cashier the bank sought to escape liability, first, on the ground that the cashier acted without the authority of the bank, and second, that the bank had no authority under its charter to buy and sell goods, and that any purchase of the goods by the bank or anyone for it was ultra vires. The court held that the bank, having received and appropriated the proceeds of the goods purchased, was estopped to set up in a suit for the price the want of power to make the purchase. See also Merchants Bank v. State Bank, 10 Wall. 104; People’s Bank v. National Bank, 101 U. S. 181.

Judge Thompson, in his Commentaries on Corporations, in discussing under what circumstances a corporation which has exceeded its charter power in making a contract may be held liable thereon, states the law thus: “The great mass of judicial authority seems to be to the effect that where a private corporation has entered into a contract in excess of its granted powers and has received the fruits and benefits of the contract, and an action is brought against it to enforce the obligation on its part, it is estopped from setting up the defense that it had no power to make it.” 5 Thomp. on Corp., sec. 6016, and note 3; also sec. 6025.

Where a contract between a corporation and another party has been fully performed by such party, and the corporation has received a benefit from such performance, it will not be permitted, as a ground for defeating its enforcement against it, to plead that the contract was executed in excess of its charter powers. Railway v. Gentry, 69 Texas, 625; Bond v. Terrell Mfg. Co., 82 Texas, 309; Logan v. Association, 8 Texas Civ. App., 490.

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60 S.W. 823, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 645, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-greenville-oil-cotton-co-texapp-1901.