Houston Funeral Home v. Boe

78 S.W.2d 1091
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 20, 1934
DocketNo. 10253
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 78 S.W.2d 1091 (Houston Funeral Home v. Boe) 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 Funeral Home v. Boe, 78 S.W.2d 1091 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

LANE, Justice.

This suit was brought by the Houston Funeral Home, a corporation, J. H. Johnson and S. P. Miller, individually and as officers and directors of the Houston Funeral Home, against Henry W. Boe, Slim Kent, Buster Kent, George Boe, Frank Glover, C. L. Cotton, and one Rossin, relators, alleging in substance that they were in possession of the physical properties and assets of the Houston Funeral Home, a corporation engaged in the business of conducting funerals and embalming, and that they were properly and successfully conducting the business' of said corporation, and that on October 10,1934, the re[1092]*1092spondents banded themselves together and forcibly-seized the property of said corporation and unlawfully and wrongfully and fraudulently and by threats, all of which were fully alleged, ousted the relators from their possession and from their management of the property and business of the Houston Funeral Plome; that they had no adequate remedy at law; and that they feared that unless the equitable powers of the court were invoked and an injunction and temporary restraining orders issued in the cause that irreparable injury to relators and to said Funeral Home will result.

Relators prayed for a temporary injunction requiring respondents to restore the status quo of the business and property of said Houston Funeral Home, and that upon final hearing such injunction or mandatory order be made permanent. The petition of relators was duly verified and presented to Judge Hannay, judge of the judicial district court at Houston, who set the matter involved for a hearing on the l'ith day of October, 1934, and ordered that respondents appear and show cause why the temporary injunction and restraining orders prayed for should not be granted.

Respondents filed an answer admitting that they had' taken possession of the property and management of the Houston Funeral Home, but alleging that they had done so “in a quiet and peaceful manner.” The respondents also filed a cross-action in which they asserted that at á stockholders’ meeting on August 22, 1934, respondents Boe and Kent had been elected president and . vice president of said corporation and that relators Johnson and Miller had been illegally declared elected as president and secretary, respectively, and sought in said answer and cross-action to have the controversy between the various parties litigated and their rights determined as to the management and control of said corporation.

After argument presented to the court with respect to the scope of the present hearing, the court announced substantially that at this time he would hear only the matter of a temporary injunction and proof as to the allegations of possession and ouster. At the conclusion of the testimony the court rendered his judgment refusing to grant the temporary writ of injunction restoring the status quo of the property pending a decision upon the merits of the cause, to which relators properly excepted and gave notice of appeal, and the case is brought to this tribunal for revision.

Appellants insist that the trial court erred in refusing to grant the writ of temporary injunction restoring the status quo of the property and business pending a decision upon the merits of the cause, for the reason that the undisputed evidence showed that rela-tors were in peaceable and actual possession of the properties and management of said business of the Houston Funeral Home prior to October 10,1934, and on that date respondents forcibly and by forcible trespass and by threats and fraud invaded the possession and management óf relators and thus ousted rela-tors from their possession and management, and therefore the writ prayed for by relators should have been granted.

Under the foregoing assignment relators submit the following proposition: “Where, pending a controversy between claimants to property and a right of management and control of a business, the possession thereof is taken by one claimant by forcible trespass or actual fraud or wrongfully from the claimant holding and using said property, a mandatory temporary injunction should issue .requiring the claimant who has thus taken the property and management to restore it to the one from whose possession it was thus taken pending' the trial of the issues between them.”

We sustain appellants’ assignment and proposition. Henry Boe, one of the respondents, testified that respondents met in a café in the early morning of the 10th day of October, 1934, and from there they went over to the Houston Funeral Home; that their purpose in going to the funeral home was to take the place over; that he invited the other respondents to go with him to take the home over and to change it up and put some new employees in there; that he had Mr. Housch. to discharge some of the employees; that he told Mr. Housch that witness was now in charge of the funeral home; that he took the books of the corporation and put them in the hands of a public accountant and told him to start auditing them; that the books taken by him were books of accounts and notes; that he removed such books from Mr. Miller’s-office, where Miller kept them as bookkeeper for the corporation; that respondents got into Miller’s office by opening the door and going in there, just opened the door and went' in; that some of the books taken were in the desk and others were on top of the desk in Miller’s office; that in the evening of the day on which he took the books he told Miller that he had taken them; that Miller did not come back because the books of the corporation were not there but were in a public account[1093]*1093ant’s office to be audited; that after respondents took charge, J. H. Johnson, claiming to be president of the corporation, came back the same day and had not been back since that time; that Johnson brought with him several plain-clothes officers and some special officers to have them take respondents to jail, under the claim that they were disturbing the peace, and that in the meantime respondents had gotten in two bodies and the men were all busy at work, and that he (witness) had been out on an emergency call “and that he was backing in off the call”; that Mr. Johnson and these officers were there and the officers came up and said that Mr. Johnson had asked them to arrest respondents for disturbing the peace and that witness told the officers that he did-n’t see how respondents were disturbing the peace, that everything was as quiet as could be; that Mr. Johnson wanted all of them taken down to police station as he was going to charge them with disturbing the peace.

Being asked if it was his intention to keep Johnson and Miller both from participation and management of the Houston Funeral Home, he said: “Yes,.but; not to keep them away.” In other words, they could come to the funeral home if they wouldn’t bother witness in running the business; that on the 31st of August he wrote letters to Johnson and Miller demanding that they turn over to him all books, records, notes, and other papers in their hands; Johnson and Miller had, at the time he wrote such letters, the books, records, notes, and papers belonging to the funeral home.

Witness Charles Chapman testified that he was at the. Houston Funeral Home on the night of October 10,1934, and that while there he heard Buster Kent, one of the respondents and a brother of Slim Kent, another of the respondents, say if Johnson came around there and raised any more trouble, making any more trouble, he was going to get his shotgun and kill him; that he told Johnson what Kent had said.

C. L. Housch testified that he was employed as an employee of the funeral home by J. H.

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78 S.W.2d 1091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-funeral-home-v-boe-texapp-1934.