Morgan v. Hunley

267 S.W.2d 274, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 1954
DocketNo. 12611
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 267 S.W.2d 274 (Morgan v. Hunley) 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
Morgan v. Hunley, 267 S.W.2d 274, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2477 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

It is appellees’ position on this appeal that this is an action on behalf of the Parker Memorial Methodist Church (formerly called Central Methodist Church) against its agent and former pastor, the Reverend Mr.- C. W. McPhail, and his associates consisting of L. D. Morgan and J. F. McPhail, both of Lubbock, to account for secret profits made in connection with the sale of real estate located in Houston at the intersection of Wayside and Harrisburg. Because of the tacit abandonment by appellees of certain of the issues made by their pleadings, it is deemed best to set out, before any discussion of the pleadings, some of the salient and undisputed facts.

The Parker Memorial Methodist Church, formerly called Central Methodist Church, will hereafter be referred to simply as,the Church. On the property of the Church there was located the church building proper, the youth building, the Sunday school building, the parsonage, and a filling, station, on that portion of the property which had been leased to the Sinclair Oil Company. Prior to March 2, 1945, the Church had obtained another site in the City of Houston on which it proposed to erect its church buildings. On March 2, 1945 the church’s Quarterly Conference (being its governing body under the discipline of the Methodist Church), appointed a committee to consider selling the Church’s property located at Wayside and Harrisburg. On March 14, 1945 the Sinclair Oil Company made its first offer to purchase that part of the property which was occupied by it, being-100 x .150 feet for $60,000. ■ Other offers to purchase parcels out of said property were received.

Early in 1946 pursuant to the Methodist Church ‘discipline, Pastor " McPhail announced a Quarterly Conference for February 3, 1946, to consider offers of purchase made in connection with the aforesaid property. These offers included a new one by the Sinclair of $80,000 for the same property for which it had formerly offered $60,-000, and an offer by an undisclosed principal to purchase the entire property for $110,000. On the same day that he had announced the meeting of the Quarterly Conference, as aforesaid, Pastor C. W. McPhail left for California on certain business of the Methodist Church.- He went by way of Lubbock where his brother, J. F. McPhail, lived and was engaged in and assocated with L. D. Morgan, in the real estate business. C. W. McPhail discussed with his brother, J. F. McPhail, the proposed sale of the Church property. J. F. McPhail expressed interest in the proposed sale. In returning from California C. W. McPhail passed through Lubbock and was told by J. F. McPhail that L. D. Morgan was going to make an offer for the purchase of the Church property. Morgan did offer $120',000 for the entire property, together with the privilege of the Church remaining in the possession of the property for 18 months.

[276]*276The Church, through its building committee, made a counter-offer to L. D. Morgan, which contemplated selling to him the entire property for $125,000 with the right to retain the occupancy for Church purposes of the portions of the property which were then being so occupied for two years. The building committee had no power to make a binding offer to sell on said terms but Morgan wired his agreement to those terms. At the Quarterly Conference meeting of February 3, 1946, the building committee recommended that Morgan’s last offer of $125,-000 plus two years free occupancy be accepted. By a vote of 20 to 7 the Quarterly Conference agreed to accept said offer. The terms of t'he sale were duly approved in writing by the District Superintendent who presided over the Quarterly Conference, all in conformity with the Methodist Church discipline. A formal written contract of sale dated February 4, 1946, was placed in escrow together with a cashier’s check for $5,000. Thereafter, on August 30, 1946, the trustees of the Church executed to Morgan a deed covering the parcel which Sinclair had offered to buy for $80,000. Morgan thereafter sold said parcel, less a strip of 30 x 100 feet, to Sinclair for $80,000. He paid a commission on said sale of $4,000. On October 4, 1947 the final payment which Morgan was obligated to pay under the contract of sale was made to the Church.

From time to time rumors spread among the members of the 'Church that their pastor, C. W. McPhail, in some way stood to share in the profits which would be realized or were being realized on the sale of the parcels of land. Over a period of two and one-half years Morgan completed the resale, in parcels, of the entire property which he had purchased from the Church, for the gross sum of some $175,000. It was established without dispute that real estate values steadily increased in Houston during this period.

On April 29, 1950, certain members of the Church brought an action to recover the land, and in the alternative to recover from C. W. McPhail, and his brother J. F. Mc-Phail, and Morgan, the profits made on the resale of the property in parcels. Said plaintiffs alleged that they were bringing the suit for and on behalf of the Church and not for their own benefit. The Church was made a formal party defendant so as to bind it by any judgment which might be rendered in the suit. On February 11, 1953, the fourth original amended petition was filed' and it was in this petition that the Church for the first time joined as plaintiff. We think no purpose would be served by stating the issues which were tendered in said pleading because all of said issues, except as hereafter shown, were tacitly abandoned when the court submitted the case to the jury on special issues. At the conclusion of the trial the appellants, C. W. Mc-Phail, J. F. McPhail and L. D. Morgan, moved for a directed verdict. After the coming in of the verdict they also moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Said motions were overruled. The court submitted the case to the jury upon 15 special issues; the first seven of said special issues were plaintiffs’, or appellees’, special issues and special issues Nos. 8 to 15, inclusive, related to the statute of limitations. Special Issue No. 1 reads: “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that C. W. McPhail in acting as agent for Central Methodist Church in the sale of the property in question had any intention prior to October 4, 1947 to make for himself a personal profit as the result of said transaction?” To which the jury answered, “We do.” The jury found, in answer to special issue No. 2 that prior to- October 4, 1947 J. F. McPhail knew, etc. that C. W. Mc-Phail intended to make a personal profit out of the sale. In answer to special issue No. 3 the jury found that prior to October 1, 1947 L. D. Morgan knew, etc., that C. W. McPhail intended to make a personal profit oüt of the sale. In answer to special issues Nos. 4, 5, 6 and 7 the jury found, respectively: (4) that C. W. McPhail made a profit of $20,000, (5) that prior to October 4, 1947 there was an agreement among the McPhails and Morgan to divide the profits made out of the transaction, (6) related [277]*277back to special issue No. 5, and specified that L. D. Morgan and J. F. McPhail entered into the agreement so inquired about in special issue No. 5, (7) that the amount of the profit made by the parties to the agreement so to share profits was $60,000.

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.W.2d 274, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-hunley-texapp-1954.