Otto v. Republic Nat. Co.

173 S.W.2d 235, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 467
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 1943
DocketNo. 13366.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 173 S.W.2d 235 (Otto v. Republic Nat. 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
Otto v. Republic Nat. Co., 173 S.W.2d 235, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 467 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

The suit was upon a promissory note, brought by Republic National Company, owner and holder, after maturity. At conclusion of testimony, plaintiff’s motion for instructed verdict was sustained, with resulting judgment against Republic National Bank, Independent Executor of the Estate of W. J. Wyatt, Robert L. Clark and L. J. Otto, jointly and severally, as co-endorsers for the full amount due in principal, interest and attorney’s fees. From aforesaid action of the trial court, defendant Otto alone assigns error, with Republic National Company as the sole obligee in his cost bond on appeal to this Court.

The note was for $15,000, dated October 21, 1937, due in ninety days, executed by Dallas Brewery, Inc., through Robert L. Clark, followed by Clark’s signature individually; the names of Otto and W. J. Wyatt appearing on the back thereof. It was payable to order of Republic National Bank of Dallas, bearing ten per cent, interest after maturity, and with usual provision for attorney’s fee (ten per cent.) in event of placement for collection. The proceeds of. said note were promptly credited to the checking account of Dallas Brewery with payee Bank, and used, to the amount of $10,039.74, in paying off an existing overdraft of such corporation. W. J. Wyatt endorsed the instrument after November 5 and before December 2, 1937, when L. J. Otto signed as endorser.

*237 Appellant’s chief defense lies in the claim of no consideration for his subsequent endorsement of this paper. The gist of other points of error is that he was merely an accommodation endorser for Dallas Brewery and W. J. Wyatt; that Wyatt was, in fact, principal on said note and that he (Otto) was entitled to judgment over against.the estate of Wyatt; also against R. L. Clark as co-maker.

Antecedent facts and events leading up to the obligation just described, relating to the Dallas Brewery, its management, financial condition, and the connection of all defendants therewith (Clark, Otto and Wyatt), must first be stated. The Brewery was not sued, having gone into bankruptcy in 1939; and W. J. Wyatt being deceased, his estate was impleaded by service on Republic National Bank as Independent Executor. During 1937 and earlier, Messrs. Clark, Wyatt and Otto were directors of ■said Brewery corporation, the two first named continuing to hold considerable stock. Except for a qualifying share, Otto had sold his stock to Clark in 1936, evidenced by the latter’s note for $29,890, secured by some 590 shares as collateral. Appellant had been vice-president of the named company in 1936, actively supervising its affairs, but in 1937, his connection was as director only, additional to above-mentioned interest in unpaid stock.

The record indicates an unsatisfactory condition of Brewery finances for several years, necessitating numerous endorsements by directors on corporate notes at the Republic Bank to avoid overdrafts; for instance, by Wyatt and others in 1934; similarly, by Otto in 1935 and 1936, and later by R. L. Clark. These overdrafts began to recur along in April, 1937, and ■continued with slight intermission until the consummation of the $15,000 loan. Robin Williams was vice-president of Republic Bank at the time, in charge of the Brewery’s liability account, though he was not a Bank employe when his deposition was taken for this trial. So testifying, Williams stated that in August or September of 1937, he talked with W. J. Wyatt (also a director in the Bank) about said overdrafts and was told to go ahead and pay them, that he, Wyatt, would be responsible up to $7,500. The overdrafts continued, fluctuating from a high point of more than ■$8,000 on October 1 to a low of $2,700 on October 16, about which time, Mr. Wyatt, for the Brewery, and the Bank, through Williams, had conversations relative to a $15,000 loan to cover existing overdrafts and provide new money for the Brewery during the forthcoming dull season; Wyatt first advising Williams that he would get stockholders Earnest and Willard to endorse the loan, but they having refused, Mr. Wyatt later reported that he was “contacting Mr. Otto at his home.”

We quote further excerpts from the testimony of Robin Williams:

“Now, it is a fact, is it not, that the $15,-000.00 loan that was made, was negotiated with the Bank by Mr. Wyatt? A. Yes sir.
“Q. Was that done through you or how was it handled? Was it submitted to a committee? A. Submitted to a committee.
“Q. And approved by the committee, and then the loan was made ? A. That is right.
“Q. Do you recall the date on which this note was actually signed? A. No, I don’t.
“Q. Isn’t it a fact that this $15,000.00 was actually advanced and placed to the credit of the Dallas Brewery, Inc. prior to the date on which this note was actually signed? A. I think so. And I think that that overdraft was more than $7,500.00, due to the fact that that note was coming up and the delay was occasioned by Mr. Wyatt’s accident or something like that, to keep it from going on through.
“Q. In other words, plaintiff’s Exhibit B here shows that a deposit was actually made to the credit of the Dallas Brewery, Inc. of $14,812.50 on October the 21st, 1937, and the note actually bears that same date but, as a matter of fact, the note was not signed until quite a few days after that? A. That is true.
“Q. Now, do you recall in connection with that a conversation with Mr. Clark with reference to that matter, at which time he objected to signing the note? A. No.
“Q. Do you recall that it was several days before he actually did sign the note? A. I can’t say about that. I know there was a delay in getting it signed, but, as I remember it, it was all due to Mr. Wyatt’s accident entirely. * * *
“Q. The agreement or understanding of the Bank, according to the records here, was, was it not, that the Dallas Brewery, Inc., make the note and that Robert L. Clark, W. J. Wyatt and L. J. Otto would endorse the note? A. That is right. * * *
*238 “Q. As a matter of fact, at the time this note was given, the Bank was looking primarily to the endorsement of Mr. Wyatt for payment of the note? A. Looking to it just as the note read, ‘Any or all of them.’ * * *
“Q. Did you ever discuss .the note with Mr. Otto? A. The first that Mr. Otto told me that Mr. Wyatt had taken it up with him, he asked for his cooperation. And I assumed it was gone into thoroughly between them. Mr. Otto came into the Bank one day and told me that they had called him over to the cage to sign this note: That he looked on it for Mr. Wyatt’s endorsement, and it wasn’t there, and they told him Mr. Wyatt had broken his arm, and he came over to my desk and told me, he said he was going to cooperate with Mr. Wyatt but that they told him that he had not endorsed it because he had broken his arm, and he had told him that his arm was broken too.
“Q. Mr. Otto at that time thought there was a joke about his arm being broken, probably? Now, do you know when Mr. Otto did sign that note ? A. No, I couldn’t say. * * *
“Q. It was a month or two after the note was executed? A.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W.2d 235, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otto-v-republic-nat-co-texapp-1943.