Millsaps v. Johnson

196 S.W. 202, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 634
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 16, 1917
DocketNo. 1153.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 196 S.W. 202 (Millsaps v. Johnson) 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
Millsaps v. Johnson, 196 S.W. 202, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 634 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HALE, J.

This action was brought by W. J. Johnson, D. W. Colley and wife, R. H. Henry, J. H. Endacott, J. R. Baker, and W. M. Waldock against Due Millsaps, C. L. Mur-rie, and the MeGrattan-Millsaps Company, a corporation. Plaintiffs alleged that each of them was a stockholder in the MeGrattan-Millsaps Company, and held such stock in January, 1913; that said corporation had a capital stock of $40,000, divided into shares of $10 each; that defendant Due Millsaps was at all times a director, and that the other directors were Hugh McGrattan, I. E. Rose, and Prank McGrattan and J. H. Endacott; that the said Millsaps assumed to act as manager of said corporation up to about March 1, 1914, and that Endacott was not an active director; that the corporation operated a dry goods store at Weatherford, Tex., up to the latter part of 1914, and that in the fall of 1913 put in a stock of dry goods at Wichita Palls, Tex., and conducted the business there until about March 1, 1914; that early in the year of 1914 P. H. Pennington, C. J. Barnard, and Due Millsaps agreed to organize two mercantile corporations at Wichita Palls, one to be known as the P. B. M. Company, and one as the P. H. Pennington Company; that Pennington and Barnard each owned a stock of goods in Wichita Palls, Tex.; that the Pennington Company was to have a capital stock of $25,000, and the P. B. M. Company of $75,000, and that both were to be operated by Pennington, Barnard, and Millsaps, and that each of them was to furnish, either in cash or merchandise, one-third of the capital of each corporation; that Barnard and Pennington each conveyed to said corporation merchandise of value equal to the stock subscribed for by them respectively, and that Due Millsaps took from Me-Grattan-Millsaps Company’s stock at Wichita Palls goods worth $36,500, and placed $25,-000 worth of the same in the P. B. M. Company, and $13,500 into the P. H. Pennington Company, and that in doing so he acted without authority of ihe corporation, and converted the goods to his own use, and that neither said corporation nor its stockholders had ever received anything for said goods. Plaintiffs further alleged that, if Millsaps was authorized to transfer the goods, that he had convei’ted whatever shares of stock or money he received as the consideration for said merchandise and fixtures to his own use, and that the stock was worth 100 cents on the dollar, and that thereby the MeGrattan-Millsaps Company and its stockholders were damaged $36,500; and, further, that if the MeGrattan-Millsaps Company received anything, that the consideration was wholly inadequate, and was not agreed to and accepted by the corporation and that he had no right to purchase either the goods or stock from said corporation; that the said Millsaps still owned a part of the stock in the P. B. M. Company and in .the Pennington Company, but claimed the same as his own, and had repudiated his trust relationship, and that the corporation and stockholders were entitled to recover the. value of the goods and fixtures or the value of the stock. The petition then proceeds as follows:

“Plaintiffs further allege that they are informed that the said defendant Due Millsaps, in consideration of the said merchandise and fixtures taken by him in the first instance, as aforesaid and the stock obtained for same in the second instance, has either paid or arranged to pay a portion of the debts of the McGrattan-Miil-saps Company, and being in the sum of about $20,000, and that, as part of said consideration, the said defendant Due Millsaps canceled $5,000 of his own stock in the MeGrattan-Millsaps Company; but plaintiffs allege, if this be true, that this consideration is wholly inadequate, and that the said property so converted was worth, as aforesaid, the sum of at least $36,500, and in the cancellation by the said Due Millsaps of $5,000 of his stock in the said McGrattan-Mill-saps Company was not any remuneration of any value of any kind to the MeGrattan-Millsaps Company, and was of no benefit to said company, and was not agreed to by any of the stockholders or directors in said company; so that, if the said defendant Due Millsaps has paid the sum of $20,000, which these plaintiffs deny, then the said defendant Due Millsaps is still indebted to the said MeGrattan-Millsaps Company and the stockholders thereof in the sum of $3.6,500; that as soon as said merchandise and fixtures were appropriated by the said defendant Due Millsaps, as aforesaid, which act plaintiffs alleged took place about March. 1, 1914, the said defendant Due Millsaps abandoned the said MeGrattan-Millsaps Company, and devoted all of his time and attention to the said P. B. M. Company and the said P. H. Pennington Company, and thereby went in competition with the said MeGrattan-Millsaps Company, and was in competition with same as long as the said MeGrattan-Millsaps Company survived in Wichita Ealls, Tex., which plaintiffs alleged was some two or three months, and by this act on the part of the defendant Duo Mill-saps the said, MeGrattan-Millsaps Company was forced out of business in Wichita Ealls, and the value of plaintiffs’ stock in said MeGrattan-Millsaps Company, which but for the wrongful acts of the said defendant Due Millsaps was worth par, and was made to depreciate in value until the same was worthless, and that said defendant Due Millsaps thereby wrongfully and maliciously destroyed the said McGrattan-Mill-saps Company’s store in Wichita Ealls, and deprived these plaintiffs of the value of their stock in the said company, and by virtue of these facts the said plaintiffs are entitled to recover of the said defendant Due Millsaps the sum of $5,000 as exemplary damages.
“Plaintiffs further allege that they bring this suit as stockholders in the said MeGrattan-Millsaps Company for the use and benefit of said company, and for themselves as stockholders, and for the other stockholders in the same, and they allege that the board of directors of said corporation, at the time of the institution of this suit, and at all times since the wrongful acts complained of, is and was dominated and controlled by the said Due Millsaps, and that the said Due Millsaps and the majority of the board of directors were in league with each other for the purpose of assisting and enabling the said Due Millsaps to acquire the property of the said Millsaps Company, their plan being for the said Due filillsaps to take the assets; and for the said Due Millsaps to compensate his co- *204 partners after he had made a successful getaway, and that the said Due Millsaps at all such times influenced and controlled the vote of a majority of said directors on this account, and he thus caused them to disregard their true relation and obligations to the stockholders of the said company, and overpersuaded them, and misrepresented to some of them his true intention, so that they were induced to vote at said meetings during said times as directors, by the said Due Millsaps, and the majority of said directors are still aiding and assisting the said Due Millsaps in completing the fraud which he had perpetrated upon plaintiffs herein and other innocent stockholders; that the two directors, Hugh McGrattan and Frank McGrattan, were recompensed for their acts in this connection by being permitted to buy accounts of the said McGrattan-Millsaps Company at Weatherford, Tex., for a sum much less than their reasonable value, and the said I. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 202, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millsaps-v-johnson-texapp-1917.