Murphy v. Argonaut Oil Co.

299 S.W. 488, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 829
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 2, 1927
DocketNo. 11776.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 299 S.W. 488 (Murphy v. Argonaut Oil Co.) 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
Murphy v. Argonaut Oil Co., 299 S.W. 488, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 829 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinions

BUCK,’ J.

Suit was filed by J. Myron Murphy in the Seventeenth judicial district court of Tarrant county against the Argonaut Oil Company, a Delaware corporation with a permit to do business in Texas,- Walter B. Scott, individually and as trustee for the corporation, James P. Straughan, individually and as receiver of the corporation, J. Lee Costley, Tol Johnson, and S. W. Fisher. The plaintiff’s third amended original petition was filed May 8, 1926. The record does not show, when the original petition was filed. Plaintiff alleged that the permit of the Argonaut Oil Company to do business in . Texas was forfeited on or about July 3, 1922; that there were no directors or officers of the oil company residing in New York City. The. suit was in the nature of a creditor’s bill, and he alleged that the assets of the corporation in Texas had been dissipated and disposed of by proceedings in the district court of Tar-rant county, which were irregular and fraudulent on the part of defendants, and that thereby the plaintiff, unless said proceedings and judgment were set aside, would be deprived of his right to collect his debt. He alleged that on June 18,1922, plaintiff had filed in the Supreme Court of New York a suit against the Argonaut Oil Company on five promissory notes for $5,000 each, and had obtained judgment therein on September 4, 1923. For cause of action, he alleged that on March 13, 1922, the defendant J. L. Costley filed a suit in the Seventeenth judicial district court of Tarrant county against the Argonaut Oil Company, asking for the appointment of a receiver for the properties of said company in Texas. This suit was based upon a joint contract alleged to have been executed by the Argonaut Oil Company, acting by W. E. Brady, its then president, as first party, and the plaintiff J. Lee Costley and W. E. Brady as second party, whereby the Argonaut Oil Company obligated itself to pay W. E. Brady and J. Lee Costley the sum of $35,000, for certain state oil permits in the bed of the Wichita river. W. E. Brady, joint maker of said contract, was not made a party to this suit, nor to the' prayer for a receivership. The petition prayed for a judgment against the oil company for one-half of .the total consideration which said contract purported to bind the Argonaut Oil Company to pay to the said J. Lee Costley and W. E. Brady, and for a foreclosure of an alleged vendor’s lien upon the oil permits alleged to have been sold by Brady and Cost-ley to the Argonaut Oil Company.

The law firm of Phillips, Trammell & Caldwell represented plaintiff in this suit, and plaintiff alleged that on the same day an application was filed by said firm for the immediate appointment of a receiver, though *490 the record shows that it was filed the second day thereafter. The reasons stated for the appointment of a receiver were that a judgment in favor of Tol Johnson against the oil company had been recovered in the Sixty-Seventh district court, on which garnishment was issued, and its funds tied up thereby, and it owed approximately $100,000, and further alleged:

“Plaintiff is informed and believes that the said defendant will be unable to replevy any such funds or properties seized or impounded by writs of' garnishment, attachment or other process, and the result of levy of such process (which plaintiff alleges to be imminent) would be to greatly jippair the ability of said defendant to carry on its business and would greatly impair the securities held by plaintiff for the payment of the indebtedness herein sued on, and cause plaintiff to lose a great portion of his debt.”

The prayer of the application was:

“ * * * That a receiver be appointed for said defendant, with authority to operate, care for, keep and maintain its properties and assets, pending the trial of this suit, with such authority, duties, aud powers as to the court may seem proper.”

On March 15, 1928, the court entered an order appointing James P. Straughan temporary receiver, without notice to the creditors generally—

“!i * * with the authority, power, and duty to take charge and control of the books, papers, assets, and funds of said defendant in this state, and to safely keep and preserve same, pending the hearing of this case.”

The court, on application of the receiver, appointed the plaintiff’s attorneys, Phillips, Trammell & Caldwell, to represent the receiver of the defendant. Error is assigned to this action of the court, by reason of the fact that thereby the attorneys of plaintiff were made the attorneys of the receiver, and would be required to advise the receiver in the management of the assets of the oil company and the payment of the claims against said company and receiver, including the claim of J. Tee Costley.

McLean, Scott & McLean, of which firm the defendant Walter B. Scott is a member, filed an answer in the Costley suit May 9, 1922, as attorneys for the Argonaut Oil Company. June 23, 1922, Tol Johnson filed a petition in intervention in said suit of Costley v. Argonaut Oil Company, alleging that on February 7, 1922, he recovered a judgment in the Sixty-Seventh district court against the Argonaut Oil Company for $13,562.15, and had abstracted the same in Comanche county, Tex., and prayed that due notice be given to the plaintiff and that upon hearing the court enter an order directing the receiver to make sale of the properties of the Argonaut Oil Company, over which this intervener has a valid and subsisting lien. The plaintiff here insists that the intervention of Tol Johnson is insufficient on which to base a judgment, inasmuch as he alleges that no adverse parties were mentioned, and it does not allege that the abstract of judgment alleged to have been filed in Comanche county was properly indexed, and does not pray for notice to the Argonaut Oil Company that it was filed without any motion therefor or any leave of the court or any entry on the motion docket, or elsewhere on the records of said court, that the judge’s trial docket shows no notation of Tol Johnson ever appearing in the ease, nor does the motion docket nor do the minutes of the court show any record thereof.

On July 31, 1922, as alleged, without notice to any one, or any record of Tol Johnson’s intervention, an order was entered that Tol Johnson’s alleged claim “be and is hereby allowed against the estate of said Argonaut Oil Company, and the same is hereby decreed that said property [describing the same] be, and the same is hereby, ordered to be sold by the receiver.”

The Argonaut Oil Company was served with summons in Murphy’s New York suit against it on June 18, 1922, by service on its president, John P. McEwan. Pending this suit, John P. McEwan came to Texas and made a financial arrangement with McLean, Scott & McLean, whereby the attorneys advanced a sum of money with which the Tol Johnson claim was paid in the sum of $7,250 and the Costley claim in the sum of $1,000. On September 21,1922, the receiver, Straughan, made a report to the eoiirt of the sale of the Argonaut Oil Company’s properties to Walter B. Scott, said report being in part as follows:

“At such sale your receiver was presented with an assignment from Tol Johnson, plaintiff in cause No. 54647, styled Tol Johnson v.

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Related

Colburn v. Ward
40 S.W.2d 878 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1931)
Murphy v. Argonaut Oil Co.
23 S.W.2d 339 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
299 S.W. 488, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-argonaut-oil-co-texapp-1927.