Great American Insurance Co. v. Sharpstown State-Bank

460 S.W.2d 117, 14 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 12, 1970 Tex. LEXIS 223
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1970
DocketB-1620
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 460 S.W.2d 117 (Great American Insurance Co. v. Sharpstown State-Bank) 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
Great American Insurance Co. v. Sharpstown State-Bank, 460 S.W.2d 117, 14 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 12, 1970 Tex. LEXIS 223 (Tex. 1970).

Opinion

GREENHILL, Justice.

This is a suit by Sharpstown State Bank on two promissory notes totaling $470,000, and on “note guaranty” bonds issued by the Petitioner, the Great American Insurance Company, guaranteeing the payment of the notes. Summary judgment was entered for the bank against the makers of the notes. No appeal was taken by the makers of the notes, and that matter is not before us.

*118 What is before us is this: In the action against the Great American Insurance Company on the bonds, the insurance company defended on the grounds that the bonds were not issued by it; i. e., that the bonds were not (1) signed by anyone with actual or apparent authority nor (2) delivered to Sharpstown by anyone with actual or apparent authority. Trial was to a jury. On a verdict for Great American on the issue of apparent authority, 1 the tried court rendered a judgment that Sharps-town take nothing. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment as to Great American.

The Court of Civil Appeals held that there was no evidence to support the jury’s findings of lack of apparent authority, and that there was apparent authority as a matter of law. It rendered judgment for the Sharpstown Bank against Great American on the bonds. 441 S.W.2d 548. We reverse the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals. We hold that the verdict of the jury is supported by some evidence; but since one of the points which that court did not decide is within its exclusive jurisdiction and may control the final judgment herein, we remand the cause to the Court of Civil Appeals for a consideration of that point. 2

The background of the case is as follows :

Frank Sharp, majority stockholder and Chairman of the Board of the Sharpstown State Bank, and two other men, William Nathan and Lee Wiley, were partners in a business transaction. The transaction was arranged with the apparent expectation that each of the three men would eventually own a one-third interest in a sizeable amount of stock of California Financial Corporation, a substantial financial conglomerate listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

Wiley was to borrow $300,000 from a bank other than Sharp’s, the Central National, to furnish the initial cost consideration for the transaction. If Wiley’s debt’ was unpaid at the end of six months, Sharpstown State Bank would make Wiley a $100,000 loan, and Oak Forest Bank, which Sharp also controlled through a majority ownership of the stock, would lend Wiley the remaining $200,000. Central National also required that $600,000, twice the amount of the loan to Wiley, be maintained on deposit with it by the Sharp-controlled banks for the entire duration of this loan. Charles McLean, president of Sharpstown, was aware of these maneuvers and disapproved of them, but he felt helpless to dispute Sharp.

While Wiley was the man to furnish the-cash consideration, Nathan’s part of the deal was to contract to purchase the California Financial stock and to execute any notes required. Soon after Nathan had tied up the stock as planned, Frank Sharp, the man who was seeing that Wiley would be able to get the loans for the venture, decided that he wanted out, and he instructed Nathan and Wiley to get him out. Nathan then began to look for a purchaser of the consummated transaction.

After some time, Nathan found Commercial Investment Fund of Los Angeles as a possible purchaser of the stock positions held by Sharp, Nathan and Wiley. Apparently Commercial Investment Fund was quite willing to purchase the stock position in California Financial if it could obtain the necessary funds.

Nathan, who was highly desirous of helping Commercial find the necessary funds, consulted with Charles McLean. Nathan described to McLean what had transpired and told McLean that Commercial wanted a $470,000 loan, $300,000 to purchase the stock contracts held in the name of Nathan *119 and his company, the Mayfair Investment Corporation, and an additional $170,000 for expenses of the transactions. Nathan stated that Commercial would provide a performance bond if Sharpstown would lend Commercial the money. Nathan further told McLean that the bond would be one written by an “A plus 5-A” company, or in other words, the strongest company rated. Nathan told McLean that a similar loan had recently been arranged with a certain California bank. McLean called the California bank, and an officer there named Gould confirmed that they were contemplating making a loan secured by a performance bond, though the loan had not been consummated. McLean apparently called Gould since a bank loan secured by a performance bond was a highly unusual transaction, as will be later developed, and one which none of the banking experts who testified had ever heard of prior to this transaction.

McLean went to Frank Sharp and told Sharp what Nathan had told him, McLean. Not surprisingly, Sharp agreed that if the promised bond were presented, there was no reason why Sharpstown could not make the loan.

On October 18, Nathan furnished McLean with a blank specimen of the type bond which Commercial would furnish, but with no insurance company listed as surety. McLean wrote the bank’s attorney for advice as to the sufficiency of the wording of the bond. The attorney replied that the bond should be made payable in Harris County, and was otherwise sufficient.

At this time, Nathan also furnished McLean with a financial statement, supposedly prepared by a certified public accounting firm in Los Angeles, showing Commercial’s net worth to be $11,000,000. McLean subsequently called Dun & Bradstreet for a credit report on Commercial and received an unusual report, — that no information could be released on Commercial as it had threatened Dun & Bradstreet with a lawsuit in this event.

On November 4, a man named Luftig and two other men, all described by McLean as looking like promoters, came to McLean and signed a note for Commercial payable to Sharpstown. Luftig was, or claimed to be, the president of Commercial, and he produced its corporate resolution showing that he had authority to borrow money on its behalf. Luftig left for California with the agreement that the bonds would be shortly forthcoming. The note was not to be effective until the bonds arrived.

Weeks passed and no bonds came, and McLean became convinced that none would come.

Toward the end of November, Nathan and a man named Bill Skillman, w‘ho identified himself as an insurance broker from Kansas City, told McLean that Great American was to be the surety on the bonds. December 8 was the date set for the delivery of the bonds. Meanwhile, McLean got a rating on Great American from his local insurance man which confirmed it as “A plus 5-A.” He also called Great American’s local agent to ask who had authority to sign bonds out of the Kansas City regional office.

On December 8 at 4:30 in the afternoon, Nathan, Luftig, Skillman, a person named Predovich, and a man named Gilbert Bart-ling came into McLean’s office. Skillman was identified as the broker on the bond, and Bartling was presented as a general agent of Great American from Kansas City.

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Bluebook (online)
460 S.W.2d 117, 14 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 12, 1970 Tex. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-american-insurance-co-v-sharpstown-state-bank-tex-1970.