Red Ball Stage Lines, Inc. v. Griffin

275 S.W. 454, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 750
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 6, 1925
DocketNo. 9589.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 454 (Red Ball Stage Lines, Inc. v. Griffin) 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
Red Ball Stage Lines, Inc. v. Griffin, 275 S.W. 454, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 750 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

This is an action by the Red Ball Stage Lines, Inc., plaintiff below, against J. M. Griffin and R, J. Spann, defendants below, begun in district court of Hunt county, for the sole purpose of securing equitable relief through the office of a temporary writ of injunction, largely mandatory in its scope and effect, requiring the appellees to return four certain busses, and to report to the president of appellant for the amount of money taken in by appellees in the operation of said busses, and to pay over and restore same to appellant and its president, and to further restrain appellees from further undertaking to operate and control appellant’s business ¿nd undertaking to collect and receive the receipts and revenues thereof, and from further interfering with appellant’s officers and agents in the management and operation of its stage line business, and from further operating or attempting to operate, directly or indirectly, either for themselves or others, any other motor busses between the cities of Greenville and Paris, Tex. The claim for in-junctive relief sought, especially the mandatory feature‘thereof, was based on the allegations.

That appellant was incorporated for the purpose of operating motor busses or stages, and that it is now engaged in such business. That-O. V. Partain and appellees constitute the board of directors of appellant corporation. That at a regular meeting of said board said Partain was duly elected president and business manager of said corporation; that under and by Virtue of the by-laws of said corporation the president thereof is given full authority to manage and control the business of said corporation in the direction of its affairs, in the operation of motor busses, and full authority to receive, handle', and control receipts of said business, and full authority to issue checks of said corporation in payment of its obligations and necessary operating expenses. That on the 12th day of March, 1925, appellees did sell, convey, and deliver to appellant four motor busses, which ¿ad theretofore been opérated by appellees in the carrying of passengers between the cities of Greenville and Paris, Tex., together with the schedules, runs, and the terminal facilities theretofore owned, used, and enjoyed by said. appellees.

As a part of said transaction, including the transfer of said motor busses, appellees agreed to refrain from engaging in the motor bus business, or the operation of stage lines or automobiles for hire between said cities, or any intermediate points along said route, and agreed that they would not, directly or indirectly, enter into any competitive business with any other person or firm, other than as employes, stockholders, or officers of the appellant company, for a period of three years from the date of the instrument transferring said motor busses, to wit, the 12th day of March, 1925. That appellant is now the legal and equitable owner and holder of said motor busses, runs, schedules, and all rights and privileges appertaining thereto. That *456 immediately after said motor busses were so acquired by appellant it took charge of same in connection with said business, and continued to operate them until on or about the 17th day of April, 1925. That appellant employed appellees to assist in the conduct and operation of said business, appellee Griffin being placed in charge of said busses and drivers at Greenville, with authority to check up the drivers, and collect and receive the money taken in by them as fares or otherwise. That under his employment said Griffin was required to make daily reports to said Partain, and turn over to him all moneys received in the operation of said business. That appellee Spann,' under the terms of his employment, was placed in charge of appellant’s business at Paris, but that said Spann had no authority to collect or otherwise handle the funds and revenues of said company. That in pursuance of said employment, which began on or about March 12, 1925, appellee Griffin did take charge of said business in the respects hereinbefore referred to, and continued in such employment, reporting daily to said Par-tain as the president of appellant corporation, and daily turned over the receipts and revenues of the business, until on or about the 17th day of April, 1925, when said Griffin, with the acquiescence, connivance and assistance of said Spann, began to operate said busses as if they were the property of appel-lees. That said Griffin refused to further report to the president and manager of appellant company, refused to turn over the moneys paid in to him by the drivers of said bus-ses, and refused to recognize appellant company or its duly elected and authorized manager, and that he still so fails and refuses, notwithstanding the fact that he has been requested to do so, and requested to turn over the money so wrongfully appropriated by him which belongs to appellant. That said Griffin, -with the acquiescence, consent, and co-operation of said Spann, has wrongfully assumed the management, direction, and control of appellant’s business, and has wrongfully converted the motor busses aforesaid, and is wrongfully holding possession thereof, for the benefit of himself and said Spann, and that appellees are undertaking to operate the business of appellant as a private asset of their own, to appellant’s damage in the sum of $130 per day, said sum being about the average daily receipts derived from the operation of said motor busses. That in addition to the four motor busses operated by appellant between the cities of Greenville and Paris it owns and operates other motor busses for the carriage of passengers for hire between the cities of .Greenville and Dallas, and that appellees have not only converted to their own use the four motor busses operated between Green-ville and Paris, Tex., and the moneys and revenues arising from the operation of said business, and undertaken to repudiate appellant’s ownership and rights in said property, but that they are doing all in their power to injure appellant’s business in the operation of other motor busses, by attempting to interfere with appellant’s schedules and runs, and by connivance with appellant’s competitors to that end, for the purpose of injuring appellant’s business. That if the appellees are not restrained by injunction, and appellant’s property restored to it.by order of the court, that it has been and w-ill continue to be irreparably damaged.

The petition for the writ, duly sworn to, was presented on April 12, 1925, in chambers, to 1-Ion. J. M. Melson, judge of the Eighth judicial district, exercising jurisdiction in the county of Hunt, at which time, without notice to appellees or either of them, the petition was considered and the writ, as prayed for, directed to be issued by the flat of the judge indorsed upon the petition, upon appellant’s filing bond in the sum of $1,000, payable and conditioned as required by law' and approved by the clerk of the court.

The appellees answered by general demurrer to the merits, by general denial, and a special plea, duly sworn to, containing allegations constituting, in effect, a cross-action, but not amounting to a specific denial of the allegations contained in appellant’s petition, being more in the nature of a plea of confession and avoidance, except as to the following, which constitutes, in a measure, a denial of some of the material allegations contained in.appellant’s petition, to wit: Referring to the busses operated by appellant between the cities of Greenville and Dallas, it is alleged that:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 454, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/red-ball-stage-lines-inc-v-griffin-texapp-1925.