Gardner v. Dorsey

272 S.W. 266, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 277
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 9, 1925
DocketNo. 1683.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 272 S.W. 266 (Gardner v. Dorsey) 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
Gardner v. Dorsey, 272 S.W. 266, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 277 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

Appellee filed this suit in the district court, El Paso county, against Lawrence Gardner, A. M. Heineman, and Hugo Eichwald, alleging that appellants, who were directors of the Empire Bottling Works located in El Paso, and while engaged in a directors’ meeting of said corporation, combined and organized themselves for the purpose of conducting a' business in Mexico, and organized therein what is known as an anonymous society, and gave to it the name of Compania Imperial, S. A., purporting to manufacture and sell beverages at Juarez; that in pursuance of the agreement appel-lees, as controlling directors in the Empire Bottling Works, sold to this Mexican company a quantity of equipment, bottles, wares, and merchandise, for which appellant Gardner was charged upon the books of the Empire Bottling Works the sum of $5,000, and certificate of stock in the Mexican company was issued in the name of said Gardner in the sum of 10,000 pesos; that the other appellants authorized the defendant Gardner to seek investments of capital for said Mexican company; that in pursuance of said *268 agreement Gardner on or about March 9, 1922, solicited appellee to purchase stock in the Mexican company, and in pursuance thereof made representations to appellee which were untrue and known so to be, but that said representations were made for the purpose of inducing appellee to believe the same, relying on which appellee on or about March 22, 1922, purchased shares of the capital stock of said Mexican company at the par value of 10,000 pesos; that, if the representations made had been true, the stock would have been worth 10,000 pesos, or $5,000, but in truth said stock was and is without value. The representations alleged to have been made were, in effect: First, that all the capital stock of said company, to wit, 100,000 pesos, had been fully subscribed and paid in, whereas in truth and fact only 32,000 pesos had been paid in, and that part of the assets represented by said payments, to wit, $5,000, was not paid in cash but in property of much less value than said sum; that, on account of such small part of the capital stock having been paid in, the company was without sufficient capital to properly conduct its business; that it had to go in debt and borrow money in order to conduct business.

Gardner further represented that he was well acquainted with conditions in Mexico and the state of the markets therein and what would be the future state of said markets for the products that were to be handled; that the stock of the Mexican company was better than that of the Empire Bottling Works and of the Southwestern Coca-Cola Company; that the Mexican company would make more money than either 'of said companies; that the stock would earn more money than the stock of either of said com.panies; that the Empire Bottling Works had always paid good dividends except during the year' 1921 when it had a book loss of $21,000, but that said losá was not real; same having occurred through writing off the values by way of depreciation of fixed assets; that Gardner, placed in the hands of appellee for investigation a statement of the assets of the Empire Bottling Works showing a book value of 79 per cent., and represented that what was written off would more than,absorb the 21 per cent, loss; that in making these representations Gardner spoke for himself and his associates; that with reference to the Southwestern Coca-Cola Company, Gardner represented that it owned valuable plants in Phoenix, Douglas, Globe, and Deming, and had paid in dividends as much as its original fcapital stock; that, its fixed assets were worth about its authorized capital; that it was doing a prosperous business.

It was further alleged that appellant Heineman, on or about March 15th, before appellee paid his money over for the stock, for the purpose of inducing him to complete the purchase, fraudulently represented that the Mexican company was a good company and would be a profitable investment; that he and Eichwald wére behind the company, and that any enterprise that he and Eichwald backed was a safe investment. These representations were made for the purpose of inducing appellee to believe that Heineman and Eichwald had invested heavily in said company, whereas, in truth the said stock was practically valueless, and neither Heineman nor Eichwald had invested any cash in said company; that the representations with reference to the value of the stock in the Mexican company was false and its stock was not as valuable as the stock of the other corporations above referred to; that the conditions were such that appellants knew that said stock was not as valuable as represented, could not have the prospect represented; that appellee was a stranger in El Paso when said representations were made and unfamiliar with business conditions in El Paso and Mexico and with the prospects of a Mexican company; that he relied upon what he felt to be the superior judgment of Gardner and Heineman and the knowledge they represented that they possessed, and that but for such representations and his reliance thereon he would not have invested in the Mexican stock; that because of said reliance' he on about March 22, 1922, paid over to Gardner $5,000 for stock in the Mexican company of the par value of 10,000 pesos; that Gardner had actual knowledge of the falsity of said representations; that for the purpose of inducing him to purchase these stocks ’Heineman and Gardner, for themselves and as agents for Eichwald, concealed the following facts: That Compañía Imperial had sustained a loss in excess of $1,800 during the year 1921; that the original 10,000 pesos of capital stock of the Compañía Imperial did not represent a cash investment but represented personal property of much less value which had been purchased from the Imperial Bottling Works; that neither' Heineman nor Eichwald had made a cash investment in the stock of the Compañía Imperial; that much of what appellants claimed as assets of said company was wine, whisky, gin, brandy, and agua caliente, of practically no value; that Eich-wald, whom appellants represented to be backing the Mexican company, was then and afterwards earnestly insisting that he had no faith in it and wanted nothing to do with it; that, had these facts been disclosed, appellee would not have'purchased capital stock in the Mexican company; that the concealments were material. Judgment was asked in the sum of $5,000, with interest, and for $10,000 exemplary damages.

The defendants answered separately. It is not necessary to quote the answers; it *269 being sufficient to say they present the questions raised by the appeal.

A brief outline of the facts disclosed by the evidence is as follows:

The Empire Bottling Works and the Southwestern Goca-Oola Company were corporations domiciled in El Paso, Tex. Their capital was all paid up. The defendants were stockholders in each of them. Heineman and Eiehwald were business associates and owned a controlling interest in the Empire Bottling Works. Each also owned a substantial interest in the Southwestern Company. Gardner was also interested in the latter company to just what extent it does not appear. Gardner for many years had been associated with Heineman in a business way. Heineman and Eiehwald resided in California, Gardner in El Paso. The defendants were directors and officers in the Empire Bottling Works. Heineman was president, Eiehwald vice president, and Gardner general manager.

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Bluebook (online)
272 S.W. 266, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-dorsey-texapp-1925.