General Bonding & Casualty Ins. Co. v. Mosely

174 S.W. 1031, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 324
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1915
DocketNo. 729. [fn†]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 174 S.W. 1031 (General Bonding & Casualty Ins. Co. v. Mosely) 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
General Bonding & Casualty Ins. Co. v. Mosely, 174 S.W. 1031, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 324 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

8224 Writ of error pending in Supreme Court. *Page 1032 This suit was brought by A. Mosely Bro., a firm composed of A. Mosely and W. A. Mosely, against the General Bonding Casualty Insurance Company (which will hereinafter be called the Insurance Company), John D. Stephenson, James A. Stephenson, Ed Kneeland, and T. L. Camp, to rescind the plaintiff's subscription of ten shares of stock of the Insurance Company and to recover $500 paid thereon, to cancel a note for the remaining subscription price and a deed of trust on certain property in Quanah securing the same, and to recover $280 interest already paid on such note.

The grounds assigned were fraudulent misrepresentation and invalidity of a note and deed of trust executed on account of a subscription to corporate stock. All of the defendants denied the fraud and invalidity and the defendant Insurance Company, owner of the note and deed of trust, prayed in reconvention for judgment thereon and for foreclosure of the lien. The court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for cancellation of the note and deed of trust, but denied the plaintiffs the right to recover the several sums of money already paid. A judgment was entered accordingly.

It appears that on the 27th day of August, 1910, defendants in error executed and delivered to a copartnership composed of J. T. Boone, J. T. Boone, Jr., W. B. Anderson, Ed Kneeland, James A. and John B. Stephenson, calling themselves Texas Surety Casualty Organization Company (hereinafter called the Organization Company), an instrument in writing, wherein they subscribed for ten shares of stock of a corporation to be thereafter organized, incorporated, and named, whereby they agreed to pay $2,250, as follows: $1,750 to George W. Riddle, Isaac B. Walker, and A. Ragland, trustees, to be held and disbursed by them according to a trust agreement made part of the subscription contract, which amount was to be paid at any time after October 1, 1910, and immediately upon receipt of notice from said Organization Company that the Insurance Company was ready for incorporation; the remaining $500 to be paid at once to the Organization Company. The defendants in error did not then pay the $500, but executed their short-time note for said sum, which was thereafter paid. The Insurance Company was incorporated November 30, 1910. Defendants in error had not at that time paid the amount of their subscription to stock, and on December 3, 1910, they executed and delivered to plaintiff in error their note for $1,890, being the amount of principal and interest due upon their subscription *Page 1033 contract, and at the same time executed and delivered the above-mentioned mortgage, to secure the note for $1,890, and two interest notes for $140 each, which were simultaneously executed. The two interest notes for $140 each were afterwards paid. On December 30, 1910, the Insurance Company issued its certificate of stock in the name of defendants in error for ten shares, certifying that defendants in error were the owners of ten shares of the stock "fully paid and nonassessable." This certificate was never delivered to defendants in error, but was held as additional security for the note. Plaintiffs in error offered to prove that on November 30, 1910, when the Insurance Company was incorporated, the Organization Company paid into the corporation in cash on account of plaintiffs' subscription $1,750, without any "strings," save that, when the plaintiffs furnished satisfactory securities to the Insurance Company for a loan of $1,750, the money should be returned to the Organization Company. The charter states that the Insurance Company is formed for the purpose of: (1) Transacting all kinds of surety business; (2) all kinds of casualty insurance business; and (3) all kinds of liability insurance business. The three incorporators, Anderson, Kneeland, and John B. Stephenson, as required by Vernon's Sayles' Civil Statutes, art. 4942c, filed with the commissioner of insurance and banking their affidavit reciting:

"All the capital stock of said corporation, to wit, $200,000, has been subscribed in good faith and fully paid for in cash."

This insurance company was organized under the provisions of chapter 108, Acts 31st Legislature 1909 (Gamel's Laws of Texas, vol. 14, p. 192). This act expressly provides that the articles of incorporation shall show that the capital stock has all been subscribed and fully paid up and in the hands of the corporators before said articles of incorporation are filed. Section 2, subd. (e). Section 3 provides that, when such articles of incorporation are filed with the commissioner of insurance and banking, together with an affidavit made by two or more of its corporators that all the stock has been "subscribed in good faith and fully paid for," he shall, upon payment of the charter fee, submit the charter to the Attorney General, and, in the event of its approval by this officer, the commissioner shall then authorize the company to organize. Section 4 makes it the duty of the commissioner, after organization, to thoroughly examine the company's affairs, and, if he finds that all the capital stock has been fully paid up, and is in the custody of the officers of the company either in cash or securities of the class in which such companies are authorized by this act to invest or loan their funds, he shall issue to such company a certificate of authority to transact business, provided, however, two officers of the company shall first file with him a schedule of the company's assets and their sworn statement that the same are "bona fide, the unconditional and unincumbered property of the company and are worth the amount stated." This act expressly repeals articles 3049 (Supplement to Sayles' Civil Statutes, 1908-10, p. 208), 3048, and all of chapter 4, tit. 58, Sayles' Civil Statutes. The repealed statutes did not contain the specific requirements set out above, but permitted payments to be made upon stock after incorporation and at such times and in such amounts as the subscription contracts and the stockholders might require. The changes in the law wrought by the amendment of 1909 demonstrate the intention of the Legislature to require all subscriptions to the capital stock to be fully paid in in good faith before organization and incorporation; that such payments shall be made either in cash or securities, readily convertible into cash; that such assets are bona fide the unconditional property of the company and worth the amounts stated.

On November 30, 1910, when the company was incorporated, defendants in error had paid nothing, and the corporators had no obligation of theirs to pay other than the subscription contract mentioned above. The law, therefore, which required that their stock be "fully paid for and in the hands of the corporators," had not been complied with. Under the Constitution (article 12, § 6), it is clear that the issuance of such stock upon a subscription contract, and before compliance with the statutory requirements was ultra vires and void. Mason v. First National Bank of Paint Rock, 156 S.W. 366. Plaintiffs in error sought to avoid this result by offering to prove upon the trial that the Organization Company had advanced to the Insurance Company on the date of its organization the amount due and unpaid upon the subscription contract of defendants in error. If this was done, the transaction was without the knowledge or consent of defendants in error, and has not since been ratified by them. If this testimony had been admitted, the trial judge should have at once directed a verdict for the defendants in error upon the theory that their debt was canceled.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W. 1031, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-bonding-casualty-ins-co-v-mosely-texapp-1915.