International Aircraft Sales, Inc. v. Betancourt

582 S.W.2d 632, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3727
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 1979
Docket1367
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 582 S.W.2d 632 (International Aircraft Sales, Inc. v. Betancourt) 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
International Aircraft Sales, Inc. v. Betancourt, 582 S.W.2d 632, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3727 (Tex. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION

YOUNG, Justice.

In this appeal arising from a suit on a note, the primary issue is whether the defendants established as a matter of law their defense of illegality of the origin of the note. Vendors of electronic components, Lionel Betancourt and John Phillips, appellees, sued International Aircraft Sales, Inc., and vendees, Raymond Kyral, Jr., and George Whitley, all appellants, on a $147,-196.00 negotiable note which represented the balance due for goods received. Defendants answered asserting three defenses: 1) want of consideration because the components were, in effect, consigned to Kyral and Whitley rather than sold to them; 2) fraudulent inducement to sign the note herein; and 3) unenforceability of the note because it arose out of an illegal transaction, i. e., smuggling.

Trial was before a jury. The only issues considered by the jury dealt with the first and second of the above defenses. The remaining illegality defense was not submitted to the jury since the appellants considered it to be established as a matter of law. The jury found that the transaction here was a sale and that the appellees did not fraudulently induce the appellants to sign the note. Appellants moved that the court enter judgment in their favor based upon the illegality defense. The trial court, however, overruled the defendants’ motion and entered judgment for the appellees. This appeal by the defendants followed on only one point of error; namely whether the illegality defense was established as a matter of law.

In the early part of 1975, Kyral and Whitley began smuggling television sets, stereos and other electronic components by airplane from Brownsville, Texas, to various places in Mexico. Sometime later, Be-tancourt and Phillips were introduced to Kyral and Whitley through a mutual friend. Betancourt and Phillips, who were already engaged in the sale of electronic components in San Benito, Texas, worked out an arrangement to sell Kyral and Whitley the *634 components to be smuggled into Mexico. Betancourt and Phillips were to order the merchandise from their suppliers and have it delivered in San Benito. Then, according to the instructions of Kyral and Whitley, they (Betancourt and Phillips) were to remove the electronic components from their cartons, cut the cartons apart, and put the cartons, inside out, back around the components. The cartons were then to be wrapped in brown kraft paper and the insignia “K & W” was to be written on the outside. Whereupon Betancourt and Phillips were then to make up 1,200 to 1,400 pound airplane loads of these rewrapped units and deliver them to Kyral ⅛ warehouse in Brownsville. Generally, Betan-court and Phillips were also to decide which components would comprise each load.

Betancourt and Phillips also were to arrange their invoices and other documentation so as to facilitate the smuggling of the goods into Mexico. Kyral and Whitley then stamped these documents to show that the goods had been exported so that Betancourt and Phillips would not be liable for any state sales tax.

The parties stipulated that it was illegal to ship this merchandise into Mexico. They also stipulated that Betancourt and Phillips knew that the merchandise in question was to be exported to Mexico and sold in Mexico. And the evidence is undisputed that Betancourt and Phillips knew that this was an illegal enterprise in Mexico. They also knew that Kyral had had an airplane confiscated in Mexico and that there was a substantial risk of having shipments confiscated.

Deliveries began in late 1975. Kyral and Whitley had told Betancourt and Phillips that they would be receiving their money about ten days from delivery. The payment would be in the form of checks written on a Mexican bank. During 1975, payments were made in five or ten days from delivery and everything went according to plans. In 1976, though, it began taking fifteen days or more for payment. On March 8, Betancourt and Phillips were notified that a Mexican check given to them as payment was worthless; as it turned out, every check they had received since January 8, 1976, was worthless. Those bogus checks caused their bank account to be overdrawn in an amount exceeding $200,-000.00. Apparently, the purchasers in Mexico were paying for the smuggled goods with worthless checks, and Kyral and Whitley consequently ran out of money. Kyral then told Betancourt and Phillips that the checks would be taken care of in a few days. Over a. period of about four weeks, Kyral did pay some of the checks, but only to the extent of $110,000.00.

In order to cover their resulting overdraft at the bank, Betancourt and Phillips executed a note to their bank in San Benito. Betancourt and Phillips then entered into a series of discussions and visits with Kyral in which payments on the dishonored checks were discussed. At one point, Kyral was asked to sign as surety of the note executed in favor of the bank. But he refused to do this. After a series of further discussions concerning how to take care of the dishonored checks, Betancourt and Phillips directed their attorney to draw up a negotiable note and two security agreements covering the four airplanes that Kyral and Whitley were using to transport the electronic components into Mexico.

On June 10, 1976, Betancourt and Phillips drove to Brownsville to meet with Kyral and Whitley. When Betancourt and Phillips arrived, Whitley was not yet present, so Betancourt and Phillips discussed the terms of the note and security agreements with Kyral. The evidence is undisputed that these discussions were directed toward honoring the checks. When Whitley arrived, both he and Kyral privately discussed the terms of the note and security agreements. After about ten minutes of deliberation, they met again with Betancourt and Phillips and each signed the note. Further, Kyral signed the security agreement as to two of the airplanes because they were in his name, and signed the security agreement in the name of International Aircraft Sales, Inc., as to the two other airplanes because they were registered as owned by *635 that corporation. Kyral later paid Betan-court and Phillips $8,000.00. No other payments were made and this suit followed.

At the trial, the note and security agreements made the basis of this suit were introduced without challenge. Thus, the plaintiff appellees made out a prima facie case of validity of the instruments. Hager v. Texas Distributors, Inc., 560 S.W.2d 773, 775 (Tex.Civ.App.—Tyler 1976, writ ref’d n. r. e.). It was then the appellants’ burden at trial to prove the illegality of the note. McKenzie v. Carte, 385 S.W.2d 520, 529 (Tex.Civ.App.—Corpus Christi 1964, writ ref’d n. r. e.).

To determine whether the appellants have met their burden of establishing their illegality defense as a matter of law, we will first consider whether the agreement preceding the note herein was legal and then whether the illegality of the transaction tainted the note herein.

If a contract or sale is made with a view of violating the laws of another country, though not otherwise obnoxious to the law either of the forum or of the place where the contract is made, it will not be enforced. 15 Williston on Contracts, § 1748 (3rd ed.

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Bluebook (online)
582 S.W.2d 632, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-aircraft-sales-inc-v-betancourt-texapp-1979.