Oil Lease & Royalty Syndicate v. Beeler

217 S.W. 1054, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 12
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 3, 1920
DocketNo. 8284.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 217 S.W. 1054 (Oil Lease & Royalty Syndicate v. Beeler) 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
Oil Lease & Royalty Syndicate v. Beeler, 217 S.W. 1054, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 12 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

On January 7, 1919, W. E. Shuttles, E. H. Shackelford, H. B. Beeler, Wertli Wimberly, ancf J. W. Crotty signed and acknowledged, in the manner required for acknowledging deeds, an instrument in writing for the purpose of forming a voluntary association, to be known as the Oil Lease & Royalty Syndicate, the purpose of which was to accumulate money and property and to buy and sell oil leasés and oil and mineral royalties. The amount of money to be accumulated was in no event to exceed $259,000, and those contributing the money were to receive certificates of shares covering the amount contributed, each of the face value of $25, issued by the officers designated in the 'articles of association. The parties agreed that an “executive committee,” composed of “five certificate holders,” should manage the affairs of the association, and should have authority during its existence to perform all acts in its judgment necessary to complete the organization, and, after organization, to make or enter into all contracts or agreements necessary or advisable, in its judgment, for the conduct of the affairs of the association, to invest its funds, and to direct and manage all of its affairs. It was also agreed by the fiye parties that they should constitute the executive committee, and should hold their office as executive committeemen “until called together for the purpose of electing trustees to take over the accumulated assets and create a declaration of trust or corporate body. * * * ” It was further agreed that there should be a board of five directors, which should act in an advisory capacity to the executive committee, but that after the “dissolution” of the executive committee a board of directors selected by the shareholders should have charge of the conduct and management of the affairs of the association. The profits, after deducting all expenses of operation, commissions, etc., were to be paid to shareholders in good standing upon the order of the executive committee as dividends. Other provisions, attempting to fix the liability of shareholders as to third persons, etc., are contained in the agreement, but are omitted here, because of no controlling importance in the decision of the issues presented.

Prior to or concurrently with the execution of the articles of association the parties named therein as the executive committee, Shuttles, Shackelford, Beeler, Wimberly, and Crotty, organized and secured from the state authorities a charter for the Oil Lease & Development Company, naming themselves as its board of 'directors, with an authorized capital stock of $700,000, all of which was acquired by them and one ,Tucker, a geologist. On January 7, 1919, the association, Oil Lease & Royalty Syndicate, and the corporation, the Oil Lease & Development Company, entered into a contract in writing by which, after reciting that the Development Company was possessed of valuable geological information regarding the location of oil and gas leases within, the state, and possessed as well of certain exclusive sales con-tl-acts covering oil and gas leases in Erath and Comanche counties, the Development Company agreed to transfer and assign to the Syndicate all its right, title, and interest in and to the enumerated lease contracts, and to furnish the Syndicate such geological information regarding the oil-bearing territories of the state possessed by it, together with the exclusive option of purchasing all oil leases and royalties acquired by the Development Company upon the terms mutually agreed upon between the parties. In consideration of the doing of the things enumerated by the Development Company, the Syndicate agreed to pay the Development Company an amount -equal to óne-half its net earnings, first deducting all legitimate expense incurred in the operation and conduct of the 'business of the Syndicate.

Subsequent to the foregoing there were several meetings of the executive commit *1056 tee; the proceedings being recorded in a minute book. At such a meeting on Eebru-' ary 7, 1919, Beeler was elected chairman of the executive committee and president of the board of directors, Grotty, Wimberly, and Shackelford vice presidents, and Shuttles secretary and treasurer. At the same meeting it was voted “that all salaries start on February 1st, $300 per month, payable last day of each month.” The minutes fail to show to whom the salaries of $300 per month were to be paid, but the evidence shows without contradiction that they were intended for each member of the executive committee. On March 25, 1919, it was voted that one share of stock be issued to each of the executive committee. On April 29, 1919, there was held what purported to be a meeting of the stockholders of the Oil Lease & Royalty Syndicate. There were present at the meeting, according to the minutes recorded at that time, 18 stockholders in person and 103 by proxy. H. B. Beeler, E. L. Maxey, H. J. Oastleberg, Miss Sue Adams, Henry Bell, O. W. Swisher, J. H. Poster, L. E. Warner, and W. E. Shuttles, 'all shareholders, were elected directors of the association. The call for the meeting was issued by Beeler, chairman of the executive committee. The authority for .doing so is in dispute; some testimony tending to show that a majority of the executive committee directed it, and some tending to show the call was issued upon the demand of a minority of the executive committee. All members of the executive committee were cognizant of the call and the proposed meeting.

On Apx’il 30, 1919, the Oil Lease & Royalty Syndicate, the Oil Lease & Development Company, J. W. Orotty, Werth Wimberly, and E. H. Shackelford, the appellants, applied for and secured a temporary injunction enjoining Beeler, Shuttles, Oastleberg, Poster, Warner, Maxey, and Sue Adams from interfering with a proposed sale by appellants of an oil and gas lease to R. O. Harvey, and from interfering with the ihan-agement of the affairs of the Oil Lease & Royalty Syndicate as conducted by its executive committee. Subsequently, on the coming in of motion to dissolve, answer, and cross-action, the court dissolved the temporary injunction, and on a hearing of appel-lees’ cross-action enjoined appellants Orotty, Wimberly, and Shackelford from acting or assuming to act as executive committeemen, managers, or otherwise for or on behalf of the Oil Lease & Royalty Syndicate, and from interfering with the stockholders and directors of the Syndicate in the exercise' of their rights, duties, and functions as such, and from occupjnng the offices of the Syndicate from and after two weeks frpm the date of the entry of the decree, and enjoining such parties and the Oil Lease & Development Company from attempting to enforce the contract between the Syndicate and the Development Company.

In addition to the foregoing, it appeared on the trial of the motion to dissolve and appellees’ cross-action, that approximately $3S,000 had been paid to those in charge of the association. None of the executive committee, with the exception of Shuttles, had paid in any money, and Shuttles only paid in $25, the par value of the share of stock issued to him by the executive committee. Beeler claimed to have purchased $1,000 in stock. The purchase was made, however, after the meeting of the stockholders, and payment was made by having a charge fen try made against Beeler on the books for that amount. Beeler claims the association was in debt to him in excess of that sum at that time.

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Bluebook (online)
217 S.W. 1054, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oil-lease-royalty-syndicate-v-beeler-texapp-1920.