Rowan v. Stowe

193 S.W. 434, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 265
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 1917
DocketNo. 669.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 193 S.W. 434 (Rowan v. Stowe) 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
Rowan v. Stowe, 193 S.W. 434, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 265 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

J. E. Stowe, a resident of the city of El Paso, filed this suit against Sam Rowan and the West Texas. Club, which was alleged to be a private corporation, duly incorporated under the laws of Texas. The substance of the plaintiff’s allegations may be stated briefly as follows:

*435 (1) That Rowan is in possession and in control of and is the lessee of certain premises in the basement of the McCoy Hotel in the city of El Paso, said premises being commonly known as the West Texas. Club, and being the place where the West Texas Club has its headquarters and place of business; that the said premises, in fact, are owned, operated, and controlled by Rowan, for his own private use, benefit, and profit, the said Rowan using the charter granted to said corporation as a sham and makeshift for the purpose of conducting in the name of said corporation a buffet and saloon at said place, and for the purpose and with the intent of evading and avoiding the liquor laws of the state and the payment of the taxes due the state as a retail liquor dealer, and that the said Rowan for a long time prior to the filing of the petition has been so engaged in the business of and occupation of a retail liquor dealer, and has been conducting said premises as a disorderly house, and threatens and contemplates to so continue to do; that the premises constitute a disorderly house in this, that therein spirituous, vinous, and malted liquors are sold in quantities of one gallon or less to be drunk on the premises, ánd have continuously been kept for sale without the defendant first having obtained a license under the laws of the state to engage in the business or occupation of a retail liquor dealer, and that no person or corporation has a license to re-retail liquors or to engage in the business or occupation of a retail liquor dealer at said premises.
(2) (There is no paragraph 2.)
(3) That Rowan threatens and contemplates to continue said premises as a disorderly house aforesaid.
(4) That if plaintiff is mistaken in the foregoing allegations, and that Rowan is not personally maintaining in the premises a disorderly house, and is not personally engaged in the business and occupation of a retail liquor dealer, and that, in truth and in fact, the West Texas Club has actual control of and is conducting and managing the said premises, and that the said Rowan is merely the manager, agent, or servant of the West Texas Club, then plaintiff complains of the West Texas Club, and avers that it is duly incorporated, but that it has been granted no authority to conduct a saloon or buffet upon said premises, nor to sell, give away, or dispense to its members intoxicating liquors; that since its organization it 'has conducted a buffet and saloon upon said premises, and is now so doing, and has engaged in the business or occupation of selling and dispensing to its members, their invited guests, and other persons, intoxicating liquors without first having obtained a state license therefor ; that the sale and dispensation of such intoxicating liquors is not necessary or essential to enjoy the purposes or to carry into effect the purposes of its incorporation, nor appropriate to the exercise of its corporate authority; that the sale and dispensation of said liquors has been the chief and main occupation of the corporation since its organization, and the purposes set forth in its charter have been subverted to the business and occupation 'of selling and dispensing intoxicating liquors; that the purpose for which it was incorporated is a mere incident to the conduct of its actual business and. occupation, and that its main and principal business and occupation is that of selling and dispensing intoxicating liquors, and it was incorporated as a sham or device to evade and elude the liquor laws of the state, and that the purposes of the corporation were a mere shield and subterfuge behind which the corporation concealed its main purpose and business, viz. selling and dispensing intoxicating liquors; that it is not and has not been necessary or proper under its express or implied corporate powers to conduct a bar or buffet upon the premises and to sell and dispense intoxicating liquors.
(5) That the corporation has been and is now employing and using its stock, means, assets, and property for purposes other than to accomplish the legitimate purpose of its creation, in this:
(a) That it has been and is now maintaining a buffet upon such premises selling and dispensing intoxicating liquors to its members and invited guests, and will continue to do so unless restrained.
(b) That the corporation has not taken out or paid any liquor dealer’s license, but has sold intoxicating liquors without such license and without having qualified as a retail liquor dealer; that it has sold and now sells and dispenses intoxicating liquors in quantities of one gallon or less to be drunk upon the premises.
(6) That in so doing the corporation is employing and using its stock, assets, means, and properties for purposes other than that for which the corporation was chartered, and that the same constitutes a misuse and abuse of its corporate franchises and privileges and authorizes and requires the court to enjoin the corporation from maintaining said buffet and selling and dispensing intoxicating liquors to its members and from using its rooms and premises for such purpose; that the sale and dispensation of intoxicating liquors without a state license is the usurpation of a franchise to which it is not entitled ; that it was not chartered for the purpose of or with authority to maintain a buffet or to purchase and sell intoxicating liquors, and in so doing it is violating its corporate powers and the laws of the state, entitling the state to an injunction restraining it from such abuse of its corporate powers and such use of its corporate properties and funds, and from violating the laws of the state.
(7) Prayed that Sam Rowan be enjoined *436 from using said premises for the purpose of selling said liquors on said premises unless he should procure a license so to do and pay the tax required by law and that the corporation, its officers, agents, and employés, be enjoined from longer maintaining said buffet and using the stock, means, a'ssets, and property of the corporation in purchasing, selling, and dispensing intoxicating liquors to its members and other persons and for general relief.

1 The case was tried before a jury and submitted upon special issues. The following facts were found by the jury: That the premises had not been used by Rowan for his own private use as a place for the sale or dispensation of intoxicating liquors; that the West Texas Athletic Club, through its officers and agents, since its incorporation, had not conducted in good faith its business so as to carry into effect the purposes set forth in its charter, viz.

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W. 434, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowan-v-stowe-texapp-1917.