James v. Roberts Telephone & Electric Co.

206 S.W. 933, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1183
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1918
DocketNo. 8-2571
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 933 (James v. Roberts Telephone & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. Roberts Telephone & Electric Co., 206 S.W. 933, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1183 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

McCSLENDON, j.

Two questions are presented for our determination: (1) Whether a receiver who is interested in the receivership can legally be allowed remuneration for his services; and (2) whether compensation can' be lawfully allowed a receiver for services and expenses of a coreceiver who is a noncitizen of this state. Both questions are of first impression in our Supreme Court, and both have been answered in the negative by the Court of Civil Appeals. Roberts Telephone & Electric Co. v. Farmers’ & Merchants’ Nat. Bank of Abilene, 155 S. W. 629.

The following statement is necessary to a clear understanding of these issues:

Statement of the Case.

The Roberts Telephone & Electric Company was indebted to Stromberg-Chrlson Telephone Manufacturing Company in the sum of about $6,500, and to the Farmers’ & Merchants’ National Bank of Abilene in the sum of about $26,500, which sums were secured by liens upon all the property of the debtor company. These parties will be referred to respectively as the Telephone Company, the Stromberg Company, and the Bank. There was a controversy between the Bank and the Stromberg Company relative to the priority of their liens, and the latter instituted suit in the federal court at Abilene against the Bank and the Telephone Company and applied for a receiver. The Telephone Company was in straitened financial circumstances, and an understanding wds reached among the three named companies, whereby the federal court suit was dismissed and a receivership was to be had in the state court. The Bank shortly thereafter, on October 10, 1907, filed this suit in the district court of Taylor county making the Telephone Company and the Stromberg Company parties defendant, setting out the facts concerning the controversy between itself and the Stromberg Company relative to their conflicting claims and praying for a receiver. On the same day the Stromberg Company answered, and joined in the prayer for a receiver, and the court immediately appointed as receivers Henry [934]*934James, who was cashier, and a large stockholder in the Bank, and Charles P. Speed, who at the time was an. agent of the Strom-berg Company and a citizen of Arkansas; the order of appointment reciting that all parties at interest were given notice. No objection was made to the receivership or to the appointment of either of the receivers, and the order of appointment is silent as to the residence or citizenship of either of tho receivers. The receivers at once took charge of the property, which consisted of a local telephone exchange at Abilene and several toll lines, and adjudications were made upon the controversy between the Bank and the Stromberg Company and upon various interventions of creditors. Small portions of the property were from time to time sold by the receivers under orders of court, and finally, in April, 1910, the local exchange and all the property remaining in the hands of the receivers were sold for $13,000. It appears that Speed was a practical telephone man, and attended to the matter of rehabilitating and repairing and superintending the actual operation of the plant, as well as from time to time auditing the books. James attended to the financial matters of the company. He was experienced in these matters, but had no practical knowledge of the telephone business. Speed continued to be agent of the Stromberg Company until early in 1909-, when his connection with that company ceased. Various efforts were made to sell the property, but no purchaser could be found; and Speed, after he had severed his connection with the Stromberg Company, finally succeeded in working up a sale, which under all the testimony was pronounced to be the best and most advantageous one that could be had. During their administration as receivers the plant was enlarged from about 450 telephones up to something over 900, and in a general way the plant was rehabilitated and put in better condition. Something over $100,000 passed through the hands of the receivers, and the record shows that their duties were faithfully performed. They operated the property from the 10th of October, 1907, until it was finally sold in April, 1910. Speed, from time to time, drew amounts as salary and commissions and was paid expenses which he incurred aggregating $3,048.35, of which amount $565 was expense and the balance compensation for his services. The receivers filed their final account on February 16, 1911. On October 7, 1911, the Telephone Company and certain stockholders and creditors filed objections to the account, among them objections to the allowance of any compensation to James and Speed by reasoh of the interest of James in the suit and by reason of Speed’s interest and his disqualification as a nonresident of the state.

The trial court held that James was entitled to be paid for his services and allowed him $2,483.35, but disallowed all fees and expenses of Speed by reason both of his interest and noncitizenship, and ordered the repayment of these sums to receiver James. By a further order the court found that the services performed and expenses incurred by Speed were reasonably worth $1,000 to the estate, and allowed said sum to James.

Opinion.

[1, 2] We will first consider the action of the Court of Civil Appeals in holding as a matter of law that James was not entitled to any compensatio'n for his services as receiver because of his interest in the receivership.

Article 2129, Revised Statutes 1911, provides that no party, attorney, or person interested in any way in an action for the appointment of receiver shall be appointed receiver therein. That the appointment of a receiver who is interested in the receivership is not void, but voidable, is held in Railway v. Adams, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 198, 32 S. W. 733.

Objection to the appointment of James, not being seasonably urged, was waived. 34 Cyc. 149. The Court of Civil Appeals, while recognizing this doctrine, holds, however, that:

“The prohibition in the statute should be observed, and perhaps there is no more effectual way to enforce its observance than to deny compensation to one whose appointment as receiver is procured in violation thereof.”

The effect of this holding would be to penalize one who, in good faith and without objection, has performed all the duties of receiver, and who, but for the statute, might be held to be entitled to compensation irrespective of his interest in the subject-matter. We see no stronger reason for penalizing the receiver under these circumstances than for penalizing those who have stood by without complaint and permitted him to perform valuable services of which they are beneficiaries.

[3] Irrespective of statute, it is generally held that no party interested in a receivership should be appointed receiver. The reasons are obvious, and it is not deemed essential to enumerate them. 34 Cyc. 142.

The statute is therefore but declaratory of the law as applied generally by courts of equity. And since it does not make void, but merely voidable, the appointment as receiver of an interested party, we think the question of compensation should be determined by the same principles of equity that have been applied by the courts, independently of the statute.

The following quotations, taken at random, the former from England, and the latter from Illinois, we think, correctly summarize the result of the adjudications upon this question:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 S.W. 933, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-roberts-telephone-electric-co-texcommnapp-1918.