Hayden v. Dunlap

84 S.W.2d 306, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 701
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 18, 1935
DocketNo. 11647.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 84 S.W.2d 306 (Hayden v. Dunlap) 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
Hayden v. Dunlap, 84 S.W.2d 306, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 701 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

BOND, Justice.

This is an action for deceit, founded upon false representations and promises made by A. A. Hayden and J. Howard Hayden to John B. Dunlap, inducing Dunlap to purchase certain shares of stock of the Hayden Manufacturing Company, a corporation, from one L. A. Garlock, resigning a position he then had with L. H. Lacy Paving Company and accepting a position with the Hayden Manufacturing Company. The corporation’s general demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition was sustained, and upon refusal to amend the action against it, was dismissed.

In his petition, the plaintiff alleges that on or about March IS, 1931, he was induced to purchase from L. A. Garlock 1,500 shares of the Hayden Manufacturing Company’s stock and to resign a- position with the L. H. Lacy Paving Company, from which he was receiving a salary of $300 per month. Being financially unable to purchase the stock, which was well known to the defendants, and relying upon defendants’ representations and promises, he borrowed $7,500 from the Mercantile Bank & Trust Company, securing it with 222½ shares of the Union Title & Trust Company’s stock of the value of $22,250 and 500 shares of the Hayden Manufacturing Company’s stock, which he purchased from Garlock (this $7,500 was paid to Garlock), and at the same time he executed and delivered to Garlock his note for the principal sum of $7,500, and left with him as security the remaining 1,000 shares of the stock purchased.

The representations and promises alleged as the inducing cause of the plaintiff in making the business venture are as follows: (a) That the stock of the Hayden Manufacturing Company was worth par, namely, $10 per share, with promise that if the stock should depreciate in value, the defendants would redeem the depreciation; (b) that the business of the corporation during the preceding eleven months showed a net profit of right around $5,500; (c) that not over 2 per cent, of accounts receivable would prove uncollectible, and that the corporation would pay and had paid at least 10 per cent, on the investment; (d) that L. A. Garlock, who was at the time active vice president, was causing a great deal of friction in the inner workings of the corporation, for which reasons the defendants desired plaintiff to. take over Garloclc’s stock and replace him as vice president; (e) that plaintiff would be elected to the office of vice president and placed on the pay roll at $300 per month for a period of one year; (f) that A. A. Hayden was desirous of retiring from active participation in the business and wanted to turn the control thereof over to the plaintiff and the defendant J. Howard Hayden, jointly, and that the 1,500 shares to be purchased from Garlock, though standing in the name of the plaintiff, in reality, were to become the property of both the plaintiff and the defendant J. Howard Hayden, jointly; and (g) that J. Howard Hayden and the plaintiff would each set aside one-half of their, monthly salary to form a fund out of which to pay the 1,500 Garlock shares, and eventually purchase 3,100 shares owned by A. A. Hayden.

The plaintiff further alleged that the foregoing representations and promises were material; that they were relied on by him; that they were false; that the defendants well knew them to be false; and that he was induced thereby to purchase the Garlock stock, execute the notes therefor, resign his position with the paving company, and accept employment with the Hayden Manufacturing Company, all with the view toward eventually remaining permanently with the manufacturing company and he and J. Howard Hayden acquiring ownership and control of the business.

*308 Plaintiff further alleged that the corporation, instead of earning a net profit of 10 per cent, on the investment for the preceding eleven months, at the close of the fiscal year, March 31, 1931, its books showed a loss of $1,705.79 for the year; that instead of the accounts receivable showing a 2 per cent, loss, more than 50 per cent, were uncollectible; that the stock was “to all intents and purposes worthless”; and that the defendants failed to make the stock worth par, refused to pay him his salary and to continue him in the service of the corporation.

Plaintiff further alleged that after he borrowed the money from the bank, executed his note to Garlock, and entered upon the duties as vice president of the corporation, he was then advised by J. Howard Hayden that he could not go through with the agreement; that he could not set aside one-half of his salary to apply on the note; and that Hayden Manufacturing Company could not continue to pay the salary. As a result thereof, when the note to the bank fell due, plaintiff had to pay interest thereon amounting to $218.75; was, at maturity thereof, unable to pay the note or to extend it, and the bank sold the collateral put up as security, bid it in for $350; . the bank thereafter filed suit, and on June 20, 1932, recovered judgment against him for $8,534, with interest and cost, and that, by reason of said judgment and plaintiff’s inability to pay, his credit and reputation have been damaged in the sum of $50,000. Furthermore, the plaintiff alleged that he was not able to meet the Garlock note when it became due, will lose the 1,000 shares of Hayden Manufacturing Company’s stock put up as security, and will have a judgment against him for the amount of that note.

The damages which plaintiff alleges that he has sustained are, as follows:

(a) $218.75 interest he paid to the Mercantile Bank & Trust Company.
(b) $8,534, together with interest, on account of the judgment sustained against him by the Mercantile Bank & Trust Company.
(c) $7,500 with interest and attorney’s fees on account of the note executed and payable to L. A. Garlock.
(d) In the alternative, $15,000 as a difference between the value of the stock, as represented to him, and its actual value in the event (b) and (c) are improper items of damage.
(e) $22,500 by virtue of having lost the shares of stock in the Union Title & Trust Company.
(f) $50,000 damages to his credit and reputation, by reason of the suit filed against him by the Mercantile Bank & Trust Company.
(g) $2,100 on account of having to give up his position with L. H. Lacy Paving Cómpany, which paid him a salary' of $3,600 for the entire year, whereas he received but $1,500 from the Hayden Manufacturing Company.

The defendants, by general demurrer and special exceptions, challenged the entire theory of the plaintiff’s cause of action and the right to recover the alleged damages, on the ground that the damages sought did not constitute proper elements of damage under the legal measure of damages applicable. They further answered by general denial.

The trial court held by its action on the demurrer and exceptions that the damages sought were recoverable elements of damage, but required the plaintiff to elect as to whether he shall stand on the items (b) and (c) or item (d), supra; whereupon the plaintiff elected to stand on items (b) and ’(c), thus eliminating from the suit item (d), and the catise proceeded to trial before a jury on the remaining issues, in answer to which the jury made the following findings:

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.W.2d 306, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-dunlap-texapp-1935.