McAlister v. Eclipse Oil Co.

92 S.W.2d 545
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1936
DocketNo. 2882.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 S.W.2d 545 (McAlister v. Eclipse Oil Co.) 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
McAlister v. Eclipse Oil Co., 92 S.W.2d 545 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

COMBS, Justice.

This suit was filed by the appellee, a corporation, hereinafter referred to as the company, against appellant, McAlister, to cancel stock of the company held by Mc-Alister of the par value of $10,000, and to recover $2,500 alleged to have been wrongfully paid by the company to McAlister as dividends on the stock. The company also sued for $2,300 alleged to have been wrongfully drawn by McAlister for expenses while he was acting as manager of the company. However, appellee dismissed that part of its suit at the conclusion of the evidence. The trial was to a jury, and upon conclusion of the evidence the trial court instructed a verdict in favor of the company, canceling McAlister’s stock and awarding judgment against him for $2,500, and interest at the rate of 6 per cent. From that judgment McAlister has appealed.

The gist of the company’s cause of action, as made by its pleadings, is that Mc-Alister, together with John D. McCall and Y. D. Spell, promoted the formation of the company to drill for oil on a tract of land at Hull, in Liberty county; that McCall obtained a lease on the land which became the sole capital of the company upon-its organization, with the exception of a derrick furnished by Spell, and that the $10,000 in stock in question was issued to McAlister unlawfully and without any consideration, and afterwards treasury stock of the company was offered to the public and purchased by various persons, who are now stockholders in the company, and that the issuance of the stock certificate to McAlister and the payment to him of the dividend by virtue of it was a fraud upon the bona fide stockholders of the company. McAlister, on the other hand, contends that he owned a one-half interest in the lease, as well as a Jissth royalty interest in the land covered by it, he-being one of the lessors and owning a Vm of the fee; that the stock was rightfully issued to him in consideration of the transfer of the lease to the company.

The material facts which, as we view the record, appear without dispute, may be briefly stated as follows: McCall and Mc-Alister desired to drill for oil on 3.7 acres of land in the edge of the Hull oil field. While the tract had not been proven, there were several producing wells in close proximity to it, and it was believed to be in pro *547 ducing territory. The tract was owned by several persons, including McAlister, who owned a ¾6 fee interest in it, as above mentioned. McCall and McAlister decided to obtain a lease on the land and form a corporation to raise money to drill on it. McAlister seems to have taken the lead in obtaining the lease from his co-owners, but obtained it in the name of McCall. The lease, which was dated October 2, 1931, recited a consideration of $10 and other valuable considerations, and in addition to offset provisions and other obligations usually found in such leases it contained an unconditional drilling obligation obligating the lessee, in effect, to begin drilling a well within three months and to prosecute drilling with due diligence, “until the 4,265 ft. stratum of sand is reached or until oil in paying quantities is discovered at a lesser depth or until lessee has spent the sum of $20,000.00 in an effort to reach producing sand.” The drilling obligation was, in fact, the only consideration paid for the lease.

After the lease was obtained, McCall and McAlister took in Y. D. Spell as the third incorporator. He agreed to build a derrick on the land and to accept in payment $1,000 of stock in the proposed company. The three then made application to the secretary of state for a charter for the company with a capitalization of $40,000. The stock was subscribed, $1,000 by Spell, and $19,500 each by McCall and McAlister. The application showed the stock “fully paid” by the derrick furnished by Spell at a valuation of $1,000 and of the assignment of the lease held by McCall, which was valued in the affidavit at $39,000. The affidavit recited that the lease was owned jointly by McCall and McAlister. The charter was issued on December 18, 1931, and on the following day McCall assigned all his “right, title and interest” in the lease to the company. The assignment contained the recital: “It being understood that The Eclipse Oil Company, a corporation, by the acceptance of this lease, agrees and obligates itself to carry out all of the terms and conditions stipulated and set forth in said lease aforesaid”.

The three incorporators then organized and issued the stock in accordance with the subscriptions. McCall and McAlister then each reassigned $9,500 worth of stock to the company as “treasury stock,” and stock certificates were issued to each for the $10,000 worth of stock retained; McCall acting in the capacity of president and McAlister as secretary-treasurer of the company. The “treasury stock” was then offered for sale to the general public. Some of it was sold for cash and some traded for a drilling rig and other equipment needed, and with the funds and equipment so raised a well was drilled and a producing well brought in. Subsequently the capitalization of the company was increased to $45,000, and the $5,000 additional stock so provided sold. In all, three wells were drilled. McAlister, who was a practical oil man, was in general charge of the development as general manager at a salary of $250 per month. In the latter part of 1932, two dividends, aggregating 25 per cent., were declared and paid to the stockholders, including McAlister, who was paid $2,500 based upon the $10,000 worth of stock standing in his name on the books of the company. It seems that the new stockholders who had come into the company subsequent to the original incorporation gained control of the company and on, December 12, 1933, “fired” McAlister as manager, and on January 8, 1934, a stockholders’ meeting ordered that McAlister’s stock be canceled, and that he return to the company the $2,500 which had been paid to him as dividends. The resolution also authorized suit to be instituted against Mc-Alister for cancellation of the stock, recovery of the dividends, etc., and this suit followed.

By resolution passed at the same time it was recited that McCall had voluntarily returned to the treasury of the company $6,000 worth of his $10,000 in stock, and, further, that McCall had procured the lease and rendered services to the company and was entitled to retain the remaining $4,000 worth of stock which he held, and his title to it was recognized and confirmed.

The company, in its petition, alleged the facts substantially as above, and, further, that “he (McAlister) simply had such stock issued to him and it stands today on the books of said corporation in his name based upon no valid adequate or -sufficient consideration of any nature or kind whatsoever.” And further, “that the $10,000.00 (stock) allotted to and appropriated by the defendant McAlister at a time when the sole stockholders were himself, said McCall and said Spell, the latter two being at no time chargeable with any acts or conduct in any way prejudicial to the plaintiff, constituted on the part of said McAlister an appropriation of one-fourth (⅛) of the capital stock of said corporation without *548

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Related

Milton v. Aransas Shrimp Cooperative
668 S.W.2d 735 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1983)
McAlister v. Eclipse Oil Co.
98 S.W.2d 171 (Texas Supreme Court, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.W.2d 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcalister-v-eclipse-oil-co-texapp-1936.