Fort Worth Publishing Co. v. Hitson & Reed

14 S.W. 843, 80 Tex. 216, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1334
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1890
DocketNo. 6069.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 843 (Fort Worth Publishing Co. v. Hitson & Reed) 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
Fort Worth Publishing Co. v. Hitson & Reed, 14 S.W. 843, 80 Tex. 216, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1334 (Tex. 1890).

Opinions

HOBBY, Presiding Judge.

This action of the trial of the right of property grows out of the following proceedings: Appellees Hitson & Eeed, a firm composed of'Jesse Hitson and J. D. Eeed, the national Bank of Jefferson, E. G-. Thurmond, A. B. Smith, and T. P. Martin, who were plaintiffs in the lower court, caused attachments respectively in their favor to be levied in August, 1884, on the printing presses, type, engine, and other material used in a printing and publishing-business, as the property of the Texas Investment Company, Limited. The writs levied aggregated the sum of about $26,241.

On the 24th of August, 1884, the appellant through its president, A. M. Britton, filed affidavit and claimant’s bond under the statute claiming the property as belonging to the Fort Worth Publishing Company.

The cause was tried upon issues tendered on the one hand by the appellees (plaintiffs below), alleging in substance that the property at the time of the levy was subject thereto and was the property of the Texas Investment Company, Limited; and that the claim of the Fort Worth Publishing Company was fictitious and fraudulent, and made to hinder and delay creditors; that the Texas Investment Company, Limited, and claimant were one and the same, the latter having no distinct existence from that of the former. These issues were tendered separately by the several plaintiffs.

*223 The claimant filed demurrers to the issues above tendered and a plea of estoppel as to the National Bank of Jefferson, and alleged that it was formerly known as the Loving Publishing Company, incorporated in April, 1883, and by its amended charter in June, 1884, its name was changed to the Fort Worth Publishing Company; "that it was the owner of the property and in possession when levied on; that it had contracted several large debts, one to the City National Bank for $9000, and o'ne to Snider & Holmes for $4500, and to other persons amounting to about $30,000; that the property was not worth over $10,000 and its rental value did not exceed $500 per annum.

Plaintiffs denied that the claimant was insolvent; and alleged that at date of the levy the subscription to its capital stock, which was $100,000, was not paid and was still unpaid, and could be collected.

The cause was tried at the same time between all the plaintiffs and the claimant in the lower court, the plaintiffs assuming the burden of proof. The result was the jury found a verdict in favor of plaintiffs, that the property was subject to the levy, and its value was estimated at $20,000.

Hpon this verdict judgment was rendered by the court jointly in favor of all the plaintiffs against the claimant and A. M. Britton, J. H. Brown, H. C. Edrington, and Sidney Martin, sureties on the claimant’s bond, for the sum of $25,462, which included the value of the property as found by the jury ($20,000) and $2000 damages and $3462 interest.

The claimant appeals.

The second assignment has reference to the court’s ruling in sustaining, the demurrer of the National Bank of Jefferson, one of the plaintiffs, to the claimant’s special plea to said bank’s issue tendered in the case.

This special plea set up that the bank had seized the property by virtue of three writs of attachment as the property of the Investment Company, Limited, one of which writs was issued against the claimant; that when the affidavit and bond were filed in this cause the bank caused the sheriff to change the return on the last writ and hold the property as that of the claimant; that the claimant replevied and the' bank afterward prosecuted its claim to judgment, and was estopped from now claiming the property as that of the investment company, limited.

To this plea an exception by the bank was sustained, and this is assigned as error. We perceive no error in this ruling. The issue between the parties was as to the ownership of the property at the time of the levy, and this could not be affected by an indorsement on the writ subsequent thereto. There were none of the elements of an estoppel in this. The claimant was not deceived or misled thereby.

The most important question in the case is raised by the third, fourth, fifth, seventh, and eighth assignments, which may be considered prop *224 erly in the same connection and which relates to the admission of evidence offered by the plaintiffs over the claimant’s objections.

The bills of exceptions referred to under these assignments, and numbered from' one to six, show that the plaintiffs below in support of their allegations that “the property belonged to the Texas Investment Company, Limited, the defendant in the attachment suits, and was therefore subject to the levy, and the further averments that the Fort Worth Publishing Company was and is in fact the Texas Investment Company, Limited, and that its name of the Fort Worth Publishing Company is but another name for the former company, and that its claim is colorable and made to.delay creditors, etc., introduced in evidence the following:

The charter of the Texas Investment Company, Limited, and a written agreement between certain persons to form said company, and a transfer called “big heap transfer,” it being a written conveyance of a large amount of property by the Texas Investment Company to the Texas Investment Company, Limited, the defendant in attachment.

The charter was filed in the office of the Secretary of State on November 10, 1883, and was subscribed by J. D. Reed, Sidney Martin, Géorge Loving, W. J. Boaz, J. P. Smith, J. F. Evans, and W. J. Morphy. A capital stock of $100,000 was provided for by it, and it was incorporated for general business purposes, but none of them specified a publishing business. The agreement referred to was signed by the parties above named and others. It provided for the amount of stock each subscriber would take in the company. It further provided that “the subscribers hereto, upon such payments being made, shall be entitled to receive and have issued to them the stock of this company at par to the amount of this subscription; and further, upon such payment being-made as aforesaid, and as a part of the consideration of this agreement and for such payment, each subscriber shall be entitled to receive and there shall be transferred or issued to them stock of the Loving Publishing Company at par to the amount of his said subscription; and it is further agreed that no organization of said proposed corporation shall be had until subscriptions to the full amount of $100,000 shall have been obtained hereto.”

The transfer termed the “big heap transfer” consisted of a resolution of the board of directors of the Texas Investment Company, Limited, dated November 28, 1883, reciting that said company assumed the following debts of the Texas Investment Company; among which was a debt of the Loving Publishing Company for $5600.12, and a debt due Fore, Morphy & Henderson of $80,000, evidenced by nine notes described therein,- and provided that a conveyance to the investment company, limited, be made by the old investment company. This is followed by a conveyance from the latter to the former company of certain property, including one thousand shares of capital stock in the publish *225 ing company. The property in controversy is not named in the conveyance.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 843, 80 Tex. 216, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-worth-publishing-co-v-hitson-reed-tex-1890.