Little Motor Kar Co. v. Blankenship

228 S.W. 318, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 725
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1921
DocketNo. 8535.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 318 (Little Motor Kar Co. v. Blankenship) 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
Little Motor Kar Co. v. Blankenship, 228 S.W. 318, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 725 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HAMILTON, J.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory order made in this case by the judge of the Sixty-Eighth judicial district.

Originally suit was' brought by appellees against Little Motor Ear Company as a distinct entity, and against its three trustees individually. The trustees were exclusively managing its affairs at the time the suit was filed by appellees, and they seem to have been the exclusive managers of the company con-’ ■ tinuously from its beginning until the filing of the suit. Appellees’ original petition extends to very great length in describing the wrongdoings of the individual defendants in their relations to the defendant company during the course of their trusteeships. Ap-pellees alleged facts setting forth gross misconduct on the part of the trustees; facts showing fraud and fraudulent and unlawful schemes of selling the company’s stock; appropriation to themselves against the interests of all other shareholders of the assets of the company; the wrongful transfer of cash in bank from the credit of the company to the credit of some of the individual trustees; • and general unconscionable exploitation of the company’s assets. Although appellees have named Little Motor Ear Company as a defendant, they have made no allegation against it, but, in stating their cause of action, have confined themselves, entirely to charges of looting and exploitation of it by the individual defendants, and in the prayer of the petition they have asked no relief against it, but have prayed for certain action, in its behalf, as well as in behalf of themselves, against the individuals sued jointly with it, and who were the trustees of it, as above stated.

The praye'r is for the immediate appointment of a receiver to take over the property and assets of the defendant company and administer them; for an order requiring the individual defendants, trustees of the company, “to turn over all books and records of the company or pertaining to its affairs, including the records pertaining to the sales of its shares, as well as all other property or assets belonging to defendant company in the individual defendants’ possession” for an audit; for an accounting to be made by the individual defendants of all sums received by them “in any way or manner connected with the promotion, organization, or operation of the defendant company” ; and for an injunction to restrain the individual defendants from secreting records and from acting in any way in relation to the affairs of defendant company beyond paying certain generally designated expenses. There is also a prayer for judgment “in favor of defendant company and against the individual defendants” for $600,000, for cancellation of the individual defendants’ stock in the company, except whatever they paid for in actual cash; for restitution of salaries paid to them, and for removal of them as trustees.

We have thus stated the prayer of the petition, because it seems that a clearer conception of the nature of appellees’ contentions can thus be conveyed than by undertaking to set out a detailed statement of the allegations themselves. We find in the petition no allegations which seem to constitute a set of facts showing a cause of action on'the part of plaintiffs personally against the defendants, and we take it that the plaintiffs themselves so view the allegations, because thpy seek no relief personally except whatever might incidentally accrue to them as shareholders by virtue of the different orders specifically called fqr in behalf of the defendant company.

The petition having been filed April 8, 1820, and presented to the judge of the district court, he on the same day granted the injunction and appointed a receiver in conformity with the prayer of the plaintiffs, his action being based altogether upon the allegations of the petition, the verification of which was in part, as to the most material allegations, upon actual knowledge of one of the petitioners, and in part, as to some of the most material allegations, upon information and belief.

Subsequently, on May 20, 1920, following an order of court granting leave to intervene, appellants, as interveners, filed their plea of intervention and motion “to dissolve and vacate the receivership,” and on June 7,1920, filed their amended plea of intervention and motion to the same effect, and on June 15, 1920, interveners J. W. Payne, O. M. Ward, and W. E. Joor filed still another intervention, in substance the same as that already filed, and in addition alleging that they had lawfully succeeded to the office of trustees of the company, the original trustees, defendants in the suit, having resigned, and that interveners were entitled to have the management and control of the defendant company’s affairs to the entire exclusion of the receivership.

The other interveners alleged that they were stockholders in the company, and that, while 1,020,000 shares of the par value of $1 each were held by shareholders residing throughout the United States and in foreign countries, they sued for themselves and nearly 2,000 of the shareholders living in Texas and owning 250,000 shares. They alleged that the trustees against whom plaintiffs had alleged fraud in methods of organization and management, unconscionable manipulation in stock selling, looting of funds, etc., had already resigned, that a lawful and qualified shareholders’ meeting had accepted the resignations and had lawfully elected Payne, *320 Ward, and Joor as their successors, thereby eliminating any continuance of the misconduct and destructive criminal transactions which plaintiffs alleged would necessarily and inevitably bring the company into insolvency. They also alleged that the plaintiffs altogether. had title to only 300 shares in the company of the actual value of only $200, and that they paid nothing for it, but acquired it from the very individual defendants whom they sued, and that the circumstances of their acquisition of it were such that they had received no lawful title to it, and the company had received no consideration for it, and that therefore the plaintiffs, appel-lees here, had no rights or interests to be protected by suit, and could not for that reason maintain an action, or at least such rights and interests as they claimed were doubtful. They also alleged that the company was solvent, and that its-assets in Texas amounted to $500,000, besides $00,000 cash in bank, and that it did not owe more than $15,000, which was owing only for current expenses. They pleaded that the company owned at Dallas a fully equipped factory for the manufacture of automobiles, and that it has on hand large quantities of material out of which to manufacture automobiles to the profit of the shareholders, and, being thus equipped and provided, could resume and continue the manufacturing of automobiles, except for the existence of the receivership; that the receiver is without experience and training necessary to render him capable oí successfully conducting the manufacturing, for the purpose of which the company was formed and the plant constructed; and that the shareholders will suffer great loss if the property is held in idleness or sold by the receiver. Besides the property situated in Texas alleged to be of • value in excess of $500,000, appellants alleged the company owned other property outside of Texas, consisting . of real estate and personal property of the value of $50,000. '

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 318, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-motor-kar-co-v-blankenship-texapp-1921.