Pickens v. Rankin

258 S.W. 847
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 8, 1924
DocketNo. 8362.
StatusPublished

This text of 258 S.W. 847 (Pickens v. Rankin) 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
Pickens v. Rankin, 258 S.W. 847 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

At the outset appellees object to our consideration of appellant’s third and fourth assignments of error and attendant proposition No. 5, on the ground that no bills of exception nor other showing that objection was made at the time the complained of action was taken appear in the record, as prescribed in Revised Statutes, arts. 1971, 2061. The objection cannot be sustained; both of these assignments com *848 plain of the action of the trial court in taking the entire cause from the jury by peremptory instruction and rendering judgment direct for the appellees; in Kirlicks v. Texas Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 201 S. W. 687, affirmed by the Supreme Court in 110 Tex. 90, 216 'S. W. 385, this court held that such direction was subject to challenge on appeal, though no prior objection was made in the trial court, and that “the charge” as used in article 1971 has reference only to a charge applying the law for a jury’s guidance, and not to a peremptory instruction removing from them the entire case. Neither does article 2061 stand in the way; it relates only to special charges. Railway v. Dickey, 108 Tex. 126, 187 S. W. 184.

Appellees bought from appellant stock in the American Laundry & Dye Works of Houston of the par value of $16,910 for an agreed consideration of $3,000, $500 of which was paid in cash and 25 monthly notes for $100 each given for the other $2,500; thq first 5 of these notes were paid as they matured, but the remaining 20 never were, and appellant filed this suit against appellees, the makers, to recover thereon; appellees answered, among other things, by declaring that the contract for the purchase of the stock, as reflected in the provisions of the notes, gave appellant on the one hand the right, in event of nonpayment of any two of the notes, to demand back the proportionate part of the stock unpaid for, and to themselves on the other the option of returning the stock unpaid for at any time and receiving back the notes then unpaid, the exercise of either of which reciprocal’ options by its holder automatically relieved both sides of further liability ; they further averred that, after paying the first 5 of the series of notes, they had chosen to exercise their option rather than to pay the 20 remaining, ones, and both before and after the maturity of note No. 6 had tendered the stock then unpaid for back to appellant, which tender was renewed in court, and that appellant had refused to accept it. A denial that any provision of the contract carried the right to accelerate the maturity of the payments was also entered.

Bjr supplemental pleading appellant charged that, when two of the notes were unpaid, and before appellees had offered to return the stock, he had exercised his option to declare them all due; that at the time they purchased the stock, which constituted about 85 per cent, of the capital stock of the corporation, app'ellees agreed, with him that they would so conduct the laundry as not to cause the stock to depreciate in value or become, worthless, which agreement had been violated by appel-lee Rankin’s converting the corporation’s earnings to his own benefit while refusing to pay its current debts, and that Rankin fraudulently pursued this course in order to render, the stock worthless and force the corporation into bankruptcy, “for the purpose of giving him the opportunity to exercise the purported option set out in said notes whereby defendants might return said stock in cancellation of said notes”; that this conduct in fact rendered the stock worthless, threw the concern into a receivership, and consequently estopped appellee from exercising any such purported option to return the stock in cancellation of the unpaid notes. These additional allegations were denied by appellees.

The notes involved, after the usual formal promise to pay the amount specified, all contained these provisions:

“This note is one of a series of 25 notes this day given to the said S. R. Pickens.
“In the event of nonpayment of any 2 notes of this series when due, S. R. Pickens shall have the right to demand back the proportionate part of $16,910 par value American Laundry & Dye Works stock unpaid, on a basis of $3,000 for full payment therefor; and the parties hereto shall at any time be privileged to return to S. R. Pickens the proportionate part of stock unpaid, and receive back any notes then unpaid; ' in either of which events all parties hereto shall be relieved of further liability hereunder.”

After the evidence for both parties had been received, the court granted appellees’ motion to that end, withdrew the cause from the jury, and rendered judgment in their favor. Prom that action this appeal by the plaintiff below proceeds.

The undisputed evidence not only showed the contract for the purchase of the stock to be attended by the quoted provisions in the notes according to each of the parties to the transaction the corresponding options therein stipulated for, but also the actual exercise of theirs by the appellees in the manner alleged by them in their answering,pleadings ; the development of this situation, in our opinion, ended the case, and left the trial court no alternative than to do as it did, enter judgment for the appellees. No reason occurs to us for holding the contract represented by the quoted stipulations invalid; the contention of appellant that the clause granting the reciprocal options is void for want of mutuality and certainty cannot be sustained. It is a nonsequitur from these recitations to conclude, as appellant does, that they leave the terms of the agreement as to its enforcement exclusively with the makers of the notes; the contrary appears perforce of the express recitations themselves; likewise, and for the same reason, it cannot be true that appellant had no power to prevent any action the makers of the notes might have desired to take, because he himself had the affirmative right, upon default in the payment of 2 of them, to z-ecall all the stock then unpaid for by demanding it back, which demand appellees were correlatively obligated to comply with. There is no lack of mutuality in this. The transaction repre *849 sented by tbe notes, that is, the sale of the stock, was an entirety, to become final if paid for in full; every right accruing to either party under it carried a corresponding duty upon the part of the other; if default in two payments were made, appellant could demand the return of the stock, and appellees must comply; in turn, if appellees at any time perferred to tender back the stock still on hand and secure a pro tanto cancellation of their outstanding notes, appellant must accede, and upon the exercise by either of these privileges so accorded both were to be released from further obligation.

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Related

Rigsby v. Boone County State Bank of Lebanon
241 S.W. 207 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)
Kirlicks v. Texas Co.
201 S.W. 687 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1918)
Gulf, Texas & Western Railway Co. v. Dickey
187 S.W. 184 (Texas Supreme Court, 1916)
Decker v. Kirlicks
216 S.W. 385 (Texas Supreme Court, 1919)
Bonnett-Brown Sales Service Co. v. Denison Morning Gazette
201 S.W. 1044 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1917)
Gary v. McKinney
239 S.W. 283 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickens-v-rankin-texapp-1924.