Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Butler

86 S.W.2d 258
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 6, 1935
DocketNo. 13174.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 86 S.W.2d 258 (Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Butler) 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
Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Butler, 86 S.W.2d 258 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

D. H. Butler, appellee, had been an employee of appellant, Magnolia Petroleum Company, for many years, but less than twenty, and was retired from service on June 1, 1930, and before he became sixty-five years of age. %)

While appellee was in appellant’s employ, it created at_its own expense, without the aid of finañciaTsúppórnr&m any of its employees, a plan for the benefit of its faithful employees who might be retired from service. The plan was adopted in 1918, and is as follows:

“(a) Regular Retirement: All men who have reached the age of sixty-five years and women fifty-five years and who have . been twenty years or longer in the service shall be-retired on a regular allowance, unless, in individual cases, at the request of the employee, some later date be fixed by the Board of Trustees for such retirement; in which event, such employee, who has at the time of retirement been in the service of the company twenty years or longer, shall be retired on a regular allowance.
“(b) Retirement at Request of Employee or at Discretion of Board: Any man who has reached the age of fifty-five years, or any woman fifty years, who has been thirty years or longer in the service, or any man who has reached the age of sixty years, who has been twenty years or longer in the service, may be retired on a regular allowance, either at his or her request, with the approval of the Board, or, without the request of the employee, at the discretion of the Board.
“(c) Retirement at Discretion of Board: Any employee who has been ten years or longer in the service and who by physical examination is shown to be permanently, totally incapacitated for service, or whose retirement on account of advancing years is, in the judgment of the Board, advisable, may, at the discretion of the Board, be retired and granted a regular or a special allowance. Section 2. Amount of Payments.
“(a) The payments for regular allowances which the Board may authorize under this plan shall he, as follows:
“For each year of active service an allowance of two per cent of the average *259 annual pay during the ten years next preceding retirement; but no regular allowance shall be less than $300.00 per annum or more than seventy-five per cent of such average annual pay. Illustration:
“If the retired employee, reaching the age of sixty-five years, has been in the employ of the company twenty-five years and his average annual salary during the last ten years of his employment has been $1,200.00, or $100.00 per month, his annual allowance or annuity would be twenty-five times two per cent of his average salary — - that is, fifty per cent of $1,200.00 equaling $600.00 per year, or $50.00 per month.
“(b) The amount and duration of each special allowance shall be determined by the Board.
“Section 12. The annuities and benefits granted employees in accordance with this plan have no relation whatever to the determination of the am'ount of wages or salaries to be paid by this company, but are granted as a voluntary reward for and in appreciation of faithful and efficient service, and as an incentive to further service, applicable to all employees, including officials, on equal terms. This plan shall not be construed, however, as giving any employee the right to be retained in the service of the company, or any right or claim to~ an annuity or allowance after discharge from the service of the company unless the right to such annuity or benefit accrued prior to such discharge.
“The company reserves the right at any time, at its discretion, to withdraw or modify this plan either as to annuities or benefits.”

In 1926, appellant changed its status from that of a voluntary joint stock association, operating under a declaration of trust, to that of a private corporation, and adopted the following plan for its retired employees:

“Annuities — Section 1. Eligibility. All employees of this company are eligible for retirement on annuities under the following conditions:
“(a) Regular Retirement: All men who have reached the .age of sixty-five years and women fifty-five and who have been twenty years or longer in the continuous active service of this company shall be retired on a regular; allowance unless in individual cases some later date be fixed by the Board of Directors for such retirement.
“Optional or Discretionary Retirement: Any man who has reached the age of fifty-five years, or any woman who has reached the age of fifty years, 'who has thirty years or longer in the continuous active service of the company, or any man who has reached the age of sixty years who has been twenty years or longer in the continuous active service of the company, may be retired on a regular allowance, either at his or her request, with the approval of the. Board of Directors, or without the request of the employee, at the discretion of the Board of Directors.
“Section 2. Payments, (a) Amount of Payments. The amount of payments for all such regular allowance which the Board authorizes shall be as follows:
“For each year of continuous active service an allowance of two per cent of the average annual pay during the five years next preceding retirement; but no regular allowance shall be in excess of seventy-five per cent of such annual pay, except that for the first year from the date of retirement the annuitant shall receive an amount equivalent to the full salary in effect at the time of retirement.
“(b) Method of Payments: Annuities are to be paid monthly by check to the order of the annuitant and mailed to his or her address.
“Part 4, General Rules — Section 2:
“The annuities and benefits herein provided for are voluntary grants by the company and this plan shall not be construed as giving any employee the right to be retained in the service of the company, or any right or claim to. an annuity or death benefits to his beneficiaries after discharge from the service of the company.
“The company reserves the right at any time at its discretion to withdraw or modify this plan, either as to annuities or death u benefits. The above plan is to go into effect as of July 1, 1926.”

Butler was retired as an employee in 1930, and on May 22, 1930, at a meeting of the board of directors of appellant, the following iesolution was passed:

“Whereas, David H. Butler, age sixty-four, an employee of the sales department of Magnolia Petroleum Company for approximately seventeen years, is in ill health and physically not able to continue in the employment of the company.
“Now, therefore, be it resolved, that the said David H. Butler is hereby specially

*260

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86 S.W.2d 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magnolia-petroleum-co-v-butler-texapp-1935.