Mauro v. Wildwood Company

426 S.W.2d 322, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2941
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 1968
Docket85
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 426 S.W.2d 322 (Mauro v. Wildwood Company) 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
Mauro v. Wildwood Company, 426 S.W.2d 322, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2941 (Tex. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

BARRON, Justice.

Plaintiff, Steve J. Mauro, filed suit against Wildwood Company, a corporation, Paraffine Oil Corporation, Stewart Title Company, Southern Title Company, Herbert J. Zieben and S. Alex Susholtz, all defendants, for payment of an alleged commission which he claims to have earned under a written listing agreement signed July 19, 1963. The listing agreement, termed an exclusive authority to sell real estate, was executed by Steve J. Mauro as realtor and by Wildwood Company, by S. Alex Susholtz, vice president of the corporation, as owner. The agreement provides for payment to Mauro of a 5% commission upon his procuring the sale or contract of sale of the property. The description of the property to be sold .is “approximately 40 *323 acres out of the Ritson-Morris Survey, in Harris County, Texas, adjacent to WILD-WOOD ADDITIONS.”

Stewart Title Company and Southern Title Company were joined in this suit as holders of deposits of $10,000.00 and $18,-860.68 respectively. Neither of the title companies made any claim to the above money. Wildwood Company was owned by three persons. S. Alex Susholtz and his sister, an attorney, Leona J. Susholtz, owned 50% of the stock and Herbert J. Zieben owned the remaining 50% of the stock. Zieben was president of the corporation and S. Alex Susholtz was vice president. The land which Mauro was empowered to sell was a substantial portion of the assets of Wildwood Company, and the trial court found that the sale was not in the usual and regular course of business of Wildwood Company as ordinarily conducted. The trial court further found that the president, Zie-ben, was at all material times personally in the City of Houston and not disabled to act and was accessible to telephone and other communication, but that Susholtz and Mauro failed to notify Zieben of the intended sale of the major assets of the corporation. The court found that Mauro made no inquiry and that Susholtz disregarded suggestions that Zieben should be contacted and notified. When Zieben received notification of the transaction and of the purported contract, he immediately repudiated it. This resulted in a lawsuit between the stockholders of Wildwood Company, the outcome of which left Zieben owning all of the stock of Wildwood Company. Another result was that a $265,000.00 mortgage loan was made on the property which Mauro was to sell, the proceeds of which were parceled out to the stockholders and to various creditors, with $18,860.68 of the proceeds being held as an “escrow” for the payment of Mauro’s commission if he was entitled to it. The stockholders’ litigation was settled and dismissed as between them, and was later settled as between Paraffine Oil Corporation, the alleged willing purchaser of the involved property, who received a dredging easement and a right-of-way easement in the settlement.

Meanwhile, before the filing of the stockholders’ action above mentioned, Wildwood Company, acting by S. Alex Susholtz, executed an earnest money contract to sell the property involved to Paraffine Oil Corporation. In such written contract the property was described as 39 acres, more or less, (being part of tracts originally containing 76.-849 acres, describing the deed) out of the Ritson-Morris Survey, “lying west of the channel or slough opening into Clear Lake.” Also included were a number of undeveloped lots in Wildwood Additions, “and all other right, title and interest of seller, whether now owned or hereafter acquired before the date of closing hereof, in and to land and improvements located in the Rit-son-Morris Survey * * * and lands lying adjacent to the lands described * * * above and underlying roads, easements and said channel or slough.” The purchase price was listed as $6,500.00 per acre for 39 acres, $4,500.00 per lot for all waterfront lots, and $4,000.00 per lot for all other lots. The purchaser deposited $10,000.00 earnest money with Stewart Title Company, with a printed provision that the seller should have the right to retain the cash deposit as liquidated damages for the buyer’s breach of the contract, and should pay “agent therefrom the usual commission, * *

The latter contract, by reason of the facts summarized above, was never consummated, and no money was paid to Mauro. Therefore Mauro filed this suit to recover his alleged commissions. The trial court, without a jury, decreed that Mauro recover nothing, and held that the listing agreement was unenforceable by reason of the vague and indefinite description of the property to be sold thereunder; that Susholtz, as vice president of Wildwood Company, had no authority to bind the corporation by a sales listing and a sales contract when the president of the corporation, owner of one-half of the stock, was available and not notified; and that Mauro was not entitled to collect commissions from Wildwood Company *324 while serving as trustee for Paraffine Oil Corporation in a related transaction which he did not divulge to Wildwood Company or any of its representatives.

Mauro is appellant, and the principal ap-pellee is Wildwood Company. Appeal properly has been perfected to this court.

While serious questions related to the validity and enforceability of the sales contracts executed by Susholtz are presented, by reason of the provisions of V.A.T.S., Business Corporation Act, Art. 5.09, and Art. 5.10, involving sale of assets of a corporation requiring special authorization of Board of Directors and Shareholders when disposition of all or substantially all of the property and assets of a corporation is involved, we find it necessary for disposition of this case to consider only the first finding of the trial court. The trial court found on what we believe to be ample testimony, that the description of the property in the written listing contract was wholly inadequate, and that the land involved being irregular in shape and the description indefinite, could not be specifically located. The trial court found that it was unable to determine from the description of the lands what was intended to be embraced in the written agreement. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

By note included in the listing agreement it was recited that other information appeared on the reverse side of the sheet on which the contract was imprinted, but none of the blanks for the inclusion of such information were filled in. The agreement was typed by Leona J. Susholtz. We have as a description in writing, “approximately 40 acres out of the Ritson-Morris Survey, .in Harris County, Texas, adjacent to Wild-wood Additions.” There are two Wildwood Additions, designated as Section One and Section Two. Appellant testified that he intended to include undeveloped acreage which he found consisted of about 40 acres. Further, there were approximately 22 lots adjoining, which were unsold in the additions, and apparently this was open land adjoining the alleged 40 acres attempted to be described in the written contract, on which Mauro was claiming a commission under the contract. At the time of the signing of the listing agreement, Mauro thought that Wildwood owned some other property on the front of FM Road 528 consisting of about four or five acres of commercial property to the east of the subject property. When the property was surveyed it was found to contain only 38.03 acres, including about two acres under the waters of the slough which was excluded from the thirty-nine acre tract described in the earnest money contract.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Butler v. Benefield
589 S.W.2d 778 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
426 S.W.2d 322, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mauro-v-wildwood-company-texapp-1968.