McFaddin v. Wiess

168 S.W. 486, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 1914
DocketNo. 6711.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 486 (McFaddin v. Wiess) 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
McFaddin v. Wiess, 168 S.W. 486, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1180 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

McMEANS, J.

The McFaddinv Wiess & Kyle Land Company is a private, voluntary, unincorporated joint-stock association, with a capital stock of $800,000, divided into 8,000 shares, of which W. P. H. McFaddin owns 3,995 shares and L. W. Houk owns 5 shares, or together 50 per cent, of the total capital, and W. W. Kyle owns 2,000 shares, and P. H. Wiess claims to own 2,000 shares, which belonged to his father, V. Weiss, until his death on July 30, 1913. McFaddin, Kyle, and V. Wiess, until his death, composed the board of trustees of the land company from its formation. McFaddin is the president and general manager of the land company and has been since its formation, and Houk is the secretary and treasurer.

On February 6, 1914, P. I-I. Wiess and W. W. Kyle filed their petition, duly sworn to by P. H. Wiess, praying for the immediate issuance of a mandatory order requiring McFaddin “to execute and acknowledge a certificate of the election of the said P. H. Wiess, as trustee”; the plaintiffs alleging that he was eligible to membership on the board, and that he had been duly elected as a member of the board, and the defendants denying that he was eligible, or that he was ever elected as a member of the board. *487 Plaintiffs also prayed for the issuance of an order, in effect forbidding MeFaddin to do anything touching the business of the company, and forbidding MéFaddin and Houk to esecute or draw any checks or drafts on the funds of the company, or to buy, sell, or transfer any notes, securities, or other personal property belonging to it.

On the same day the district judge, in chambers, on presentation to him of plaintiffs’ petition, made an order setting the application down for hearing on February 10, 1914, and granted a temporary restraining order, prohibiting and restraining the defendants from in any manner selling, leasing, or otherwise disposing of property of any kind belonging to the land company, or from mortgaging or in anywise executing contracts, checks, drafts, or any other instruments affecting the liability of the company, or any of its property or assets, or from in any manner transferring or otherwise disposing of the funds of said company; the object and purpose of the order being to hold the property, etc., in statu quo until the further order of the court.

On February 20, 1914, a hearing was had on the plaintiffs’ original and supplemental petitions, and the answer of the defendants, whereupon an order was entered by the coürt granting a temporary mandatory injunction commanding the said W. P. H. MeFaddin to sign and acknowledge before a notary public, or some other officer authorized to take acknowledgments, the certificate attached to plaintiffs’ petition, or one similar in nature, and deliver the same to P. H. Wiess, and also granting a temporary injunction forbidding the defendants from in any manner selling, leasing, or otherwise disposing of any property of any kind belonging to the company, and from incumbering the property with debts, and from executing contracts, notes, checks, drafts, or any other instrument affecting the liability of said company or assets, and from transferring or disposing of any of the funds of the company until otherwise ordered by the court; the object and purpose of this order being, as stated by the judge, "to hold, keep intact and in statu quo all of the property and assets of said company until the defendant W. P. H. MeFaddin shall have complied with the order of this court in matters pertaining to the certificate as hereinabove provided.” The certificate which MeFaddin was required by the judge’s order to sign and acknowledge was to the effect that said “P. H. Wiess is now the duly authorized, elected, and qualified trustee of said MeFaddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Company, as made and constituted under the actions of the two remaining trustees as aforesaid.”

To the ruling of the court the defendants duly excepted, gave notice of appeal, filed their supersedeas appeal bond, and within the time required by law filed in this court the transcript of the proceedings of the court below, and the case is now properly before us for review.

At, the time of the formation of the Me-Faddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Company on June 27, 1904, a code of by-laws for the government of the company was adopted and is now in force. This code is very elaborate, consisting of 28 articles, and we give below the substance of such of the articles as we think material to the questions under consideration and essential to an understanding of the views of this court in reaching the conclusions herein expressed.

Article II provides that the association shall be governed by a board of trustees, and vests the title to all the property of the land company in the board ‘‘as joint tenants and not as tenants in common, in trust for the benefit of all the shareholders, in proportion to the number of shares held by each in this association.”

Articles III and IV are as follows:

“Article III. The shareholders in said association shall have no title to the trust property, which is or may hereafter be vested in the trustees, nor any right to manage, control, alienate, dispose of, mortgage, incumber or deal with the same in any way except by and through the trustees, as hereinafter provided, nor shall any shareholder have any right at law or in equity to demand or require or enforce a partition or dissolution of the trust except as hereinafter provided; and it is hereby declared that the shares in said company shall be and remain personal property, carrying the right of a division or share in the profits of the' company, only until the winding up of the company and the dissolution of the trust, at which time the shareholders shall be entitled to a division of the property and profits then in the hands of the trustees, in the proportion that they hold shares in the company at such time, as hereinafter provided.
. “Article IV. The death of a shareholder during the continuance of this association shall not operate to determine the trust, nor shall it entitle the legal representatives of the deceased shareholder to an. account, or to take any action in the courts, or otherwise; against the trust or the trustees; but the executors, administrators, assigns or legal representatives of the deceased shall succeed to the rights of said decedent in the trust hereby created.”

Article VI provides;

“The certificates of stock shall be signed by a majority of those who are at the time trustees', and countersigned by the treasurer. They shall be transferable only on the books of the company, and shall be in form as follows:”

Then follows the form of the certificate, containing this provision:

“The shares of this association are personal property, and transferable only on the books of the company, in accordance with and subject to the by-laws of the company, and the purchaser or holder accepts the same subject to the declaration of trust and the acceptance thereof, and of the by-laws now or hereafter to be made.”

After the form of the certificate is this provision;

“Shareholders whose certificates stand in their names upon the books of the company shall alone be considered within the terms of this instrument, shall alone be entitled to vote, receive dividends, or be notified as hereinafter provided, or shall have the rights of owners.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 486, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfaddin-v-wiess-texapp-1914.