Peugh v. Moody

145 S.W. 296, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 273
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 145 S.W. 296 (Peugh v. Moody) 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
Peugh v. Moody, 145 S.W. 296, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 273 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

GRAHAM, C. J.

This appeal is from a money judgment rendered by the district court of Lipscomb county in favor of appel-lees and against appellant, the amount of judgment representing the balance due on a certain promissory note executed by the W. F. Peugh Mercantile Company, a private trading corporation, as principal, and W. F’. Peugh as its surety, and payable on its face to J. P. Hatfield, as cashier of the First National Bank of Higgins, Tex.; the note bearing date June 19, 1909, and being due on its face 120 days after date.

The record on this appeal shows, without any conflict in the evidence, that on and prior to June 19, 1909, the W. F. Peugh Mercantile Company was a private trading corporation, with its place of business at Higgins, Tex., and that at that time W. F. Peugh owned a very large portion of its stock and was one of the directors therein, as well as its president and general manager; that the company’s financial affairs were such on that date as to require the borrowing of money for its benefit, and that W. F. Peugh applied to the First National Bank of Higgins for a loan, which was made only on condition that W. F. Peugh personally would sign the note as surety and see that the loan was repaid to the bank with *297 accumulated interest, and that the note sued on was executed by the W. F. Peugh Mercantile Company, acting through W. E. Peugh; he also signing the note personally; that the W. P. Peugh Mercantile Company received the benefit arising from said loan, but thereafter the mercantile company’s financial condition became such that, with the consent of its officers and stockholders, as well as its creditors, its entire assets were placed in the hands of one of its creditors, to be wound up and proper distribution made among its creditors and stockholders; that after this trustee creditor had managed its affairs for a short time, and had made a distribution of 15 cents on the dollar to its creditors, with the consent of its creditors, its officers and stockholders, at a meeting held for. that purpose, and attended and participated in by W. E. Peugh, at Higgins, Tex., the entire remainder of the assets of the TV. F. Peugh Mercantile Company was turned over to W. F. Peugh and four of its creditors, under a contract by which said W. F. Peugh and said four creditors were to pay 50 cents on the dollar of the balance oí the indebtedness of the mercantile company to all of its creditors, the creditors agreeing to accept that amount in full settlement of their claims as against said mercantile company; the agreement further being that from the assets of the mercantile company, after the creditors were thus settled with, the persons advancing the funds with which to pay the said 50 cents on the dollar should reimburse themselves for the money so advanced, with interest, and also should pay their claims against the company in full, and if anything remained it was to be distributed equally among the stockholders of the mercantile company.

Under this last arrangement, TV. E. Peugh and the four creditors mentioned did raise the funds with which to pay in cash said 50 cents on the dollar of the remaining indebtedness of the company, and paid the same to its creditors, including the First National Bank of Higgins; the amount so paid said bank being credited on the note sued on. The record, we think, also shows that in raising the fund with which to pay said 50 per cent. W. F. Peugh and the four creditors raised a sum each in proportion to the amount of stock owned by them severally in the mercantile company; and the evidénce tends to show that these five persons at this time owned and controlled all of the stock of the company.

After the agreements above referred to were made, and after 50 per cent, had been paid, the plaintiffs in this case, Robert Moody, Thomas F. Moody, J. P. Hatfield, and D. J. Young, sold their entire interest in the First National Bank of Higgins, and in the sale, and as part of it, acquired the exclusive ownership of the note sued on. Each of the plaintiffs knew at the time the other transactions hereinbefore mentioned were transpiring, and were stockholders and officers in said First National Bank of Higgins, and they individually acquired the ownership of said note after its maturity and with full notice of all the facts herein-before set out.

The suit below was filed by appellees against the TV. F. Peugh Mercantile Company and W. F. Peugh individually; but at the conclusion of the introduction of the evidence the trial court gave a - peremptory instruction for the W. F. Peugh Mercantile Company and against plaintiffs and in favor of plaintiffs as against TV. F. Peugh, and verdict and judgment so rendered. TV. F. Peugh alone appeals.

Appellant urges in this court several assignments of error, based on the refusal of the trial court to give special charges requested by him; but, under the view we have of the disposition that should be made of this appeal, they each become immaterial, and it therefore follows that the trial court did not err in faffing to give them, and each of said assignments will be overruled.

While we do not believe the appellant’s first assignment of error has been brought before us in such way as to require of us a consideration thereof on its merits, because, as we believe, the rules governing such matters in this court have not been complied with, we have concluded to dispose of it on its merits. The assignment is as follows: “The court erred in refusing to allow the defendant W. F. Peugh to testify that at no time during the making of the agreement with J. P. Hatfield, as cashier of the First National Bank, nor at any other time, or with any other person, did he offer or promise to pay the balance owing upon the note sued on in this case, in the event it was not fully collected from the principal, the Peugh Mercantile Company, and that he did not offer any inducement, by any promise of his, to induce said J. P. Hatfield, acting for the First National Bank, to accept the proposition made in settlement of said note by Peugh Mercantile Company; that there was no understanding whatever between him and the First National Bank, or the officers, that he would settle the balance owing upon the note sued upon, and that when he answered, on cross-examination, that it never entered his mind that he was not bound to pay» the balance owing upon the note sued on that it was only a mental conclusion of his own that he arrived at by reason of being surety upon the note sued on, and that such conclusion was not arrived at from anything that was said or done at the time the agreement was made with J. P. Hatfield, acting for the First National Bank, and that he (TV. F. Peugh) had refused to pay or secure the note sued upon. This was error, because said evidence was material to the issues involved in this suit, and said testimony should have been introduced in evidence and weighed with other testimony in *298 determining the liability of the defendant.”

Three propositions are submitted under this assignment, as follows: (1) “When a contract is made to release the principal, and the principal is in effect discharged, it also releases the surety, unless there is an agreement with the surety to remain liable for the unpaid portion of the debt. It was therefore necessary and important that the testimony offered by defendant W. E.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W. 296, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peugh-v-moody-texapp-1912.