New State Land Co. v. Wilson

150 S.W. 253, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 791
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 29, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 150 S.W. 253 (New State Land Co. v. Wilson) 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
New State Land Co. v. Wilson, 150 S.W. 253, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 791 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

JAMES, C. J.

The case was disposed of in the district court on certain special exceptions to plaintiffs’ (appellants’) third amended original petition, to wit, the exceptions 14, 15, and 15a urged by defendants Cora Ogden Wilson and B. F. Wilson, also the. geperal demurrers urged by them, and also the special exceptions of the defendants R. H. Hunnam and F. C. Hunnam; plaintiffs having declined to further amend. The judgment was that plaintiffs take nothing.

The amended petition stated, in substance: That plaintiff New State Land Company was incorporated under the laws of the United States applicable to the Indian Territory, now the state of Oklahoma, in 1905, and that the other plaintiff, A. H. Scoggin, had heretofore intervened, by leave of court, as the assignee of said company, and complaining of defendant B. F. Wilson, a resident of Nashville, Tenn., Cora Ogden Wilson, a resident of Bexar county, Tex., H. L. Norris, a resident of Jones county, Tex., and F. C. Hunnam and Richard Hunnam, residents of Bexar county, Tex., and alleged that about April 26, 1909, said company began negotiations with said Wilsons, who were acting through said Hunnams, for the purchase of certain lands owned by said Wilsons, 30,345 acres in Terrell county, Tex., which led to a contract of purchase or sale of said lands being entered into between said company and said Wilsons, by the terms of which contract the consideration of $37,906.25 was to be paid them by said company, $1,000 in cash, which was paid, and the balance in periodical installments, with certain interest on the deferred payments, the sellers agreeing to furnish abstract showing marketable title, also tax statements, and good and sufficient warranty deed, and providing that, should the purchasers fail to comply with the contract, the sum of $1,000, above mentioned, should be forfeited as liquidated damages, the deal to be closed within 15 days from date (May 6, 1909), and warranty deed furnished. That plaintiff corporation, and since its assignment to plaintiff A. H. Scog-gin, have at all times been ready, anxious, and able to comply with said contract, and have in fact done so — that is to say, the said corporation has paid the $1,000 and executed and delivered to defendants Wilson vendor’s lien notes for the deferred payments, *254 according to the requirements of the contract — but that said. Wilsons have failed and refused, and now refuse, to execute to either plaintiff the deed to said lands. That said Wilsons prepared and presented the vendor’s lien notes, and at their special instance and request the same were signed and delivered to said Wilsons, through their agents, F. C. Hunnam & Co., who accepted and retained them, and same are now in their possession, or in the possession of their said agents. That, relying on said contract and on its being carried out by defendants, etc., the said New State Land Company has contracted to sell a large portion of said land, and was contracting to sell more of it, at $3.50 per acre, and would have sold the entire land at that price, and could and would have realized a profit thereon of $68,276.25; and that the reasonable market value of this land at the time defendants breached the contract and refused to convey same to plaintiff corporation was $3.50 per acre, whereby plaintiff corporation and Scoggin, its assignee, have been damaged in said sum, for which they sue in the alternative as hereinafter prayed for.

Plaintiffs alleged further: That the initial payment of $1,000 was paid to F. C. Hun-nam & Co., as agents of defendants Wilson; and if it should' be determined that they were not their authorized agents, or for any other reason were not entitled to receive said $1,000 for defendants Wilson, and should plaintiff fail to recover judgment for specific performance of said contract, or a judgment for said damages, as hereinafter prayed for, against the Wilsons, and then, but in that event only, they ask judgment against defendants Hunnam for said $1,000, with interest, etc. That on August 7, 1909, the plaintiff New State Land Company filed a lis pendens notice of this proceeding, which was duly recorded in Terrell county in volume 1, p. 6. That since filing this suit the New State Land Company sold, transferred, and assigned, for valuable consideration to it paid, all its right, title, and interest in and to the subject-matter of this suit, and all rights of action by it had against the said Wilsons under the said contract of sale and by reason of the breach thereof, to A. H. Scoggin, the intervener and plaintiff herein; wherefore said Scoggin represents that as such assignee he is damaged by the failure and continued failure of defendants to perform their said contract in the amount of $68,276.25, for which he asks judgment in the alternative, as hereinafter mentioned. That the defendant H. L. Norris is asserting some character of title or claim to said land, and he is made a defendant.

The petition concludes with a prayer (1) that plaintiffs have judgment specifically enforcing the performance of said contract, and that the title to the lands be decreed to plaintiffs, or to plaintiff New State Land Company, or to plaintiff A. H. Scoggin, subject to the vendor’s lien for the deferred payments, and that all title, but subject to said vendor’s lien, be divested out of defendants B. F. and Cora Ogden Wilson and Norris and all their assignees who have become sucb since the filing of said lis pen-dens notice, and for general relief; (2) that should plaintiffs not be entitled to the above relief, they, and each of them, pray in the alternative for judgment against the defendants Wilson for said damages, including said $1,000; and (3) that, if found not entitled to either of the above forms of relief, they ask for judgment, in that event, against defendants Hunnam, as the facts may justify.

As already stated, the defendants Wilson interposed demurrers, of which the general and the special demurrers 14, 15, and 15a were sustained. By these the question was raised that the New State Land Company, being a foreign corporation, and it appearing that the contract alleged was executed, if executed at all, in San Antonio, Tex., and at the times mentioned in the petition it was actually transacting business within the state of Texas, could not transact business in the state, such as the making of the contract in question, and could not maintain an action in this state — the petition failing to allege previous compliance with our statute for filing a copy of its articles of incorporation, and obtaining a permit from the Secretary of State of the state of Texas to transact business in the state; that it inferentially appears from the petition that said foreign private corporation has as its principal object and purpose the buying and selling of lands, but it does not appear that it had the legal right under its charter, or under the laws of Texas, to enter into the contract for the purchase of lands in Texas as alleged; on the contrary, it appears from the face of the pleading that it was incapable of making or executing such a contract, or any valid contract for the purchase by it of lands in Texas, such as those described in the petition; and that it appears from the petition that said corporation was, at the date of the alleged contract, a foreign corporation, without authority to purchase the land referred to, and the defendants could not be compelled to accept the notes of such a corporation as part consideration for the land, and such notes are not a legal consideration for such land, and no action for damages can be based on defendants’, refusal to accept such notes.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.W. 253, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-state-land-co-v-wilson-texapp-1912.