Harris County Houston Ship Channel Nav. Dist. v. Williams

87 S.W.2d 813
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1935
DocketNo. 10130.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 87 S.W.2d 813 (Harris County Houston Ship Channel Nav. Dist. v. Williams) 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
Harris County Houston Ship Channel Nav. Dist. v. Williams, 87 S.W.2d 813 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

As tried out below, the suit was by the appellee against the Greater Houston Improvement Company, a corporation, to recover the alleged unpaid balance due on fourteen vendor’s lien notes executed by the improvement company to Mrs. Rosa C. Allen on June 27th of 1927, as the deferred part of the purchase price for 1388.44 acres of land in the William Vince and Callahan & Vince surveys in Harris county conveyed by her to it on that date, and to foreclose vendor’s and deed of trust liens contemporaneously retained to secure the payment of the notes on 973.93 acres of the 1388.44 acres claimed to be still unreleased; she also named as a party defendant appellant, Harris County Houston Ship Channel Navigation District, a public corporation, a purchaser on the same date with the notes sued on of 484.69 acres of the land from the improvement company, seeking only as against the navigation district a foreclosure of her claimed two liens against the 484.69 acres that so went to it.

' The cause was submitted to a jury upon five special issues, two of which were unanswered because that was rendered unnecessary, the remaining three, with the answers thereto, being as follows:

“No. 1: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Robert C. Stuart was authorized by Mrs. Rosa C. Allen to represent her in effecting the sale to the' Greater Houston Improvement Company of the 1388.44 acres of land at the price and upon the terms in the contract dated May 3, 1927?
“He was so authorized.
“No.' 3: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Robert C. Stuart was authorized by Mrs. Rosa C. Allen to represent her in matters pertaining to the. sale to the Greater Houston Improvement Company of the 1388.44 acres of land from the date of the contract between Mrs. Rosa C. Allen and the Greater Houston Improvement Company through the final closing of the sale on or about June 27, 1927?
“He was so authorized.
“No. 5: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Robert C. Stuart was authorized by Mrs. Rosa C. Allen to represent her in negotiations with Thos. H. Ball, president of the Greater Houston Improvement Company on or about December 27, 1927, with respect to making an anticipated collection of Forty-six Thousand Dollars and One Hundred Thousand Dollars, evidenced by checks executed by the Greater Houston Improvement Company, payable to the order of Mrs. Rosa C. Allen, given to Robert C. Stuart on that date but dated December 27, 1927, and January 2, 1928, respectively?
"He was so authorized.”

Upon this verdict and its own findings on the facts in evidence, the court rendered judgment in appellee’s favor against the improvement company for the balance found to be due upon the fourteen notes, and against both it and the appellant for the foreclosure of the appellee’s claimed liens on both the 489.44 acres retained by the improvement company and on the 484.69 acres so conveyed by it to the appellant, ordering that retained by the improvement company to be first sold in satisfaction of the judgment, together with a further decree that the appellant, on a cross-action it had filed against the improvement company for the total purchase price between them on the 484.69 acres so conveyed by the one to the other, recover of the improvement company a money judgment in the sum of $303,405.41.

This court reverses the action of the learned trial court and renders in appellant’s favor the appellee’s cause of action against it for foreclosure, upon the holding that it is entitled to have and to hold the land so deeded to it by the improvement company free from the appellee’s liens, at the same time vacating the appellant’s money recovery against the improvement company, since it only prayed for that relief as an alternative, that is, in the event the appellee was given the foreclosure she sought as against it and the 484.69 acres it held, the rendition here of that part of the judgment the other way automatically wiping out any such liability; in support of = such conclusions, these findings of fact and. law are stated:

(1) Since the quoted findings of the jury are not attacked as being without support in the evidence by either side, they stand on the appeal as established facts; not only so, but the uncontroverted evidence conclusively shows that a like finding should be stated as to the relation toward this whole transaction between the improvement company and Thomas H. Ball, that is, that in all negotiationsjeading *815 up to the contract of purchase and sale of the whole tract between Mrs. Allen and the improvement company of May 3, 1927, as well as in all subsequent transactions material to this litigation, the improvement company was represented solely by Mr. Ball, its president; indeed, Mr. Ball was that company, it being merely his alter ego, since he not only owned or controlled all of its stock, but actually conducted its affairs and exercised its corporate powers as if they were those of himself individually, as is illustrated upon the face of the purported contract of April 28th of 1927 with Robert C. Stuart, whereby he, being the sole signer thereof, and that only in his individual name, undertook to make a fifty-fifty arrangement with Stuart, not only for ■ the disposition of the land to be acquired . by his corporation from Mrs. Allen, but ' also to divide the ownership of that corporation itself between them.

(2) Whether or not the alleged contract between Ball and Stuart, just referred to, was a valid and binding one between them, which, to say the least, is doubtful, neither in it nor aliunde is there any evidence that at any of the times, or in any of the transactions wherein Stuart was found by the jury’s quoted answers to have been her authorized agent, he had any such adverse or incompatible personal interest with that of Mrs. Allen as either destroyed his agency for her, or rendered it reasonably probable that any other ordinary person in his shoes would not háve acted in her behalf upon the knowledge he acquired while so acting with her authority.

(3) Capt. Crotty had first taken up and initiated through Stuart the negotiations with Mrs. Allen for the purchase of about 500 acres out of her tract that the navigation district desired, under authorization given him for that purpose by the district’s board of directors in January of 1927; Mr. Ball had no part in these negotiations until after Capt. Crotty had told him Mrs. Allen would not sell the 500 acres the district wanted, unless the entire tract was purchased; afterwards, that is, in April of 1927, Ball saw Stuart about the matter, and after some negotiations touching it between them, about the middle of that month he borrowed $5,000 personally and deposited it with Mr. Stuart for Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W.2d 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-county-houston-ship-channel-nav-dist-v-williams-texapp-1935.