Morrison v. Mitchell

243 S.W. 555, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 15, 1922
DocketNo. 9930.
StatusPublished

This text of 243 S.W. 555 (Morrison v. Mitchell) 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
Morrison v. Mitchell, 243 S.W. 555, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1131 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

Earl Morrison has- appealed from a judgment rendered against him in favor of J. W. Mitchell, receiver of the Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company, hereinafter called bonding company, upon a promissory note for the principal sum of $600, signed by Morrison and made payable to that company. The trial was before a jury, and the judgment rendered was upon a verdict returned in *556 obedience to a peremptory instruction from the court.

During the month of July, 1910, the defendant, Morrison, subscribed for 25 shares of capital stock in a corporation known as the Bankers’ Trust Company, thereafter to be organized. The face value of the stock was $10 per share or $250 in the aggregate, but the subscription.included $30 per share to go into the treasury of the corporation as a surplus. On April 12, 1911, the 25 shares of stock in the Bankers’ Trust Company so subscribed by Morrison was issued to him. At the time Morrison gave his subscription for stock in the Bankers’ Trust Company he did not pay any cash, but in lieu thereof executed two promissory notes payable to himself, which he indorsed to that company, one for the principal suih of $250 and another for the principal sum of $750. The note for $250 was paid to the Bankers’ Trust Company prior to its incorporation. On March 16, 1912, Morrison paid to the Bankers’ Trust Company $150 of the principal of the $750 note, and executed a renewal for the balance, to wit, $600, the note maturing December 1, 1912, and made payable to the order of the Bankers’ Trust Company. On December 1, 1912, he executed a second renewal of the $600 note, but the same was made payable to the order of the bonding company. Prior to the execution of the last renewal note, and on, to wit, July 25, 1911, one R. T. Stuart, purporting to act for himself and others whom he styled his associates, offered to purchase from the bonding company $150,000 worth of its capital stock on a basis of $1 to capital and $3 to surplus. That offer was accepted by the board of directors of that company by resolution duly adopted, which further directed that the stock be issued direct to the parties in whose names the offer was made, a list of whom had been furnished by Stuart. The offer to purchase the stock was to give “securities” therefor. It is to be inferred from the evidence that Morrison’s name was on the list so furnished by Stuart of proposed purchasers of the stock, and that the offer by Stuart included an offer to buy for Morrison 18% shares of stock in the bonding company. On the basis stated in the resolution passed by the board of directors “of $1 to capital and $3 to surplus,” the offer so accepted was' equivalent to an offer to pay the bonding company $750.

The evidence further shows that in consideration of the stock to Morrison the Bankers’ Trust Company agreed to transfer to the company issuing the stock Morrison’s note for $750 theretofore given by him to the Bankers’ Trust Company for the surplus on the 25 shares of stock for which Morrison had subscribed in the latter company. On July 25, 1911, and after the adoption of the resolution by the board of directors of the bonding company above mentioned, 18% shares of the capital stock in the latter company was issued to Morrison, and thereafter Morrison’s name was carried on the book's of the latter company as a stockholder. The evidence shows that the two companies mentioned had substantially the same board of directors, and both companies were duly incorporated. The evidence furtheir shows that after the 25 shares of stock in the Bankers’ Trust Company was issued that stock was held by that company as collateral security for the payment of the balance of Morrison’s subscription of $750. Notwithstanding the adoption of the resolution above referred to by the bonding company and the issuance of the stock by that company to Morrison on July 25, 1911, in consideration of the transfer to it of the $750 notes theretofore executed by Morrison to the Bankers’ Trust Company, the latter company collected $150 on that note on March 16, 1912, and took from Morrison a renewal note for $600, payable to itself, due December 1, 1912, as above noted. And not until the last-named date did Morrison execute the note herein sued on for $600 and made payable to the bonding company.

It is undisputed that Morrison never signed any subscription contract to take stock in the bonding company, and never participated in any of the meetings of the stockholders or directors of that company. In his original petition, the receiver alleged that Morrison had entered into a certain subscription contract in writing, whereby he subscribed for and agreed to pay to the bonding company $750 for 18% shares of capital stock of that company, and that thereafter he delivered to the bonding company the $750 note mentioned above, which he had already given to the Bankers’ Trust Company for the 25 shares of stock in that company, and that thereafter the defendant executed the note sued on, dated December 1, 1912, as further security for his subscription contract for the stock and that he also hypothecated the 25 shares of .the Bankers’ Trust Company stock as additional security for his said subscription contract, and plaintiff prayed for a judgment for the amount due on the $600 note, together with a foreclosure of the lien upon the Bankers’ Trust Company stock which had been deposited as collateral security as aforesaid.

The defendant Morrison filed an answer, which, among other things, contained an express denial that he had executed any subscription' for stock in the bonding company. He also pleaded his subscription contract for stock in the Bankers’ Trust Company and the execution of his two notes, one for $250 and one for $750, given in payment of that subscription. He further pleaded the execution of the note in controversy under the belief that he was thereby paying for his stock in *557 thie Bankers’ Trust Company; and at the time he executed it he informed the bonding company that he had not subscribed for stock in that company, and did not intend so to do; that thereafter he on many occasions repeated such statements, and repudiated any rights as a stockholder in that company; that he never received any stock in the bonding company, and that he had never performed any functions as a stockholder in the bonding company. The facts so alleged were made the basis of his plea of a failure of consideration for the note sued on.

By his first supplemental petition, plaintiff prayed directly for recovery on the $600 note, but further alleged that if for any reason the note was unenforceable the plaintiff was entitled to recover the amount of said note, with interest, by reason of the fact that the defendant through his duly authorized agent, R. T. Stuart, had subscribed for 18 ¾ shares in the bonding company, by the terms of which subscription contract the defendant obligated himself to pay the sum of $40 per share, which included $10 per share to the capital of the company and $80 per share as surplus, aggregating the sum of $750, of which amount $150 had been paid, leaving a balance of $600, with interest thereon; that the defendant had held himself out to the public as a subscriber and stockholder in the bonding company, and had permitted the corporation to hold out to the public that he was such stockholder, and that by reason of all those facts the defendant is estopped from denying his liability to the plaintiff as receiver of the bonding company to the extent of the unpaid balance for said stock.

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W. 555, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-mitchell-texapp-1922.