Lee v. Galena-Signal Oil Co. of Pennsylvania

8 S.W.2d 1051, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 760
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 11, 1928
DocketNo. 9192.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 S.W.2d 1051 (Lee v. Galena-Signal Oil Co. of Pennsylvania) 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
Lee v. Galena-Signal Oil Co. of Pennsylvania, 8 S.W.2d 1051, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 760 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

GRATES, J.

This appeal is from orders of the district court of Harris county refusing permission to T. P. Dee to intervene in this suit and appointing therein over his protest a receiver for the Galena-Signal Oil Company of Texas, severally entered in the se-suence stated on the 4th and 6th days of February, 1928; being regularly prosecuted from both these decrees, it plainly lies under the principle applied in Childress v. Trust Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 32 S. W. 330, provided Dee showed such interest in the subject-matter of the litigation as entitled him to be heard before the property could properly go into custodia legis; as we think he did, for reasons given infra, the appellees’ motion here to dismiss the appeal cannot be sustained.

All the parties except appellant being private corporations, the suit was one by the Galena-Signal Oil Company of Pennsylvania against its alleged subsidiary, the Galena-Signal Oil Company of Texas, upon a claimed indebtedness to itself direct of $323,500 — as well as because of various asserted defaults in other respects and to other parties — to which the appellee Fidelity Trust Company was made a party as being the trustee under a prior deed of trust the defendant company had given on certain of its property as security for the redemption of its previously issued bonds for $3,800,000, the immediate appointment of a receiver being also sought and prayed for as indispensable to any relief for the plaintiff.

While declaring briefly upon its debt, $300,-000 of it as for money loaned, the balance as having accrued on current account, the plaintiffs’ petition at length elaborated upon the cause of action for a receiver, the outstanding averments on that feature being, in substance, that:

(1) It owned and held as sole stockholder all of the entire $12,000,000 capital stock of the defendant Galena-Signal Company of Texas, except for qualifying shares'of directors, and therefore was the sole beneficial owner of the equity that might remain of its assets after payment of all its indebtedness.
(2) Back in 1918 the defendant company, under its then corporate name,.had delivered to the appellee Fidelity Trust Company of Houston, Tex., as trustee, its deed of trust conveying certain properties therein described to the latter to secure the payment of the $3,-800,000 in bonds, above mentioned, which were referred to as “fifteen-year first mortgage 6 per cent, sinking fund gold bonds.”
(3) Under the terms of the trust deed the Galena-Signal Company of Texas undertook to retire each year not less than 10 per cent, of the amount outstanding on these bonds as of July 1, 1923, which required it to continue in the future paying large sums both yearly and monthly to the trustee for that purpose, in addition to what it had already so paid; it . was further indebted to various creditors upon current bills for about $38,000, had sold and warranted the title to $600,000 worth of lands upon which an adverse suit has since been filed, had improvidently both allowed a half million dollars of uncollected indebtedness for current merchandise to accumulate against one of its customers and entered into a large number of unprofitable contracts with others for the sale and delivery of its products.
(4) The property and assets of the subsidiary, consisting of enumerated lands and the improvements thereon, personalty, stocks of crude petroleum and its finished products and derivatives, as well as the capital stock of a number of its own dependent and affiliated companies at home and abroad, while worth far more than the amount still outstanding on the $3,800,000 bonds, provided time could be had for the liquidation thereof with a minimum loss, would bring much less at forced sale; its sales and depreciation account for the six months ending with October of 1927 before the filing of this suit in the following December showed a total loss of nearly $1,-500,000, and the same or even a greater rate of loss was certain to ensue should the company continue active business operations any longer, to the extent that its entire assets, both quick and fixed, would soon become greatly impaired if not in fact dissipated.
(5) The defendant concern was, further, not carrying out the purposes of its incorporation, in that, though fully solvent, with aggregate property at fair valuation more than suffi *1053 cient to pay all its debts, it yet had closed its refinery and was allowing its properties to stand idle to their serious detriment in resulting depreciation, and being also unable to meet its current obligations in due course of business, had in consequence of all the acts charged come to be in imminent danger of insolvency.
(6) The plaintiff, as owner of the capital stock of the subsidiary, owes and desires to perform a duty first of all to the bondholders of the latter, then to the other creditors, including itself and its own stockholders, and, having no adequate remedy at law, having made the trustee a party in view of sections 8 and 3, articles V and VI, respectively, of the deed of trust, prays for the appointment of a receiver as the only way under all the circumstances to stop the waste, mismanagement, and improvident conduct of the business alleged, and to conserve the assets of the Texas Galena-Signal Company for the benefit of all the bondholders, other creditors, ánd stockholders.

To this petition the defendants, Fidelity Trust Company -of Houston and Galena-Signal Oil Company of Texas, each made answer consisting merely of a general demurrer and general denial.

Appellant Lee filed his plea, asking permission to intervene in the cause, alleging:

“(1) That the Galena-Signal Oil Company of Pennsylvania has a capital stock of approximately $22,000,000; that the Galena-Signal Oil Company of Texas has a capital stock of approximately $12,000,000; that the American Republics Corporation has a capital stock of approximately $10,000,000 par preferred and 400,000 shares of non-par authorized, of which approximately 209,000 shares have been issued and are now outstanding.
■ “(2) That the Galena-Signal Oil Company of Pennsylvania owns all of the capital stock of the Galena-Signal Oil ‘Company of Texas, and that he, the said T. P. Lee, ¡intervener, owns more than $1,000,000 par value of the preferred stock of the American Republics Corporation, and that the American Republics Corporation owns approximately one-third of the total capital stock of the Galena-Signal Oil Company of Pennsylvania. That said T. P. Lee now owns and holds $5,000 worth of bonds heretofore issued by the Galena-Signal Oil Company of Texas secured by deed of trust on the properties involved in this lawsuit, with the Fidelity Trust Company of Houston, one of the defendants herein, as trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 1051, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-galena-signal-oil-co-of-pennsylvania-texapp-1928.