Houston Cemetery Co. v. Drew

36 S.W. 802, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 536, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 802 (Houston Cemetery Co. v. Drew) 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
Houston Cemetery Co. v. Drew, 36 S.W. 802, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 536, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 111 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Justice.

— This appeal is from an interlocutory order of the District Court of Harris County appointing a receiver of the property of the Houston Cemetery Company and of a trust fund held by said company in a trust capacity. The order was made after a notice to the defendants in a pending suit brought by Octavius C. Drew and others, lot owners in the cemetery, and a holder of a share of the stock in the *539 company, against the corporation itself and the president, directors md secretary thereof, and the trustee in a certain deed of trust executed by the company upon the cemetery grounds.

The petition alleged facts to show and charge that the defendants had failed to maintain the cemetery in a proper state of preservation and adaptation for the uses and purposes to which it was dedicated; that the defendants had without authority increased the stock of the company from $10,000 to $100,000 by issuing watered stock; that they had executed a deed of trust in violation of law upon a part of the grounds of the cemetery, and that they had wrongfully misapplied a trust fund provided by the charter and by-laws for the purpose of improving and keeping the cemetery, by loaning it to the company and executing the above mentioned deed of trust, that they unlawfully imposed a tax upon a transfer of burial lots by the lot owners; and had closed, altered and changed the drives, roads, walks and other open places in the cemetery, as shown by the map and plot thereof upon the faith of which the lot owners had bought. Plaintiffs sought. appropriate relief in respect to all the matters complained of, and prayed for the appointment of a receiver, which by the interlocutory order appealed from was appointed by the court and invested with all the powers usual or incidental to his office and specially authorized and directed to carry on and continue the business of the defendant company and to take all such steps, perform all such acts and make all such expenditures-and incur all such liabilities as may be reasonably necessary to maintain the company’s cemetery property in a reasonable state of preservation for the uses and purposes of a cemetery, including the repair or construction of such bridge or bridges as may be necessary to that end, and also the obtaining of such supply of water, at reasonable cost, as may be necessary to prevent the waste, decay or destruction of such cemetery property or any part thereof, and to protect the franchises of said corporation from forfeiture from non-user or mis-user.

It would not be proper for this court to express an opinion upon the points raised that will determine the rights upon the final hearing of the case. Our decision upon the order of the court below appointing the receiver should be without prejudice to the ultimate decision, which the court may be called upon to make.

The court appointing a receiver is invested with a large discretion as to the necessity, and its decision of the facts upon the supporting and counter affidavits, when they are conflicting, must be accepted as conclusive. The question therefore that remains for the appellate court, is to determine whether or not the case made is one in which a receiver ought to be appointed. If there are any grounds of relief prayed for that would authorize the appointment of a receiver, it need not be made to appear conclusively that the plaintiff is entitled to recover upon them; it will be sufficient if it appears that he has a reasonable expectation of obtaining such relief.

The defendant company was chartered by a special act of the 12th *540 Legislature, approved May 12, 1871, Special Laws, First Session, p. 323. It was empowered to acquire and hold not exceeding 500 acres of land in Harris County, to be held for cemetery purposes only, which it was authorized to enclos'e, lay out, ornament and improve; and it might arrange and dispose of burial lots on such terms, and with such conditions for the permanent care and preservation of the cemetery grounds or any part thereof, as may be agreed upon between the company and the purchasers. The company was required to have a map and plot of their grounds and cemetery made from an actual survey, with the lots, drives, walks and alleys delineated thereon, and to deposit the same with the register of deeds, and to make the sales of the lots with reference to the map. It was its duty before the sale of any lots, by resolution of the stock holders, to fix a percentage of the receipts from the sale of the lots in the cemetery as a permanent fund, the principal to be invested in bonds and mortgages upon unincumbered real estate in the county of Harris, the interest to be used for the purpose of improving and keeping the cemetery in order. This percentage could never "be changed, and was a perpetual trust fund to be administered as a trust by the directors of the company. The capital stock was divided into shares of $100 each, the company to be organized when $10,000 was subscribed for and ten per cent of the amount paid in; and the stockholders were authorized to fix the amount of capital stock and to increase it to a sum not exceeding $100,000. A resolution of the stockholders fixed ten per cent as the percentage of proceeds from sales of lots to constitute the permanent trust fund; and the capital stock was fixed at $10,000.

The capital stock was afterwards increased to $100,000 upon the estimated increase in value of the land bought for the purposes of the cemetery; and certificates of stock were issued to the shareholders at the ratio of ten of the new shares for one of the old. This was apparently within the inhibition of the constitution (art. 12, sec. 6), against the issuance of stock except for money paid, labor done or property actually received. On December 31, 1893, the corporation, by its president and secretary, executed a promissory note to the defendant Thomas Tinsley, as Trustee of the Permanent Trust Fund of the Houston Cemetery Company, for the sum of $8285.52, payable one year after date, with semi-annual interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, and attempted to secure the same by a deed of trust upon a portion of the cemetery grounds. The fund had been used by the company and was not then on hand, and instead of replacing it, the company, which was the trustee thereof, undertook to lend it to itself. It does not appear to what purposes the money had been applied, but it was evidently misapplied, and the defendants should be required to restore the same. ' This may properly be done through a receiver. The court may in such case, however, enter an alternative decree making the appointment subject to the payment of the money into court within a specified time; but the court below did not see proper to do so in this case, and we cannot see that it abused the discretion vested in it, especially when this ground *541 for relief is considered in connection with the various other grounds, as well as the fact that the company probably had no authority to create a lien upon the land bought for cemetery purposes, or to lend the money upon such security. Special Laws, supra; 4 Am. & Eng. Encyc. Law, 55.

Defendants have allowed the bridge which is the main approach to the grounds to become out of repair so that it cannot be used. They have also stopped the water supply, so that the flowers and shrubs are liable to be destroyed by drouth.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 802, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 536, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-cemetery-co-v-drew-texapp-1896.