Panhandle Packing Co. v. Stringfellow

180 S.W. 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1915
DocketNo. 827. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 145 (Panhandle Packing Co. v. Stringfellow) 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
Panhandle Packing Co. v. Stringfellow, 180 S.W. 145 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HALL, J.

Appellant sued in the district court of Potter county, filing its amended petition August 7, 1912, in which it is alleged that R. L. Stringfellow, the deceased husband of appellee, had subscribed for 25 shares of the capital stock of appellant, of the par value of $2,500; that by the terms of the subscription contract, upon demand of the executive committee of the subscribers of stock, 50 per cent, of each subscription should be paid to said committee, and the-remaining 50 per cent, of such subscription upon demand of the board of directors of appellant company, if the same should be-organized and officers selected; that by said subscription contract it was further agreed that, if any subscription should remain unpaid, and it should become necessary to place-the same in the hands of an attorney for-collection, then an additional 10 per cent, of the same should be added and paid by the-sribscribers as collection .fees. Appellant alleged its compliance with the terms and stipulations of the subscription agreement and', the consequent liability of Stringfellow.

Appellee answered by general demurrer, and specially excepted on the ground that the-petition showed upon its -face that, if String-fellow was indebted in any sum on the contract, it could be for only 50 per cent., for the-reason that 50 per cent, of the payments were required to be made to the executive committee,. and there was no allegation of any assignment or transfer of the cause of action from such committee. These excep tions were overruled.

Appellee answered further by general denial and two special defenses as follows:(a) That said corporation could not recover-under the terms of the subscription contract,, for the reason that it was specially stipulated that each subscriber should pay 50! per cent, of his subscription before the contract should become binding; (b) because-such subscription contract was abandoned, and the company was organized upon an entirely different subscription contract, in that certain persons, including the said R. L. Stringfellow, had subscribed for all of the-shares of stock in said corporation, and had: thereby abandoned the subscription contract sued upon. It is further alleged that appellant is estopped by reason of the organization of the company upon another and different subscription list and by its representations as to said list made to the secretary of state in procuring the charter.

Appellant filed a supplemental petition, alleging that Stringfellow had waived all provisions of the subscription contract requiring payment of his subscription, and that, if *146 Stringfellow and the otlier incorporators did, in fact, represent that all the stock was subscribed by them, the said Stringfellow and his attorney induced such action, and the Panhandle Packing Company was not bound thereby.

The case was submitted to the jury upon six special issues, which, with the answers thereto, are as follows:

“First. Did the incorporators of the Panhandle Packing Company, to wit, O. W". Butt, W. H. Fuqua, H. B. Sanborn, T. S. Bugbee, O. H. Nelson, H. R. Morrow, and R. L. String-fellow, at the time they adopted the charter read in evidence before y'ou, intend to ignore and repudiate the several stock subscription lists dated May 20, 1908, offered in evidence before you, or did they adopt this method for convenience, intending that the subscribers to said subscription lists should take and pay for the stock according to the lists? Answer: (A) Yes. (B) No.
“Second. Did R. L. Stringfellow, without paying any part of the stock subscription, unite with said Butt, Fuqua, Sanborn, Bugbee, Nelson? Did Morrow, in taking out the charter of the Panhandle Packing Company, act as a director and vice president of the company after the charter was obtained until his death, and, if so, did he by so doing intend to waive the requirement in the subscription lists that each subscriber pay 50 per cent, of his subscription before a charter should be obtained? Answer: Yes.
“Third. Did the incorporators, by their, act, in applying for the charter of plaintiff company, the organization of such company after the charter was issued, and proceeding with the work and business of the corporation, intend to waive the requirement of the subscription lists that each individual subscriber should pay 50 per cent, of his subscription before a charter could be obtained? Answer: Yes.
“Fourth. Which subscriptions did the Panhandle Packing Company accept and act upon after it was incorporated, the signed lists in evidence before you, or the oral subscriptions made by said incorporators at the time the affidavit introduced in evidence was made? Answer: The oral lists.
“Fifth: Did the said incorporators, in making annlication for the charter, and in making the affidavit that 50 per cent, of the total capital stock had been paid in, take into account the moneys theretofore paid in by the several subscribers on the stock subscription lists, and use such moneys to make up the 50 per cent.? Answer: No.
“Sixth. Did the said incorporators take out the charter of the Panhandle Packing Company for and on behalf of the subscribers to said several stock subscription lists in evidence before you, or did they agree among themselves to subscribe for themselves the entire amount of the capital stock at the time they applied for the charter and made the affidavit which accompanied said charter to the secretary of state? Answer: (a) No. (b) Yes.”

The subscription contract, among other terms, stipulates that the undersigned subscribed for the amount of stock set opposite their respective names; that 50 per cent, thereof should be paid upon demand of an executive committee, composed of R. L. Stringfellow' and four other citizens, and the remaining 50 per cent, at such time and in such amounts as the board of directors of the corporation, after its formation, should require; that the corporation should have the right to issue and offer for sale mortgage bonds in an amount not exceeding $100,000, payable on or before ten years after date. There is a provision for 10 per cent, attorney’s fees in the event it should become necessary to file suit against any subscriber for the collection of the amount due, and contains this stipulation:

“It is understood that the subscription hereto is not binding until the full amount of $150,000 is subscribed, and must be paid before a charter can be obtained.”

R. L. Stringfellow’s name appears amongst other subscribers in the amount of $2,500. The list is dated May 20, 1908, and is one of nine similar lists which was being circulated for the purpose of obtaining subscriptions.

The secretary of state testified by deposition that in order to procure a charter O. W. Butt, W. H. Fuqua, O'. H. Nelson, H. R. Morrow, T. S. Bugbee, H. B. 'Sanborn, and R. B. Stringfellow filed an affidavit with him made before H. H.

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Related

Metzler Bros. v. Johnson
45 S.W.2d 263 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1931)
Stringfellow v. Panhandle Packing Co.
213 S.W. 250 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1919)
Scharbauer v. Lampasas County
214 S.W. 468 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panhandle-packing-co-v-stringfellow-texapp-1915.