First State Bank of Agua Dulce v. First Nat. Bank of Robstown

282 S.W. 846, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 393
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 1926
DocketNo. 7539.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 282 S.W. 846 (First State Bank of Agua Dulce v. First Nat. Bank of Robstown) 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 State Bank of Agua Dulce v. First Nat. Bank of Robstown, 282 S.W. 846, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 393 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

FLT, C. J.

The pleadings in this case, together with several short orders, cover 219 pages of a transcript containing 292 pages. Pleadings supplanted by amendments have been copied, which merely tend to cumber the record and increase the labor of this court. We have ascertained from the second amended original petition that this suit was prosecuted by appellee against the First State Bank of Agua Dulce, E. L. Burks, H. C. Burks, H. C. Burks Cotton Company, Agua Dulce Mercantile Company, Den Newell and John \v. Kellam, Anderson Clayton Company, San Antonio Compress Company, J. U. Shepperd Gin Company, Aransas Compress Company, St. Louis, Brownsille & Mexico Railway Company, and Texas-Mexican Railway Company, to establish its right to certain cotton and to obtain the proceeds arising from the sale thereof. The cause was tried without a jury and a 10-page judgment was rendered in favor of appellee.

There is no statement of facts, and consequently the facts found by the trial judge must be 'the conclusions of fact of this court. The findings of facts cover 45 pages of the transcript, and of course are too bulky to be copied into this opinion. Appellant does not assail any of the findings of fact, but assails the conclusions of law of the trial judge in 11 out of 13 assignments of error. The twelfth assignment of error claims that the court erred in rendering judgment against appellant on its cross-action for the.proceeds-of 196 bales, and the thirteenth assignment complains of a failure to render judgment in its favor for the proceeds of 166 bales of cotton. We select from the findings of facts matters necessary to a proper decision of this case.

E. L. Burks lived in Agua Dulce, and went by the name of H. G. Bui-ks, and for 17 years had been an intimate acquaintance of Dale Walker, who at the time of this transaction *847 was, and ever since its organization Rad been, president of tbe -appellant bank at Agua Dulce, and knew that tbe real name of said Burks was E. L. instead of H. C. Burks. Tbe man having tbe last-named initials was a son of E. B. Burks, and lived in Concbo county. For several months prior to August 26, 1924, E. L. and H. 0. Burks were engaged in tbe mercantile and cotton buying and selling business at Agua Dulce under tbe name of tbe Agua Dulce Mercantile Company, using various names in such cotton business. They also owned a gin and gasoline station and ice business, as well as an 80-acre farm, dwelling houses, and storehouse. E. L. Burks was tbe active manager of all tbe various business enterprises, and bought cotton in Nueces and other counties; bis shipping points being Sinton, Robstown, and Aransas Pass, and other points where compresses were situated. For several months prior to August 19, 1924, ja. L. Burks and H. C. Burks, under their various and pseudonymous names were customers of appellant bank at Agua Dulce, and the latter, up to August 19, 1924, had been lending and advancing money to them to run their cotton business. The bank had a contract with the Burkses, under the name of H. C. Burks, which purported to give the bank a lien on aU cotton purchased by them, and agreed to deliver the same to a cotton yard, compress, warehouse, mill, or railroad company and deliver the bill of lading to the bank. The instrument was never deposited for registry and never recorded, - but was held by the bank. Under the agreement money was advanced to Burks, and he trusted them to apply the proceeds of cotton on the accounts. Finally Burks was indebted to the defendant bank on the cotton account in the sum of $37.262.89. Some of the stockholders insisted that the president, Dale Walker, require Burks to pay off his debt and get rid of his account. Prior to August 18, 1924, Burks had purchased and sent to Robstown 10 bales of cotton, and had received a bill of lading from the Texas-Mexican Railway, and at that time the cotton was on the platform. Burks, prior to the date named, shipped 156 bales of cotton to Galveston, and had a bill of lading from San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Company, at Alice. The appellant had advanced the money to pay for the 156 bales of cotton described, and that money constituted part of the indebtedness to the bank. On August 19, 1924, Burks had shipped 37 bales of cotton to Galveston, and had received a bill of lading from the Texas-Mexiean Railway Company.

On August 18, 1924, Dale Walker notified E. L. Burks that the bank could not longer handle his account and would not further finance him. Walker suggested that Burks get appellee to finance him. J. W. Craddock, a representative of W. L. Moody Cotton Company, with Burks, called on L. L. Nusom, president of appellee, and Burks was introduced by Craddock to Nusom. Nusom had not known Burks, and thought his name was H. C. Burks. Craddock told Nusom that Burks wanted a bank to finance his cotton business. Nusom had Burks to make a financial statement which showed his assets to be $115,000 and liabilities $16,120. Burks gave Dale Walker as a reference. The matter was submitted to the finance committee, which authorized Nusom to handle Burks’ account if he could give sufficient security to make the account safe. Burks went to see Dale Walker and had him to call Nusom on the telephone. Pie told Nusom:

“That Burks was on his way down to see him to make arrangements with the First National Bank of liobstown to finance his cotton account; that he was a capable and reliable man, that everything- was all right between Burks and the First State Bank of Agua Dulce, and his business with it had been entirely satisfactory; that Burks’ account had been a profitable one; that he would rather lose any account he had in his bank than to lose the Burks’ account, but that Burks’ business was larger than his bank could handle; that because two of his directors were competitors of Búrks they were making it very unpleasant for Burks and for him, and for these reasons it was necessary for Burks to make other arrangements; that Burks was absolutely reliable, well fixed financially, had a valuable lot of property at Agua Dulce; that Nusom could absolutely depend and rely upon anything that Burks did or said; and that he hoped Nusom would be able to accommodate Burks. During this conversation Nusom told Walker that if he decided to finance Burks he did not want any split accounts, and that if he decided to take on his account he would expect all of Burks’ business, and he was then assured by Dale Walker that if he would accommodate Burks he would see that Nusom’s bank got all of Burks’ business, and his bank would not thereafter handle any of it.
“These statements so made by said Dale Walker as president and cashier of the First State Bank of Agua Dulce to L. B. Nusom, president of the First National Bank of Robs-town, were voluntarily made, and were made in order to assist Burks in making other financial arrangements and to enable the First State Bank of Agua Dulce to get rid of Burks’ account, and to carry out the instructions of said directors as to the same, and were made for the benefit of said defendant bank, and with the intent and purpose of influencing and inducing the First National Bank of Robstown to take on Burks’ account and finance Burks on his cotton business, and were made and accepted by Nusom as statements of fact.”

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Bluebook (online)
282 S.W. 846, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-of-agua-dulce-v-first-nat-bank-of-robstown-texapp-1926.