Galveston-Houston Interurban Land Co. v. Dow

193 S.W. 353, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 240
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 1917
DocketNo. 7314.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 193 S.W. 353 (Galveston-Houston Interurban Land Co. v. Dow) 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
Galveston-Houston Interurban Land Co. v. Dow, 193 S.W. 353, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 240 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by appellees against appellant, as maker, and J. H. Bute, as indorser, of three promissory notes for the sum of $5,009 each, to recover the amount due upon said notes, and in the alternative to recover against Bute the amount due upon five notes for $4,835.55 each executed by him and held by appellees.

The petition alleges the execution by appellant of the notes for $5,000 in favor of Bute and their transfer by him to appellees under a guaranty by him that said notes were good and would be paid at maturity, and that appellees agreed to accept the amount of said notes in satisfaction of the five notes of Bute before mentioned and to surrender and cancel said five notes when the three $5,000 notes were paid, and, if same were not paid, the five notes should remain in full force and effect.

Appellant pleaded non est factum in that its president had no authority to execute the notes; failure of consideration; ultra vires; and general denial.

Bute pleaded that, if it should appear that plaintiff could not recover against appellant because of said notes being without consideration, and executed by the president without authority, which allegations of appellant he adopted, then, the maker not being liable, he, as indorser, would not be; and, as to his individual notes, that three of them were barred by limitation.

Appellees by supplemental petition replied that the three company notes were properly executed and binding upon it; that appellant was a trading corporation, and the notes were executed in due course of business in pursuit of its purposes, and comprehended within acts to be done in its management; that the president expressly and impliedly and according to the custom of said business was acting with authority and within the scope and apparent scope of his agency as such official and was held out as having such authority; that in the doing of all of which the directors and stockholders acquiesced, and appellant was estopped to deny liability; that appellant was largely indebted to the American Loan & Mortgage Com *354 pany and Bute and others for services and other considerations, and issued paper to evidence same, and received- the benefit thereof, and was estopped to question same; that the issuance of said notes-was authorized by its charter and powers incidental thereto; that appellees acquired said notes in due course of business for value before maturity thereof, without knowledge of any defenses thereto, and were entitled to protection. As against Bute’s plea of limitation, appellees replied that the maturity of his individual indebtedness was postponed by agreement until the company notes fell due, payment of which was to discharge his indebtedness, and that he was estopped to set up such plea.

The trial in the court below with a jury resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff against both defendants for the amount due upon the three notes for $5,000 each; the aggregate amount of the judgment being*$22,-044.

The appeal is prosecuted by the Galveston-Houston Interurban Land Company alone.

Only two questions were submitted to the jury by the trial court. The first question submitted was whether the Galveston-Houston Interurban Land Company received a valuable consideration for the execution of the $5,000 notes, and the second question was whether it was agreed by the plaintiffs and the defendant Bute that the five notes for $4,835.55 were not to be paid if the $5,000 notes were paid at maturity. The jury answered both of these questions in the affirmative. There was no request by any of the parties for the submission to the jury of any other issue.

The evidence shows that of the 7,000 shares of the capital stock of appellant company 3,250 shares were owned by W. E. Richards, 3,250 by J. H. Bute, and 500 by J. O. Ross. These three men were the directors of the corporation. Richards was president and Bute vice president and general manager. According to its charter the company was organized for the purpose of “growing, selling, and purchasing seeds, plants, and trees,, * * * and to purchase and lease all lands necessary for that purpose.” The face value of a share of stock in the company was $50. The 50 per cent, of the capital stock which was required to be paid in order to obtain the charter was paid in 7,000 acres of land which was conveyed to the corporation by the subscribers to the stock above named. The company was chartered in November, 1909. In February, 1910, it conveyed 5,000 acres of its land acquired from Bute to the American Loan & Mortgage Company under a trust agreement by which the mortgage company undertook to act as agent of appellant in disposing of said land under an acre bond and stock scheme the details of which are not material to any question in this case.

Prior to the acquisition of the three $5,000 promissory notes appellees became the owners of five notes for $4,835.55 each, executed by J. H. Bute. The amount of principal and interest due on said notes at the date mentioned was $30,000. Appellees were pressing for a settlement of these notes, and finally, offered to accept $15,000 in full satisfaction of the debt Bute said he had no money, but, offered to give appellees three $5,000 notes executed by appellant and indorsed by him. The transaction by which the appellees became the holders of these $5,000 notes is thus stated by the appellee Dow:

“Dr. Bute said he did not have any money, but he said that he had equities in the Galveston-Houston Interurban Land Company that would' amount to a good deal of money, and that they owed him a lot of money for his equities in these lands, and finally he said that he- would give us their notes for $15,000 and that they would be paid when they were due according to the way the notes read. So we finally agreed that we would take these notes, contingent upon their payment at maturity, as an offset of his indebtedness to us provided the notes were paid, but at the same time we agreed that it didn’t release the original notes if these notes given by the Galveston-Houston Interurban Land Company were not paid.”

The three $5,000 notes were dated. November 1, 1911, payable to the order of American Loan & Mortgage Company one, two, and three years after date, respectively. Each of the notes were signed, “Galveston-Houston Interurban Land Co., by W. E. Richards, President.” Each of the notes were indorsed to-Bute without recourse by the American Loan & Mortgage Company on November 9, 1911. Bute indorsed them to plaintiffs before ma-. turity and for the consideration above stated. The notes were regular upon their face, and appellees took them without notice of any infirmity of any kind which would render them invalid, if any such infirmity existed.

Richards was president of the American-Loan & Mortgage Company. A man named Alverson was bookkeeper and auditor of said company and also of appellant. E. L. M. Beavens, who swore to appellant’s plea of non est factum, is secretary for both companies.

Appellant was given notice to produce its. books and those of the American Loan & Mortgage Company, but declined to do so on the ground 'that “they were too bulky,” but put in evidence portions of the journal and ledgers of the American Loan & Mortgage Company. Neither Richards, Bute, nor Al-verson testified in the case.

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193 S.W. 353, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-houston-interurban-land-co-v-dow-texapp-1917.