Fuhrman v. Fuhrman

302 S.W.2d 205, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 1791
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 24, 1957
Docket5208
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 302 S.W.2d 205 (Fuhrman v. Fuhrman) 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
Fuhrman v. Fuhrman, 302 S.W.2d 205, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 1791 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

; HAMILTON, Chief Justice..’

This is an appeal'from a judgment dividing property between á'p'pelfant,' Frederick H. Fuhrman, and appellee, Jean Smith Fuhrman, u^cm their divorce. ' Ño' appfeli ■was ’tafcfen 'from ’the. divorce'rdecree'Jitself, -the' divorce'¡■dS’ci'he .rh'aVinglbe.eqc granted previously on a severance- of the divorce matter - from, the property division. The final decree of the trial court, which included findings of fact and- conclusions of law, determined what was - separate property of the appellant and what was separate property of the appellee, and what was community property, and then divided the property between the. parties by setting aside to appellant all of the property found to be his separate property, and by setting aside to appellee all- property found to be her separate property, and by dividing the community property equally between the two. The appellant, in his appeal, does not complain of the formula used by the court for its division of the properties, but does complain that the court finds certain of his separate property to be community, and thereby awards half thereof to appellee as community property. The questions involved in this appeal and property particularly affected are divided into four general categories, to wit:

(1) 60,000 shares of stock in Fuhrman Petroleum Corporation, claimed to have been acquired by appellant under a written contract executed on. June 6, 1929, amended on February 19, 1942, and December 12, 1949, and ratified on February 16, 1950.

1 (2) The, Max Fuhrman stock, being 86,000.3 shares of • stock in Fuhrman Petroleum Corporation claimed to have been acquired by appellant from the estate of his brother, Max Fuhrman, who died testate on September 14,1938.

(3) Fuhrman Petroleum Company stock, being,,6,613.9. shares, of, stock' in Fuhrman Petroleum Corporation owned by'Fuhrman Petroleum 'Company,- a Delaware corporation, and distributed to appellant as the ' tfesult of the liquidation of the Delaware corporation. ' • " ■ ,

(4) 6,000 shares of stock in Fuhrman Petroleum Corporation claimed ío'háve been ...give»Jtd,-a-ppellant .by Max Fuhrman-on or „hbput-;S,qptembpF; 10,. 19,37.* ,

*207 The trial court, in its judgment, held that all of the above-mentioned stocks were acquired during the marriage of the appellant and appellee, and belonged to the community estate of the two. Appellant and appellee were married February 3, 1934. In January, 1927, appellant and his brother, Max Fuhrman, and an associate, founded Fuhrman Petroleum Corporation, a Texas corporation. At all times material to this suit, appellant was president and general manager of said corporation, and was one of its principal stockholders. The initial capital stock of the Fuhrman Petroleum Corporation consisted of 140,000 shares,, each with a par value of $1, but in the same year of its founding, the stock was increased to 250,000 shares with a par value of $1 each. On June 7, 1929, the capital stock was increased to 500,000 shares, with a par value of $1 each, and the corporation disposed of the additional’ 250,-000 shares by declaring a 100% stock dividend. As of the time the stock dividend was declared, the appellant, Frederick H. Fuhrman, owned 56,343 shares. On June 6, 1929, the day before the stock dividend was declared, the owners of all of the stock (except for 1,000 shares owned by the Estate of Tom King, deceased) entered into an agreement whereby they waived payment of dividends upon the stock dividend to be declared, until a 100%' cash dividend had been paid upon the former 250,000 shares. In addition, they agreed to donate, and subsequently did donate, 70,000 shares of the stock dividend to the corporation, 20,000 shares of which were to be sold or donated to the corporation employees, and appellant and others were given option to purchase the other 50,000 shares. These 70,000 shares are not involved in this lawsuit. It was further agreed that the remaining 180,000 shares were to be placed in escrow for appellant, his brother, Max Fuhrman, John I. Moore, and Barron Kidd.The purpose of the escrow' agreement was “as an inducement to the beneficiaries, respectively, to give such care, effort and’ consideration to the affairs of the ^corpora-. tion to the end that the stock máy rapidly" increase in value.” It was. specified that, if any beneficiary should cease to be in the service of the corporation, or should fail to serve it properly, his share of such stock should be delivered to the corporation and become free treasury stock. It was further provided that if any beneficiary died.before the end of the escrow arrangement, his death should be. deemed a partial failure to serv.e the corporation, and one-half of the' shares held for him should belong to his estate, but the other one-half should .be delivered to the corporation and become, treasury stock. Finally it was directed that the escrow agent should deliver the stock to the beneficiaries whenever a 100%' cash dividend had been paid upon the former 250,000 shares. Of the 180,000 shares, of stock to be placed in escrow, 60,000 shares, was to be held for the benefit of the ap-. pellant, and that is the stock mentioned in the above paragraph ■ numbered (1), and which the court found to be community property, and which appellant contends should have been found to have been his; separate property. The records of the corporation were introduced in evidence to. show exactly what happened to that stock, and there is no. dispute as to what happened. The difference between the parties is as to what the legal ..effect of certain happenings had on the status of the stock, as. to;: whether it was separate property of the appellant, or community' property of the marriage.

. On June 24, 1929, an escrow agreement, as provided for in the June. 6, 1929 agreement, was entered into with Republic Na-. tional Bank of Dallas, the appellant, his brother Max, and the two other beneficiaries being parties thereto. On that same day the stockholders and directors met and ratified the escrow agreement. Pursuant, to all these proceedings, on August 15, 1929,. Certificate No. 76 for 180,000ishares of the, corporation stock was issued to Republic National Bank and Trust Company, trustee". Of the 180,000 shares, 60,000 were held fpr. .appellant, and 10,000 for .appellant’s1 *208 brother, Max Fuhrman, and the other 110,-000 shares were held for the other two beneficiaries under the June 6, 1929 agreement. Soon after the aforementioned events, the latter two beneficiaries, John I. Moore and Barron Kidd, left the employment of the corporation and, pursuant to the terms of the agreement, the stock that had been held for them as turned back to the corporation as free treasury stock. Consequently, on May 26, 1930, certificate No. 76 was cancelled and, in lieu thereof, Certificate No. 129 for 70,000 shares was issued to said trustee. The stub for this certificate recites that it is part of the escrow stock, and that it came from original certificate No. 76. Appellant’s brother, Max Fuhr-man, died September 14, 1938. Of the 10,000 shares being held in escrow for Max Fuhrman, 5,000 shares were turned over to the Fuhrman Petroleum Corporation as treasury stock. Of the 5,000 shares that were due the Max Fuhrman estate, 500 had previously been assigned. Consequently, on September 29, 1941, certificate No. 484, in the amount of 4,500 shares, was issued to F. H. Fuhrman.

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Bluebook (online)
302 S.W.2d 205, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 1791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuhrman-v-fuhrman-texapp-1957.