Looney v. Doss

189 S.W.2d 207, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 764
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 13, 1945
DocketNo. 14707.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 189 S.W.2d 207 (Looney v. Doss) 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
Looney v. Doss, 189 S.W.2d 207, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 764 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

*208 McDONALD, Chief Justice.

By virtue of a declaration of trust executed on March 15, 1922, and other instruments thereafter executed, H. H. Tucker, Jr., became the sole trustee of certain lands and interests in lands. He sold beneficial shares or interests in the enterprise thereby created to many persons, the number of outstanding shares at the time of the trial involved here being estimated by Tucker at 6,000,000. In other words, Tucker was the sole managing trustee of the business trust thus organized. There is testimony in the record to the effect that the value of the properties belonging to said trust, plus money on hand, amounts to several hundred thousand dollars at the present time.

In 1934 Charles C. Looney, James Gayle and C. B. Newcomer filed suit in the District Court of Parker County, Texas, naming as defendants the said PI. H. Tucker, Jr., individually and as trustee, and the said common law trust, which was known as The Texas American Syndicate. The petition is lengthy, but it suffices here to say that it alleged fully the facts surrounding the formation of the trust and the business being carried on, the ownership of an aggregate of some 29,000 shares or interests in said business trust by the plaintiffs, and the management of said trust by Tucker. It further alleged that shortly before the filing of said petition Tucker had been convicted in the Federal Court at Dallas of participating in a fraudulent use of the mails and had been sentenced to serve four years in the penitentiary. It alleged that Tucker was in jail, and that the properties of the trust were in danger of being lost or materially injured unless there was some person to take immediate charge and control thereof, and that it was vital to the interests of the shareholders that a receiver be immediately appointed to preserve and protect the properties. It alleged that it was necessary to remove Tucker as trustee. The prayer was for the immediate appointment of a receiver, and that the court, at a later date, should cause to be held a stockholders meeting for the purpose of considering the election of a substitute trustee, and that the court should then permanently remove Tucker as trustee. There was a concluding prayer for general relief. The plaintiffs alleged that they prosecuted the suit for themselves and for the benefit of and in the interest of all the shareholders of the trust.

On the same day that the above petition was filed, the court appointed J. H. Doss as receiver, granting him broad powers with respect to the management and operation of the properties of the trust, and decreeing that the order might be amended, amplified, enlarged or modified at any future time, as the court might direct.

It appears that no citation was served on Tucker or The Texas American Syndicate, but Tucker testified at the hearing from which this appeal is taken that he wanted the receivership petition filed, and that it was filed by the attorney who had been acting as attorney for Tucker and the trust. It further appears without dispute from the testimony that Tucker had actual knowledge of .the receivership, and that he afterwards worked in close conjunction with the receiver in the handling of the business of the trust.

It appears without dispute that most, if not all, of the debts of the trust have been paid, with the exception of certain moneys owing to the State of Texas on the purchase price of some of the lands belonging to the trust, and certain vendor’s lien notes claimed by Tucker or members of his family against certain of the properties. The receiver has more than $25,000 in cash on hand belonging to the trust.

There has been no order of the court removing Tucker as trustee, unless it could be said that the order appointing a receiver had that effect by implication, a question we need not decide, nor has there been any move under the auspices of the receiver or the court below to bring about the appointment of a substitute trustee. The receiver apparently managed and controlled the properties and affairs of the trust with the cooperation of Tucker, and without protest or objection from anyone, until the time of the filing of the motions hereinafter described. The evidence indicates that the receiver has handled many transactions, including the execution of many conveyances, and that he has collected in the neighborhood of $225,000 during the period of receivership.

On March 15, 1945, Tucker filed a motion alleging, in substance, that he was the sole trustee named in the declaration of trust; that in addition to his authority as trustee, he was attorney-in-fact for more than a majority of the shareholders, both as to numbers and as to amounts of stock owned by them; that the plaintiff Looney had *209 filed a motion to take a non-suit, that the plaintiff Gayle had died, and that the plaintiff Newcomer had no substantial interest in the trust and was not represented by an attorney and had never appeared personally or otherwise in the suit since it was filed; that if there were ever any grounds for receivership they had ceased to exist and that there was no justifiable reason for continuance of the receivership; that before the hearing of such motion there would be a lawfully appointed substitute trustee to serve in Tucker’s stead; that the allowances for fees and expenses made by the court to the receiver were fair and reasonable; and that the best interests of the stockholders required a termination of the receivership. The prayer was that the receivership and the suit be dismissed; that the receiver turn over all property, books, and records to the substitute trustee; that the receiver report to the court the property turned over to the substitute trustee; and that the receiver and the sureties on his bond be discharged after paying any unpaid costs of court. There was also a prayer for general relief.

On April 2, 1945, Charles C. Looney filed a motion, alleging that the properties and business of the trust had been operated by the receiver for eleven years; that the plaintiffs in the suit, Looney, Gayle and Newcomer, had not prosecuted the suit, nor made any attempt to do so, since the filing of the suit in 1934, and that they have no attorney to represent them; that Looney now believes that he has no just cause of action against .the defendants in the cause, and believes that no grounds exist for the appointment or continuation of the receivership; and that he does not desire to prosecute the suit; that Looney takes a non-suit and prays that the cause of action be dismissed and that the full title and possession of all assets of the trust now held by the receiver be restored to the trustee, and that the receiver be required to file his final report and upon the filing of same be discharged as receiver. The motion is signed by Looney, for himself:

On April 26, 1945, R. J. Golightly filed a pleading, alleging that he had been given leave on April 2, 1945, to intervene in the case; that he has examined the motions of Looney and Tucker to dismiss the suit; that he is the owner of 100,000 shares of the stock and validating certificates of the trust; .that he has made some independent investigation of the affairs of the trust; that as a result of such investigation he is convinced that it is ,to the best interests of the stockholders that the suit be dismissed and that the possession of the assets of the trust be delivered .to Karl A. Crowley, trustee of the trust.

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.W.2d 207, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/looney-v-doss-texapp-1945.