Hapgood v. City Nat. Bank

230 S.W. 775, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 245
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 1921
DocketNo. 1768.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 775 (Hapgood v. City Nat. Bank) 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
Hapgood v. City Nat. Bank, 230 S.W. 775, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 245 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HALL, J.

This suit was filed by E. M. Rogers and J. J. Knight, composing the firm of Rogers & Knight, against Epps G. Knight, L. B. Mitchell, R. E. L. Knight, Alex F. Weisberg, Rhodes S. Baker, and the City National Bank of Wichita Falls, Tex., alleging in substance that plaintiffs were the owners of a certain oil and gas lease, in so far as it pertained to 15 acres of land in Wichita county, a part of block 73, Red River Valley lands; that they employed the defendant Epps G. Knight to sell their lease at a minimum price of $600.00 per acre, agreeing to pay him a commission of $25 an acre, which proposition the said Epps G. Knight accepted; that thereafter the defendant Epps G. Knight represented to them that he had procured a purchaser, to wit, the defendant L. B. Mitchell, at a price of $600 an acre, whereupon plaintiffs delivered an assignment of said lease to the City National Bank of Wichita Falls, upon the agreement that the defendant L. B. Mitchell would place in said bank the sum of $2,000 in cash as a forfeit should he refuse to take the lease; that the said L. B. Mitchell placed his check for said amount, drawn on the First National Bank of Wichita Falls, in said City National Bank; that said check was turned down on account of insufficient funds, and that plaintiff withdrew their offer to assign said lease to him. Plaintiffs further allege that Epps G. Knight was not acting in good faith as their agent in making the sale, but had conspired with L. B. Mitchell to purchase said lease for himself; that the bank unlawfully delivered the assignment upon the payment of the purchase price thereof to Epps G. Knight.

The cause was transferred to the Seventy-Eighth district court of Wichita county, and on January 6, 1920, an amended petition was filed, in which M. J. Bashara, P. P. Langford, N. B. Chenault, W. W. Silk, W. T. Willis, L. R. Crowell, W. N. Maer, O. B. Mauross, J. N.' Kilgore, H. A. Allen, Frank Collier, and W. F. Weeks, joined therein as interveners, alleging that they had purchased the lease from the plaintiffs Rogers & Knight, pending the suit, in which amended petition plaintiffs and interveners also sued A. O. Parks, R. J. Brown, and K. N. Hapgood, together with the other above- *776 named defendants, alleging substantially tbe facts as set up in the original petition, and further that Epps G. Knight was the uncle of J. J. Knight, and was spending the larger part of his time in the oil fields of Wichita county, Tex., and was familiar with values in said county; that Rogers & Knight had placed great reliance in Epps G. Knight and procured him to act as their agent in the sale of said 15 acres of land, relying on his statement with respect to its value, said transaction being at Eort Worth on or about the 23d day of January, 1919; that the 15-aere lease was not in proven territory, and .that its value was dependent upon surrounding developments; that Epps G. Knight conceived the scheme of defrauding Rogers & Knight out of said lease and informed them that he had sold the same to one h. B. Mitchell for $600 per acre, and requested plaintiffs to send the assignment to the City National Bank of Wichita Falls, and the $2,000 would be deposited by Mitchell in said bank in escrow, to guarantee his purchase, he to have 10 days in which to examine the title; that as a matter of fact that said Epps G. Knight was purchasing for himself, and said Mitchell had no interest in the property, all of which was withheld from Rogers & Knight; that the object and purpose was to give Epps G. Knight an opportunity to speculate on said lease, and the 10 days prescribed for examination of title was for such purpose; that the said Epps G. Knight procured a check from L. B. Mitchell for $2,000, knowing that the check was worthless, and caused said check, instead of the money, to be placed in escrow, this transaction taking place about the 20th day of January, 1919; that, in compliance with the request of Epps G. Knight, Rogers & Knight prepared an assignment to L. B. Mitchell for a consideration of $600 an acre, and sent the same along with a letter to the said bank, authorizing the bank to hold the assignment not exceeding 10 days from January 28, 1919, and to deliver it to L. B. Mitchell upon his payment of the $9,000 purchase price; that on January 29 the bank acknowledged receipt of the assignment and the letter from Rogers & Knight, which had been delivered to them in person by Epps G. Knight, and stated that it was clearing the $2,000 check; on January 30 it notified Rogers & Knight that payment of the $2,000 check had been refused, which notice reached Rogers & Knight at Fort Worth on January 31, 1919; that immediately upon receipt of said notice Rogers & Knight notified the bank by wire to return the papers, canceling the transaction, and subsequently confirmed the wire by letters and telephone communication; that Epps G. Knight learned of these requests on the part of Rogers & Knight to return the papers and upon the representation that he desired to procure the assignment for the purpose of having it examined by his attorney, made to R. E. Shepherd, cashier of said bank, induced the said Shepherd to permit him to take the assignment out; that, instead of returning the assignment, he placed the same of record and returned and gave Shepherd his own cheek for $9,000; that when Rogers & Knight learned of this transaction they immediately repudiated the same and demanded that the bank straighten the matter out; that they never accepted the $9,000 and did all in their power to get it returned; that thereafter the said Epps G. Knight purported to contract the sale of the property to one Rinker, said transaction being had some two or three weeks thereafter, and that Rinker filed his suit for the property on or about the 20th day'of February, 1919; that Epps G. Knight made a transfer of the property to Weisberg, Baker and R. E. L. Knight; that Rogers & Knight did all in their power to get the matter straightened out and were finally forced to file suit.

For cause of action against Parks, Hap-good, and Brown, plaintiff alleged in substance that they had contracted to purchase the property from Baker, Weisberg, and R. E. L. Knight, but that they had full knowledge of all the claims of Rogers & Knight as to the invalidity of the pretended conveyance from Rogers & Knight to L. B. Mitchell, who had in turn conveyed to Epps G. Knight, and who in turn conveyed to Baker, Weisberg, and R. E. L. Knight; that said Parks, Hapgood, and Brown had never in fact consummated the contract even at the time of the trial, but under some agreement between themselves and Epps G. Knight had withdrawn their money and were making a common fight with Epps G. Knight; that said Parks, Hapgood and Brown, even if they had parted with money, could not be innocent purchasers, for the reason that the assignment had never been delivered, standing on the same footing as a forged assignment, under which a claim of bona fide purchaser could not be made. Defendant Epps G. Knight answered by general denial and in substance that Rogers & Knight and the other plaintiffs who claimed under them were estopped and had ratified the transaction in that the value of the lease was fluctuating, and that they had remained inactive, waiting for the lease to rise or fall in value until they should determine whether to take the $9,000, or whether to disaffirm the contract and seek to cancel the lease, thereby placing the said Epps G.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 775, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hapgood-v-city-nat-bank-texapp-1921.