Pitman v. Lightfoot

937 S.W.2d 496, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 3531, 1996 WL 453005
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 7, 1996
Docket04-93-00480-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by141 cases

This text of 937 S.W.2d 496 (Pitman v. Lightfoot) 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
Pitman v. Lightfoot, 937 S.W.2d 496, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 3531, 1996 WL 453005 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

LOPEZ, Justice.

Appellees, William R. Fields, Jr. and 0. Waymond Lightfoot, Jr., filed suit against appellants, Fred L. Baker, Frank Davila II, Rodolfo Davila, Trustee of the Rodolfo Davila Estate Trust (together, the Davilas), Lawrence F. Haass, J. Brian O’Connor, Kim I. Manning, J. Pat O’Connell, Brian O’Connor, B.F. Pitman III, and others, for breach of contract and other related tort theories. Fields’ trustee in bankruptcy, John Patrick Lowe, intervened in the case. Appellees’ theories of recovery concern a purported agreement with the appellants to purchase bank holding company stock from the appel-lees for which payment was not made. After a jury verdict, the trial court granted a judgment in favor of the appellees, from which appellants now bring an appeal raising 104 points of error. We affirm the trial court’s judgment in part, and reverse and render in part.

BACKGROUND

Appellants, appellees, and other individuals were investors in Crown Bancshares, Inc., a bank holding company (Crown Bancshares). Incorporated in June of 1985, Crown Banc-shares owned all the stock of Crown Bank, N.A (Crown Bank). The incorporating officers and directors were Bernard Austin and appellants, Frank Davila II, Lawrence F. Haass, and Brian O’Connor. The Federal Reserve approved Crown Bank’s application in August of 1985, and capital stock in Crown Bancshares was privately offered beginning in October of 1985.

*501 Beginning in February of 1986, the bank was capitalized through a series of loans to 28 purchasers of Crown Bancshares stock, including appellants and appellees, in the aggregate amount of $6,066,310.00, from First State Savings Association (First State). Fields purchased 10,000 shares of Crown Bancshares stock (at $10 per share), with $5,000.00 in cash and $95,000.00 borrowed from First State. With a two percent origination fee, Fields’ loan was in the amount of $96,900.00. Lightfoot purchased 30,000 shares of Crown Bancshares stock (at $10 per share), with $15,000.00 in cash and $285,-000.00 borrowed from First State. With the two percent origination fee, Lightfoot’s note to First State was for $290,700.00. The purchasers pledged their Crown Bancshares stock to First State as security for the loans. These agreements also contained cross-default provisions — a default by one borrower equaled a default by all borrowers. 2 In the event of a default, First State could “declare the entire unpaid balance of principal and all earned interest on the Indebtedness immediately due and payable.” Each of the borrowers, except Lightfoot and Dr. Richard Rouse, also signed personal guaranty agreements.

A series of agreements were concluded: a voting trust agreement, a stock repurchase agreement, an agreement for funding repurchases of Crown Bancshares, a repurchase agreement concerning the capital stock of Crown Bancshares, and an amendment to the voting trust agreement. Although these agreements were prepared in 1985 — 1985 is typed on various pages — they were all apparently signed in February of 1986. These agreements were signed by both the appellants and appellees.

The purpose of the voting trust agreement was to maintain Crown Bancshares as a closely-held corporation. The organizers of the bank had determined that a voting trust agreement should be signed so that a majority of the subscribers of Crown Bancshares stock could maintain control over the direction and operation of the bank. Through the voting trust agreement, a majority of the shareholders subscribing to the agreement would control the vote at the shareholders’ meeting and elect the directors of Crown Bancshares which, in turn, owned and controlled Crown Bank. The stated purpose of the voting trust agreement was to “secure continuity and stability of policy in management, and to establish constructive administration of the business of the Company....” The voting trust agreement signed by the parties referred to them as “subscribers,” but the parties often used the term “Control Group” to describe themselves. All of the appellants (except Rodolfo Davila, individually) and appellees were members of the Control Group.

Although it was originally intended that the trustee under the voting trust agreement was to have all the stock of Crown Banc-shares issued in his name as trustee, with the trustee then issuing voting trust certificates to the various shareholders to evidence their stock ownership, the stock of the holding company was not issued that way. No stock was tendered into the voting trust. Instead it was issued separately in the name of each subscriber. First State required that all such stock, upon the closing of the loan to purchase, be physically pledged to First State and that each subscriber sign an “irrevocable stock power” as to the stock and deliver it to First State at the time they signed the other loan documents. The voting trust agreement was signed only by members of the Control Group; neither Crown Bancshares nor First State were parties to the agreement. The subscribers to the voting trust agreement appointed Dwight L. Lieb — the largest Crown Bancshares stockholder — as the voting trustee.

The voting trust agreement defined the powers and duties of the voting trustee. The agreement contained a “Grant of Irrevocable Proxy and Power of Attorney,” which reads as follows:

In addition to all other rights and powers granted under this Agreement, during the term hereof each Subscriber by execution of this Agreement irrevocably names, con *502 stitutes and appoints Trustee (or successor Trustee) Ms true and lawful attorney and agent with full power of substitution, to vote all shares of stock deposited with Trustee by such Subscriber, subject to the requirements of Section 4 hereof, at any and all regular and special meetings of the Company’s shareholders whenever and wherever held during the term of this Agreement, or at any adjournment thereof, and hereby ratifies and confirms all that the said Attorney might do. DURING THE TERM HEREOF, THE PARTIES HERETO AGREE THAT THE PROXY HEREBY GRANTED IS COUPLED WITH AN INTEREST AND IS IRREVOCABLE.

An amendment to the agreement further provided:

Any Trustee then serving shall have the power and authority to designate agents, and in such connection, to execute and deliver Powers of Attorney designating any person or group of persons to act in his full place and stead, to have and perform any and all powers, duties, acts and discretions as set forth in such written Power of Attorney to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law. Any person dealing with said Trustee shall be entitled to rely upon such Power of Attorney as fully authorizing the exercise of such powers, acts and discretions as therein set forth.

(Emphasis added).

The Control Group comprised nearly 75 percent ownersMp of Crown Bancshares. The voting trust subscribers selected the board of directors of Crown Bancshares. The directors of the holding company then elected the directors of Crown Bank who, in turn, selected a slate of officers for the bank. Most, if not all, of these individuals were members of the Control Group.

Sometime after agreeing to participate in the bank’s formation, appellees decided to withdraw from the enterprise.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
937 S.W.2d 496, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 3531, 1996 WL 453005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitman-v-lightfoot-texapp-1996.