Pavey v. McFarland

234 S.W. 591, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1027
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 12, 1921
DocketNo. 8676.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 234 S.W. 591 (Pavey v. McFarland) 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
Pavey v. McFarland, 234 S.W. 591, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1027 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HAB1ILTON, J.

This appeal is prosecuted from an order of the district court declining to grant a temporary injunction.

Previous to July 14, 1920, Trinity Tire & Service Company, a private corporation, was conducting its business in Dallas county, Tex., and Central Tire & Rubber Company of Waco, Tex., another corporation, was conducting its business in Waco, Tex. The total capital stock of Trinity Tire & Service Company was $12,000. Only $0,000 of the capital stock had been paid in, but the remainder had been derived from increase in value of assets. It was owned in equal shares by the appellants H. M. Pavey and H. L. Freear and S. J. McFarland and Dan Rogers, the individual appellees, each of whom had subscribed for 30 shares of thé capital stock of the par value of $100 per share, and each of whom had paid thereon the sum of $1,500. The total capital of Central Tire & Rubber Company of Waco is not disclosed by the record, but it seems that the two appellants and the appellees S. J. McFarland and Dan Rogers each owned 10 shares of its stock of the par value of $100.

*592 Payey, Freear, McFarland, and Rogers not only constituted all the shareholders in Trinity Tire & Service Company, but also composed the board of directors. Pavey and Freear were, respectively, president and secretary of this organization, and as such officers had the exclusive active management of its affairs continuously from the organization until July 14, 1920. In the course of events each one of the appellees wrongfully took money from the funds of the corporation without the knowledge and consent of McFarland and Rogers, who, as aforesaid, were not active in the management of its affairs; the management and conduct of the business being intrusted to appellants. The aggregate amount which they thus appropriated to themselves from the assets of the company, as admitted by them, was $8,500. They executed notes to the company for this amount before the other stockholders learned of the indebtedness, and the notes appear to have been secured by some character of mortgage upon an interest in land in Fayette county, Ohio, owned by Pavey.

A short time prior to July 14, 1920, McFarland and Rogers discovered that funds of the company had been taken by Pavey and Freear in the unwarranted manner above stated. Negotiations and discussions were immediately entered into between McFarland and Rogers on the one hand and Pavey and Freear on the. other, after the discovery of the latter two’s conduct and of the indebtedness resulting from it, which negotiations and discussion resulted in McFarland and Rogers demanding that Pavey and Freear entirely sever • their connections with the affairs of both corporations.

Transactions looking to this end terminated on July 14, 1920, in the notes executed by Pavey and Freear to the Trinity Tire & Service Company being delivered to McFarland and Rogers, or to Trinity Tire & Service Company and to S. G. McFarland as trustee, secured by a deed of trust upon Pavey’s interest, in the Ohio land. Also as a result of these negotiations Pavey and Freear seem to have delivered all their stock in both corporations either to McFarland- and Rogers or to Trinity Tire & Service Company. The notes matured and suit was filed in Fayette county, Ohio, to recover the aggregate amount of the notes and an additional sum alleged to be owing to the corporation by appellants, and which additional sum appellees allege and contend was secured by the same deed of trust which secured the $8,500 indebtedness. The total amount for which foreclosure suit was filed, as above stated, was $11,942.50.

Upon the filing, of the foreclosure suit in Fayette county, Ohio, appellants instituted this- proceeding. . They allege substantially (among other things not material to our consideration of this case) that on July-14,1920, McFarland and Rogers, as officers of the corporation, were pressing appellants for payment of their debts, and threatening them with criminal prosecution for wrongful appropriation of the company’s funds, and that because of threats appellants were put under duress- and forced to sell their stock in the two corporations, and also by duress induced and compelled to execute a deed of trust upon which the foreclosure suit was predicated. They alleged that McFarland and Rogers, in consideration of the transfer by appellants of their said stock, agreed to pay all the indebtedness owing by appellants to the Trinity Tire & Service Company, and also $2,000 which they owed to the Security National Bank of Dallas, and that the deed of trust was to be held as indemnity by McFarland as trustee. They also alleged that an accounting was to be had, and that in the event it disclosed the value of the stock transferred to be less than the indebtedness of appellants, then in such event the balance should be realized by foreclosure of the deed of trust. It was alleged that the books of the company were to be audited immediately and an inventory of the assets and liabilities of the Trinity Tiré & Service Company and of Central Tire & Rubber Company of Waco made, and from the same the value of the stock transferred determined; that appellants were to have credit for the stock transferred, and were to be charged with their several items of indebtedness, and that if the audit disclosed that the value of the stock exceeded the entire indebtedness, then McFarland and Rogers were to pay the excess in cash; whereas, on the other hand, if the audit revealed, that the entire indebtedness exceeded the value of the stock, then appellants were to execute their notes to McFarland and Rogers for the difference, and secure it with a deed of trust against the land. It was not alleged that McFarland and Rogers were to have the audit made, nor that the corporation was to have the audit made. The allegations seem to indicate that the audit was to be provided mutually by appellants and appellees. It was alleged that McFarland and Rogers had refused to have a correct audit made, had disregarded the agreement to that effect, and that suit had been instituted in the court of common pleas of Fayette county, Ohio, for foreclosure of the deed of trust executed to Trinity Tire & Service Company to secure the indebtedness claimed. It was alleged that appellants owed none of the money; that although at the time the deed of trust was executed and delivered the indebtedness of appellants evidenced by the notes was in existence, and while the deed of trust expressly states that it was given to secure notes which appellants owed the Trinity Tire & Service Company, yet, when considered in connection with the agreement had among all the parties, the deed of trust appeared to have been executed for the purpose, of indemnifying McFarland *593 and Rogers against loss by their assumption of and agreement to pay tie indebtedness which appellants owed Trinity Tire & Service Company and the Security National Bank; that McFarland and Rogers became primarily liable for the payment of the indebtedness of appellants; and that it was not contemplated that the deed of trust should ever be foreclosed because of the indebtedness to the Trinity Tire & Service Company, which it was understood should be paid by McFarland and Rogers. It was also alleged that the actual value of appellants’ stock in the two corporations at the time of the transaction was $16,000, and that after all indebtedness had been paid McFarland and Rogers would owe appellants at least $3,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 S.W. 591, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pavey-v-mcfarland-texapp-1921.