Joachim v. Magids

737 S.W.2d 852, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 7904
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 23, 1987
Docket01-86-0877-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 737 S.W.2d 852 (Joachim v. Magids) 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
Joachim v. Magids, 737 S.W.2d 852, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 7904 (Tex. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

EVANS, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a take-nothing judgment. Appellants sued to recover *853 damages for alleged violations of federal and state securities statutes in the sale of unregistered stock in their family-owned business.

In 1979, the appellant Silvan Joachim, as president of Buffalo Bag Company, entered into an agreement to purchase his brother Mortimer’s stock ownership in their company. The agreed purchase price was $155,-000; $4,950 was to be paid in cash and the balance in installments represented by promissory notes. After Mortimer sold his shares in the company, he withdrew his personal guaranty of the company’s bank loan. The company and Silvan then stopped payment on the notes held by Mortimer in payment for his stock. Mortimer sued to recover on the notes against Silvan and Buffalo Bag Company, who responded with a counterclaim seeking rescission and return of the consideration paid for Mortimer’s stock.

In that same suit, Silvan and Buffalo Bag Company also brought a third-party claim against the appellee, the attorney who had prepared the stock purchase documents. The record is unclear regarding the proceedings in that suit, but it appears that the trial court struck the third-party action and ordered appellee dismissed as a party to that suit. The appellants’ counsel represented to the trial court in this suit that the dismissed third-party action was severed from the main suit. It does not appear that an appeal was taken from the order dismissing the third-party action. Silvan and Buffalo Bag Company thereafter brought this suit as a separate action against the appellee, and tried unsuccessfully to have this suit consolidated with the pending counterclaim against Mortimer.

In this suit, the appellants, Silvan and Buffalo Bag Company, alleged that the ap-pellee prepared the documents in the stock purchase transaction. Appellee allegedly “aided and abetted” in a stock sales “scheme” in which Mortimer falsely represented to Silvan that he would not withdraw his personal guaranty of the company’s bank loan, and that he would subordinate his loan to the bank’s loan. These representations were allegedly made by Mortimer to induce the appellants to purchase his stock.

The appellants alleged that the stocks from Mortimer were not “registered” as required by the Federal Securities Act of 1933 and the Texas Securities Act, and that “no valid exceptions to such requirement can be shown by the Defendant.” The appellants claimed that the appellee was liable to them for the $155,000 consideration paid for the stock, plus interest from date of payment and attorney’s fees. In a concluding paragraph, the appellants alleged that a suit “similar to the instant one” had been timely filed on June 1, 1982; that the appellee was dismissed from that suit on a “technical defect”; and that this suit was filed “to ensure that Defendant does not escape liability for its [sic] acts because of the running of the statute of limitations if the other suit is dismissed.”

The appellee answered by general denial and specially alleged that because no attorney-client relationship existed between himself and the appellants, he had no duty to advise or counsel the appellants with regard to the matters alleged in their petition.

Silvan Joachim testified that in 1950, he and his father started Buffalo Bag Company in Houston, and that in 1956 or 1957, his brother Mortimer came to work for the company. In about 1972, the two brothers started negotiations on a buy-sell agreement but were unable to finalize that transaction. In 1978, the two renewed their negotiations and eventually reached an agreement whereby Silvan and his business, Buffalo Bag Company, would purchase Mortimer’s entire stock ownership in the company. According to Silvan’s testimony, he told Mortimer that he would not purchase Mortimer’s stock unless he, Silvan, had a line of credit with the bank. Silvan testified that Mortimer assured him that he would continue his guaranty of the bank loan and subordinate his loan to the bank’s. Silvan said that he accepted Mortimer’s word on the matter and therefore did not ask that his brother’s obligation be included in the written stock purchase agreement. Silvan acknowledged that he *854 was familiar with the provisions of the proposed agreement, but said that he did not read the final document before signing it. At the time he signed the contract, he asked the appellee if there had been any substantial changes made, and the appellee told him there had been none. Silvan testified that he had not consulted with an attorney about the transaction even though his brother Mortimer mentioned to him that he should. In 1980, Silvan tried to renew the company’s credit for the next season and was unsuccessful because the bank did not have Mortimer’s guaranty and loan subordination.

On cross-examination, Silvan Joachim admitted that the appellee had never represented him, and that he had not sought any advice from the appellee as an attorney, regarding the stock purchase agreement. He acknowledged that the appellee was acting for his brother Mortimer, and that was agreeable with Silvan. Silvan admitted that the appellee prepared the stock purchase agreement acting as a lawyer for Mortimer, and that he, Silvan, had read a prior draft of the agreement.

The appellants offered the appellee’s deposition testimony at trial. Appellee stated that he had prepared the stock purchase agreements on behalf of Mortimer, the selling shareholder, and that he had never represented Silvan, the purchaser. He had represented Buffalo Bag Company only in isolated matters. He pointed out that the stock purchase agreement expressly provided that the purchasing company would indemnify the seller against claims resulting from any guaranties that had not been previously released. When the agreement was prepared, it was done so on the premise that Mortimer would no longer be liable on his guaranty. Appellee testified that he had never been told that Mortimer’s guaranty was to continue after the sale of Mortimer’s stock and that as Mortimer’s counsel, appellee would have advised Mortimer against such action. Appellee testified that an “integral part of the agreement” was the understanding that Mortimer would not continue to guaranty the company’s obligation at Houston National Bank.

When the appellants rested their case, the appellee called, as an expert witness, Mr. John H. Buck, an attorney engaged primarily in the area of corporate securities work. In response to a hypothetical question, this witness testified without objection, that the sale of stock by one brother to another of his entire ownership in a family-held company would not, under the custom and practice of securities law, constitute a transaction required to be registered with either state or federal security commissions. Mr. Buck explained, over appellants’ objection, that such a sale would constitute a “private placement” that was exempt under state and federal security regulations. On cross-examination, the appellants’ counsel fully developed Mr. Buck’s testimony with respect to the exempt nature of the transaction.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
737 S.W.2d 852, 1987 Tex. App. LEXIS 7904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joachim-v-magids-texapp-1987.