Galveston City Co. v. Scott

42 Tex. 535
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 42 Tex. 535 (Galveston City Co. v. Scott) 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
Galveston City Co. v. Scott, 42 Tex. 535 (Tex. 1874).

Opinion

Roberts, C. J.

The appellees obtained a decree establishing their right to a share of stock in the Galveston City Company, as now existing and acting under its act of incorporation, from which an appeal has been taken to this court. The jury was waived and the case submitted to the court upon the pleading and evidence, and it is assigned for error that the decree was not justified by the evidence under the law applicable thereto. There Avere various exceptions taken to the pleading and to the evidence, which, being overruled, are also assigned as error.

Without considering the questions arising upon these exceptions, for the present, it is believed that a satisfactory conclusion may be arrived at by a proper construction of the written instruments upon which the suit is founded, in connection with the evidence adduced in explanation of them.

The first question that presents itself is, what is the legal import of the certificate sued on, and what right did it vest in the holder when issued by White as the agent of Menard? It [553]*553is an instrument in the nature of a deed of conveyance for an undivided interest (the one thousandth part) of a league and labor of land, on, and including the east end of Galveston Island, to be held subject to certain articles of covenant and association with other jpersons, who should hold similar deeds for shares in said land, which articles were attached to, and made a part of tlip deed, and prescribed the terms and contingencies upon which such association was afterwards to be formed, as well also as the objects of such association, when it should be formed and put into action, which were to lay off and erect a city upon said land, for their mutual and joint profit. It made him an associate with Menard and other holders of like instruments, as a part-owner of the land then, obligated by a concurrent agreement to become, upon certain contingencies and terms (some of which were expressed and some not), an associate with Menard, and such others, as a co-partner in a partnership, in the shape of a joint-stock company, to be organized for the possession, management, and disposition of said land, in the erection of a city. There is upon the face of this instrument, when regarded as vesting in the holder a part-ownership of the land, a condition subsequent, which put it in the power of Menard to vacate it, upon failure of compliance, and that was the payment of an additional sum in blank, if indeed an additional sum over that of five hundred dollars was contemplated to be paid, according to the scheme of which this instrument was 'a part, under the direction of White, as the agent of Menard. This is not referred to as constituting of itself a want of title to part-ownership, but to show that it left a door open for Menard to set up and claim a want of compliance, if, in fact, an additional payment was contemplated in any subsequent adjustment of such right that may have been made by him.

The next question is, how was this interest of part-ownership to be changed into a partnership interest in the land \

By Menard giving notice to the shareholders at some time thereafter not named (being a blank in the articles), of the [554]*554number of shares then sold, after which the shareholders 'should appoint directors who should be the attorneys in fact of all the shareholders in the management of said business, and whose appointment might be renewed every year, in person or by proxy, of a majority of the shareholders. And a majority of said shareholders, or the board of directors appointed by them, might require Menard, upon notice given to. him, to execute a title to said land to trustees selected by them, to be held in trust for the shareholders or their assigns, and to be disposed of in lots under the direction of the board of directors.

But so far as the evidence shows, Menard never gave any such notice, and the shareholders never appointed any directors, and Menard' never executed a deed of trust to the land to trustees, named and appointed by the said shareholders, who held certificates of shares under Menard, through his agent, White. The association so as to make the part-owners or shareholders, under the scheme attempted to be carried out through White, wholly failed. It was abandoned by Menard himself in pursuit of another, and White himself, after issuing one hundred and eighty-one or one hundred and eighty-tliree certificates of shares, upon what terms and consideration does not fully appear, ceased to operate upon said scheme, and never, so far as appears, even attempted to form an association by a meeting of the shareholders of his certificates, but instead of that, finally acquiesced in, and took stock in another association, which supplanted his scheme ; which fact is mentioned here now only to show, by affirmative evidence, that he never carried out the scheme of association inaugurated by him, whether right or wrong, so as to make the persons associates-as partners, by virtue of their acts under his certificates, in compliance with their terms.

So far then as this point is concerned, up to the period thus far considered, it is perfectly immaterial whether White’s scheme of ultimate association was sanctioned in its origin by Menard or not. The failure of his scheme left those who held, by a full valuable consideration, shares in said land from him, [555]*555associates with Menard as part-owners, but not associates as partners, by virtue of the certificates or deeds issued by him, and so they may continue to be up to the present time, if he liad full authority, as would appear to be the case from his mortgage and power of sale, to do what he did, as to selling the land, unless such right has been submerged into some other, or they have lost it by limitation or laches, pleaded or to be pleaded as a bar to them.

It is contended by plaintiffs below, that the holder of the share one hundred and fifty-three in book A, issued by White, upon which this suit is brought, was fully recognized' as a valid right by the deed of trust, made at Richmond, by Menard and Triplett, in compromise of their conflicting interests; and that by said recognition, the holder of said certificate became an equal partner in the association, afterwards formed at Galveston, styled the Galveston City Company, in pursuance of the terms of said deed of trust to Jones, Johnson & Green.

It will be seen that the first branch of this proposition might be true without its being at all necessary that the second branch of the proposition should follow from it.

To appreciate properly each branch of the above proposition, and their true relation to each other, it is necessary to consider that this league and labor of land was granted by the Congress of Texas to “ Menard and such associates as he may hereafter include,” for the purpose of building a town upon it; that Hardin, Yates, Allen, Baker, Jack, and others, to the number of nine, who were in some way concerned with him in the grant, not disclosed in this record, were silent owners of some sort of interest in it, and that they were not the persons designated in this act, as the associates that he might thereafter include in the grant. From the mortgage to White, and the obligation to Hardin, both only a few days after the grant, it reasonably appears "that these nine silent owneffe of an interest confided the title to the land, and the management of the enterprise to Menard, holding him responsible only for their shares of the net profits of it, and that some such scheme as that which was [556]

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Related

Thompson v. Schmitt
274 S.W. 554 (Texas Supreme Court, 1925)
Yeaman v. Galveston City Company
167 S.W. 710 (Texas Supreme Court, 1914)
Yeaman v. Galveston City Co.
173 S.W. 489 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
42 Tex. 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-city-co-v-scott-tex-1874.