Paine v. Carter

469 S.W.2d 822, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 21, 1971
Docket484
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 469 S.W.2d 822 (Paine v. Carter) 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
Paine v. Carter, 469 S.W.2d 822, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2289 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

BARRON, Justice.

This is a suit on a contract executed April 24, 1961 by Thomas L. Carter, Artex Construction Company, Inc., Rockland Corporation, Alex W. Head, Ernest W. Bartlett, Jr., and Fred W. Moore. The plaintiff, Paine, sued to collect a $20,000.00 obligation plus interest and attorney’s fees. A $30,000.00 note payable to the First City National Bank of Houston had been signed earlier by Ernest W. Bartlett, Jr. with Paine as co-signer. The note was for the purpose of Bartlett’s purchase of 200 shares of stock in Artex Construction Company, Inc., and he became President of said corporation prior to April 24, 1961 and an active participant therein. The contract in question was entered into in settlement of litigation arising out of certain road projects in the Republic of Argentina. The plaintiff, Paine, makes his claims in the present litigation as as-signee of the rights of Ernest W. Bartlett, Jr., one of the parties to this settlement contract. Paine paid the note to the bank. Bartlett, through whom Paine claims, along with the defendant, Thomas L. Carter and two other persons, became interested in the Argentine road projects in the 1 late 1950’s and decided to submit bids for I, the construction of roads in Argentina, i In connection with the submission of these bids, the defendant, Artex Construction f Company, Inc., a Texas corporation (Ar- i tex), was formed in 1958, and upon the ac- j ceptance of the bids by the Argentine Government Artex entered into contracts for the construction of two roads. At that ,, time Artex had four share holders, Bartlett, Carter and two others. Since it was necessary for Artex to post performance bonds in the nature of bank guaranties with the Argentine Government, and since Artex did not otherwise have the financial resources to make such bonds, Carter personally guaranteed the obligations of Artex on such performance bonds. f

By 1961 the two road projects were proceeding poorly, and disputes had arisen among the Artex shareholders which, in the case of Carter and Bartlett, had resulted in litigation between them. It had also become necessary for Artex informally to associate a corporation by the name of Paul Hardeman, S. A., a Venezuelan corporation, as joint venturer to assist in the attempt to complete these projects. In April of 1961, the litigation between Bartlett and Carter was settled by the contract dated April 24, 1961 and as a result thereof, Bartlett severed all connections as an officer and shareholder of Artex, and Carter became the sole shareholder of the corporation. Under the terms of this written settlement contract, in evidence in this case, Carter, among other things, paid $10,000.00 to the First City National Bank to be applied on the $30,000.00 note which Bartlett owed to that bank. Carter was further obligated to pay to that same bank for the benefit of Bartlett $1.00 out of every $6.00 from the “first moneys made available to Carter by Artex Construction Company, Inc., whether by remittance of cash to apply upon the obligations of Artex Construction Company, Inc. to Thomas L. Carter, by reorganization, dividends, dis *824 solution, salary, sale or otherwise” until the sum of $20,000.00, plus 6% per annum on the declining balance had been paid to the bank for Bartlett’s benefit. Another clause in the settlement contract of significance to this suit provided that “so long as Thomas L. Carter is in control of Artex Construction, Inc. * * * whenever the clear working capital of said Artex Construction Company, Inc., is in excess of $200,000.00, it shall be considered that the working capital in excess of such sum is available to Thomas L. Carter by way of repayment of the obligations of Artex Construction Company, Inc., to Thomas L. Carter”, thus requiring Carter to pay $1.00 out of every $6.00 of such excess working capital to the bank for Bartlett’s benefit under the contract provision first quoted above.

After the April 24, 1961 settlement contract was signed, Carter continued to advance large, sums of money to ArtexTor use in the corporation’s attempts to complete the road projects. Under the joint venture arrangement, Hardeman, S. A. also advanced considerable sums to the projects in order to see them through. In addition, a third road project was undertaken by the Artex-Hardeman, S. A. joint venture and Carter was once again required personally to guarantee the performance bond obligation to the Argentine Government on the third road project. These guarantees were eventually released.

On August 21, 1961, the joint venture agreement was formalized in writing whereby the two Artex jobs, Acceso Norte II, and Rosario, and the Paul Hardeman, S. A. job, Acceso Norte III, were to be completed as a joint venture composed of Paul Hardeman, S. A. and Artex, and the testimony shows, in spite of an error in the written agreement, that Hardeman, S. A. was to be the managing venturer and in complete control of all activity. It was also agreed in writing that from the first $600,000.00 of cash or cash and equipment, Hardeman, S. A. would receive fifty percent and Artex would receive fifty percent, and from the second $600,000.00 Hardeman, S. A. would receive one-third and Artex would get two-thirds. Any balance remaining would then be distributed to Artex, and if it became necessary for Hardeman and Artex to choose first, Hardeman, S. A. would choose first. By late 1963 it was becoming apparent that because of high costs, excessive inflation in Argentina and devaluation of the Argentine peso, the Artex-Hardeman joint venture was facing severe losses on these road projects. In an attempt to recoup some of j these losses Hardeman, S. A., Carter and Artex entered into an agreement dated October 30, 1963 for the possible joint venturing of future projects in South America, and Carter supplied to Harde-man, S. A. a $400,000.00 letter of credit to indicate his financial ability to undertake such new projects. In 1964, Hardeman, S. A. did secure a project in Bolivia and Carter advanced $300,000.00 to Hardeman under the assumption that he or Artex would become a joint venturer in this Bolivian project. Thereafter Hardeman, \ S: A. refused to accept Carter or Artex, for reasons good or bad, as a joint venturer in Bolivia, refused to return the $300,000.- j 00 advanced by Carter, and as Carter put it, “stole” the Artex construction equipment j from Argentina when the three projects! there were finally completed, took the! Artex equipment to Bolivia without thej knowledge or consent of Artex, and there-] after apparently went bankrupt. Addition-' al litigation ensued in the United States District Court in Houston between Artex, Carter, Hardeman and one of the suppliers of the equipment taken by Hardeman to Bolivia. This federal court litigation was terminated in 1969 by judgment.

At the time of dissolution of Artex in December, 1967, Carter testified that he received as trustee only $2.01 back from Artex. He testified that the physical assets of the corporation were taken by *825 Hardeman, S. A. as above stated, and that no money, property or equipment of any kind were received by him with the exception of the above small sum. He further testified that there was nothing with which to pay plaintiff on dissolution. Carter steadfastly denied that he had secreted any money or property during this whole affair, and that he had lost personally by advances, loans and financing of Artex Construction Company, Inc. the sum of $2,269,-000.00 and the corporation was in debt at time of dissolution in the approximate sum of $1,750,000.00 additionally.

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469 S.W.2d 822, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paine-v-carter-texapp-1971.