Groesbeck Cotton Oil & Compress Co. v. Oliver

97 S.W. 1092, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 303, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 499
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 97 S.W. 1092 (Groesbeck Cotton Oil & Compress Co. v. Oliver) 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
Groesbeck Cotton Oil & Compress Co. v. Oliver, 97 S.W. 1092, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 303, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 499 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

RAINEY, Chief Justice.

The appellants, Stillwell-Bierce & Smith-Vale Company, Carver Cotton Gin Company, Briggs Machinery & Supply Company, J. C. Weaver, Kentucky Refining Company, and Stubbs & May, in their own behalf and in behalf of other creditors, brought suit as intervenors in the matter of the receivership of the Groesbeek Cotton Oil, Gin & Compress Company, against the receiver, W. P. Brown, and the sureties on his bond as receiver, to wit: Rod Oliver, W. T. Campbell and Sol Nusbaum to recover the sum of $25,000, the amount of said bond, alleging in substance that said receiver had received sums of money in excess of $25,000, which money the said receiver had deposited in the bank of Oliver & Allen, the Groesbeck National Bank and the Barron Banking Company, where said money was allowed to remain until said banks failed and said money lost. That said banks were not at the time of the appointment of said receiver, nor since, sound and solid institutions, nor was there reason to believe that they or either of them were sound or solid institutions, and the receiver was grossly negligent in allowing the money to- remain in said banks.

The defendants answered by general denial, and specially, that at the time said receiver deposited the money in said banks, and until their failure, he believed and the general public regarded them to be sound and solvent, and he had no reason to suspect otherwise. That he had no personal interest in said deposits, and after the failure he used the utmost diligence to regain said money and restore it to the estate.

*305 Interventora filed a supplemental petition, alleging in effect, that the receiver knew or could have known by the exercise of ordinary care that said banks were insolvent. That he knew that said banks were dominated, owned and controlled by Eod Oliver, party plaintiff in the receivership proceedings, and that he was seeking large sums of money from said Groesbeck Cotton Oil, Gin & Compress Company, and to foreclose certain alleged liens against the funds placed in said banks by said receiver. That at the time and long prior thereto and up to the failure, said Eod Oliver was in all kinds of speculation® and schemes and that it was unsafe to deposit money in said banks. That in the proceeding against the Groesbeck Cotton Oil, Gin & Compress Company for appointment of receiver, said Oliver and the Groesbeck National Bank were litigants and were adversely interested to- all the other creditors; which was known to said receiver at the time.

The trial resulted in favor of defendants, and interveners prosecute this appeal.

The evidence shows that in January, 1902, Eod Oliver commenced suit against the Groesbeck Cotton Oil, Gin & Compress Company, a corporation, and asked for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the assets of said concern. W. P. Brown was appointed and qualified by taking the oath and executing the bond in suit. The powers conferred upon him by the court are such as are usually conferred. Brown in the course of his duties came in possession of about $50,000, which he deposited with the Groesbeck National Bank at Groesbeck, Texas, Oliver & Allen, a private bank, at Hubbard City, Texas, and the Barron Banking Company, at Thornton, Texas. $31,000 of said sum was deposited with the private bank of Oliver & Allen at Hubbard City. The Barron Banking Company was located about eight miles from Groesbeck, and Hubbard City, by railroad forty or fifty miles, but through the country a much shorter distance. Oliver was largely interested in all of said banks and was prominent in their management and control. These banks failed and the money deposited therein was lost. Eod Oliver owned the majority of stock in the Groesbeck Cotton Oil, Gin & Compress Company and before W. P. Brown' was appointed receiver he agreed with Oliver that his fee as receiver should be $50 per month, and Oliver made his bond. L. L. Brown, a son of W. P. Brown, was working for the said compress company before the plant burned, after which the receiver was appointed; he continued in Oliver’s employment and assisted his father in looking after the receivership matters. W. P. Brown employed as his counselors the attorneys who represented Oliver in the receivership suit, who were permitted to examine the books of the compress company, but on one occasion L. L. Brown, who had the books in charge, refused the attorneys of interveners permission to see them and an order of court had to be secured before they were permitted to do so. Hp to the time of Eod Oliver’s failure, which wrecked the said banks, he was regarded as a good financier and perfectly solvent.

W. P. Brown testified, and his testimony is not contradicted, as follows: “Lived in Limestone County fifty-five years; was county treasurer six years> county clerk ten years. Have known Eod Oliver forty years, intimately acquainted with him. He was considered a man of wealth *306 up to the time of his failure, and good business man, good financier, and regarded as perfectly solvent. I had no reason to believe otherwise up to the time of failure. Knew his partner twenty-five or thirty years; he was considered wealthy and solvent; stood as high as any man in the State; considered upright and honorable, and every one trusted him. I divided up the money; thought it best. I acted upon my confidence in him; I acted on my own judgment. The money was deposited to my account as receiver. No agreement as to- length of time money should be in bank. I never had any information up to time of failure, that would cause me to think them insolvent. I sold a mill of the Groesbeck Oil Company at Thornton, and deposited the money with the Barron Bank there. That bank was considered, perfectly solvent, and I believed it safe; never had any information to the contrary until the time of failure. Had one hundred dollars of my own money in Groesbeck bank; I lost it. When I was appointed receiver there was owing to the Groesbeck Oil Company insurance money, and companies had been garnished. Hr. Etheridge got the money. I had no interest to be served by these banks. I never requested or got accommodation from either. I agreed to serve as receiver for fifty dollars per month; no one ever objected to Messrs. Etheridge or Williams representing me. No one suggested the impropriety of their representing me. The deposits were to bear no interest. After the banks failed I did everything in my power to get the money. My attorneys prepared petition in bankruptcy against Oliver & Allen. Have been paid 50 percent of the money deposited with Barron Banking Company. Am still acting as receiver. Have proven up claim against Groesbeck National Bank. My son, L. L. Brown, conducted most of the receivership business for me; he was an employe of the Groesbeck Oil Company, and continued after its failure in Mr. Oliver’s employment for a while. Think he attended to some of Mr. Oliver’s business during the time he worked for me as receiver. T had no interest in any of the banks; knew it was customary for banks to use deposits; did not think about the money being safer on special deposit; I would not have placed the money in the hands of any individual in this county whom I knew to be absolutely solvent; thought bank proper place, and thought them perfectly safe. Since failure I have declared 4 percent dividend, and have about one thousand dollars left.”

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97 S.W. 1092, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 303, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groesbeck-cotton-oil-compress-co-v-oliver-texapp-1906.