Morrison v. St. Anthony Hotel, San Antonio

274 S.W.2d 556
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1955
Docket10275
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 274 S.W.2d 556 (Morrison v. St. Anthony Hotel, San Antonio) 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. St. Anthony Hotel, San Antonio, 274 S.W.2d 556 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

HUGHES, Justice.

All parties before this Court filed motions for summary judgment in the court below. The motion of third party defendant, Pan American Hotel Company, and intervenors, J. H. Frost, Forrest M. Smith and Ernest M. Groos, Trustees of the Morrison Trust, appellees, was granted and the motion of R. E. Morrison, plaintiff below and appellant here, was denied.

The judgment rendered'found'that appel-lees were the owners “of the legal and equitable title to the 1200 shares of Class ‘B’ stock in the St. Anthony Hotel, San Antonio, Texas,” claimed by appellant and vested title to such stock in appellees. The judgment directed that appellant deliver certificates of such stock to the Alamo National Bank in San Antonio in exchange for two cashier’s checks in the respective sums of $241,484.00 and $18,198.76, endorsed to his order and held by such bank.

This suit was initiated by appellant against the St. Anthony Hotel, San Antonio, Texas, a corporation, and its Board of Directors to compel the payment of dividends on the 1,200 shares of Class “B” Capital stock which he claimed to own. The defendants denied appellant’s ownership of the stock and impleaded Pan,American Hotel Company, a corporation, which asserted ownership of the stock based upon the alleged exercise, on February 29, 1952, of an option to purchase the stock claimed by appellant. Intervenors claimed ownership of one half of the stock by transfer from Pan American.

The trial court severed the issues relating to ownership of the stock from other issues in the case and tried only the stock ownership issues. This action of the trial court is unquestioned.

The ownership of the stock in question depends upon the proper exercise of a valid option to purchase such stock on the part of Pan American. The primary questions presented then are (1) is. the option valid and (2) did Pan American exercise such option in accordance with its terms. Before discussing the particular points made by appellant we will review the factual background of this controversy.

R. W. Morrison, who died April 3, 1948, was the owner of the physical properties constituting the St. Anthony Hotel in San Antonio. This ownership was evidenced by his ownership of all the stock in the Pan American Hotel Company, a corporation, which held the legal title and of which ‘ Mr. R. W. Morrison was President.

In 1944 Pan American entered into a lease and operating agreement with St. Anthony Hotel, Ltd., a limited partnership composed of Ernst V. Kunz, “as general partner” and R. W. Morrison (owner of all Pan American stock), H. G. Morrison, R. E. Morrison (appellant and nephew of R. W. Morrison) and P. G. Morrison as special partners, such lease and operating agreement being for a period of 35 years. R. W. Morrison owned sixty per cent of the assets of this partnership, including the 35-year lease and operating agreement.

In 1946 R. W. Morrison brought about a dissolution of this limited partnership by-conveying his interest therein, sixty per cent, to Pan American. Whereupon the remaining partners formed a new limited partnership under the name “The St. Anthony Hotel, Ltd;,” and, under an agreement with Pan American took over the lease and operating agreement relating to the St. Anthony Hotel. One of the provisions of this new agreement was that Pan American had the option to cancel such lease upon 30 days notice and upon payment to lessee, the partnership, of a cash sum equal to the net income received by lessee under the lease for the preceding three years or three times the annual net income if less than three years had elapsed.

About three months after the death of R. W. Morrison appellant and H. G. Morrison ousted E. V. Kunz and Paul G. Mor- *559 risQn from the limited partnership, “The St. Anthony Hotel, Ltd.,” declared the dissolution of such partnership and expressly repudiated the right of Pan American to cancel the hotel lease as provided in the 1946 agreement. The result of this repudiation was that Pan American gave notice to the partnership of the cancellation of the lease and operating agreement as provided in the 1946 agreement and in order to determine the rights of the interested parties Pan American filed suit in the Bexar County District Court. This litigation was terminated by a compromise agreement dated December 1, 1948. Out of certain provisions of this agreement this controversy arises.

The essentials of this agreement which we need state here are:

The limited partnership of which appellant was a member was to be dissolved, its accrued profits to be distributed to the partners and its assets transferred to and its liabilities to be assumed by a corporation to be formed. The name of this corporation was “The St. Anthony Hotel, San Antonio, Texas.”

The capital stock of this corporation was to be $50,000.00 and was divided into Classes A and B, each share of stock having a par value of $10.00. 52% or 2600 shares of the stock were Class A and 48% or 2400 shares were Class B. Class B stock had a preferential right to annual dividends up to $130,000.00, both classes sharing equally in dividends in excess of this amount.

Pan American and the new corporation were to cancel the existing lease and operating agreement relating to the hotel and a new or “reformation of said lease agreement and supplements” were to be made for the same period of time and upon other stated provisions

“* * * except that the provision contained in said supplemental agreement providing for the option to cancel said lease based upon the payment of three times the average net income to the lessee shall become operative only after the expiration of three years from December 31, 1948, and an appropriate provision shall be inserted as a condition to the stock of the lessee corporation that all cancellation funds shall be paid to the holders of the ‘Class B’ stock in addition to other funds said class of stock may be entitled to as a liquidating dividend in event of liquidation.”

The agreement provided that the Class B stock should be issued in equal shares to Mr. Kunz, Paul and H. G. Morrison and appellant and that they should be nontransferable except by unanimous written consent of the Class A stock.

Pursuant to such compromise agreement the new lessee corporation was organized on the 31st day of January, 1949, and on the same day it executed a new lease and operating agreement with Pan American for the St. Anthony Hotel. The lease term was 30 years and 11 months. Reserved in the lease by Pan American was a right to purchase outstanding Class B stock which was expressed as follows:

“12. Lessor reserves for itself, its successors and assigns or nominee:

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274 S.W.2d 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-st-anthony-hotel-san-antonio-texapp-1955.