Oil Well Supply Co. v. Burk-Waggoner Oil Co.

261 S.W. 830, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 945
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 1924
DocketNo. 2292.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 261 S.W. 830 (Oil Well Supply Co. v. Burk-Waggoner 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
Oil Well Supply Co. v. Burk-Waggoner Oil Co., 261 S.W. 830, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 945 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

This suit was brought by appellant, as plaintiff, against the appel-lees as defendants, in the county court of Wichita county. From a judgment in its favor against Bur It-Waggoner Oil Company, and against it and in favor of R. M. Wag-goner, the plaintiff has perfected its appeal to this court.

The plaintiff’s suit was based upon a note for $402.55, payable to the order of plaintiff and signed by Burk-Waggoner Oil Company by Clois L. Green, and also by Clois B. Green individually, and plaintiff also seeks recovery upon said note against R. M. Wag-goner, by reason of the facts alleged by it, that R. M. Waggoner became liable and bound to pay said note for the reason that Burk-Waggoner Oil Company sold and transferred aE of its ássets, property and buildings, to defendant R. M. Waggoner and to Clois B. Green, for a valuable consideration, part of which consideration was that the said Waggoner and Green agreed to accept, assume and pay off any and all indebtedness incurred by the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company, of whatsoever kind and character. That at the date of said transfer and sale from said oil compahy to Waggoner and Green, said note was a bona fide and valid, existing obligation against said oil company and was assumed by Green and Waggoner. Plaintiff further alleges that Green had filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy, and that all of said Green’s assets are in the hands of the United States District Court for the Northern District of, Texas.

Waggoner filed his answer containing general demurrer and general denial.

Plaintiff filed his first supplemental petition, which presents the further cause of action in support of, and in addition to, that set out, and alleges that after the plaintiff had sold its goods, wares, and merchandise to said oil company, for which debt this note sued on was given, that Waggoner and Green, jointly and Severally proposed to the directors of the oil company to take over and' accept all of the property and assets, real and personal, of said oil company, and that in consideration therefor they (Green and Waggoner) would assume and pay off all the existing indebtedness of the oil company ; that said proposal was verbally made at a called meeting of said directory, of which Green and Waggoner were members, and that the board of directors accepted said proposal at that meeting, both Wag-goner and Green being present at the time of such acceptance; that a record in writing was made upon the minute book of the company by the secretary'and vice president of the company; that immediately thereafter, and within two or three days after said *831 meeting, a transfer to said Green was made in pursuance of their contract, said transfer to Green personally being made at the request of Waggoner.

Waggoner, in his first amended answer, demurs generally and specially, denies generally the allegations of both petitions, and denies that he ever assumed payment of the note sued on, and specially denies that he or any one authorized to act for him, ever agreed- to talce over' the real and personal property of the oil company, and denies that he ever made such proposition, and specially pleads that the contract of assumption, as pleaded by plaintiff, comes within the statutes of fraud and is unenforceable. He specifically denies that he ever accepted or received any such property of the oil company, and pleads that he received no benefit of any kind from the transfer to Green by the oil company.

The trial court made the following findings of fact, in substance: (1) That at a directors’ meeting of the company, called for the purpose of winding up its affairs, it was agreed that the company would transfer to Waggoner and Green its assets in consideration of their assuming its liabilities; the vice president of the company being directed to execute the proper transfer to them. (2) Before the transfer was made, which property was both real and personal, R. M. Waggoner advised the company’s vice president to make the assignment to Clois L. Green, which was done, and Green went into possession of the property in its entirety and in his own right. (3) Some months thereafter, in consideration of the payment by Waggoner to the Wichita Bank & Trust Company for the account of'Burk-Waggoner Oil Company, of the sum of $60,000, Green transferred to Waggoner a part of the assets which he obtained under the assignment from the company prior to and besides which Waggoner received no part of the company’s assets. Waggoner and Green were not partners in this enterprise and are not sought to be held as such.

Upon these findings the trial court made the following conclusions of law:

“The court is of the opinion -that under the law of this state parol testimony is not admissible to vary the terms of the written assignment, which testimony appears in the .transcript for the information of the Court of Civil Appeals; that R. M. Waggoner cannot be required to answer for the company which he agreed to assume before advising the company’s vice president to make the assignment to Clois L. Green, the contract being executory at the time it was reduced to writing with Oois L. Green, transferee; that, prior to the merger of parol understandings into an instrument required by common law to be under seal, the verbal agreement of Waggoner to purchase real estate was unenforceable, and not having obtained a legal benefit from nor suffered a legal detriment to the company prior to the execution of the conveyance, and the company having conveyed in writing its assets to Clois L. Green, in consideration of his assumption of its debts, the defendant is not estopped from asserting his defenses.”

The plaintiff duly excepted to such findings and conclusions of the court, and the questions we shall discuss are clearly within the terms of such exceptions, and the additional assignments involving the correctness of the judgment.

The evidence clearly shows that Green and Waggoner entered into an agreement with the directors of the oil company by which and under the terms of which they agreed with such directors to accept a conveyance of all the property of the company and in return agreed that they would assume and pay all the debts of the company. This agreement was made by a board of 'five directors, two of whom were Green and Wag-goner. Waggoner was also president of the company. In pursuancé of this agreement the board had entered in the company’s minutes an order for the vice president to execute the conveyance to Green and Waggoner, upon the recited consideration of the assumption of the debts of the oil company. Before the deed was executed by Morgan, the vice president, and possibly on the next morning after the directors’ meeting, Wag-goner went into his office and told him to make out the deed to Olois L. Green. Morgan’s testimony is that Waggoner said to him, “When you go to draw that transfer make out the papers to Olois,” but said nothing to him to indicate his repudiation of the contract of assumption of the debt, and there is no evidence that he (Waggoner) ever notified any other of the directors that they would look to Green alone to carry out the contract of assumption prior to the execution and delivery of the deed, except Waggoner’s own testimony. It will be understood that the company owed Green about $140,000 and owed Waggoner $90,000, and that the total indebtedness amounted to approximately.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 S.W. 830, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oil-well-supply-co-v-burk-waggoner-oil-co-texapp-1924.