Scharbauer v. Lampasas County

235 S.W. 533, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1137
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 1921
DocketNo. 240-3430
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 235 S.W. 533 (Scharbauer v. Lampasas County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scharbauer v. Lampasas County, 235 S.W. 533, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1137 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

TAYLOR, P. J.

Lampasas county, in one cause, sued the Hess & Skinner Engineering Company as principal and the Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company as surety, upon a bridge building contract; and, in another, sued the sheriff of the county and the Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron Company, to determine the right to certain bridge materials. The two causes were consolidated. Parties not necessary to be named intervened asserting claims as materialmen and laborers.

Pending the suit, J. W. Mitchell was appointed receiver of the bonding company by one of the district courts of Fort Worth, and the receiver was made a party defendant to the consolidated action. Thereafter the county made the directors of the bonding company, B. F. Allen, Jr., W. P. Dial, E. A. Fancher, C. D. Hill, Bacon Saunders, John Scharbauer, C. C. Terrell, Jno. L. Terrell, C. D. Reimers, and Ben F. Allen, Sr., parties de[534]*534fendant, seeking recovery against them on the theory that they were liable on the bond as partners.

The cause was tried before the court without a jury. Judgment was rendered in favor of the county against the engineering company and all of the individuals named as directors, except B. E. Allen, Jr., and in favor of some of the interveners. The county failed to recover against the bonding company and' the receiver, and judgment was entered in their favor.

The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court against the directors. 214 S. W. 468.' It is not necessary to state what disposition was made of the judgment as affecting the interveners. Writ of error was granted upon the application of Jno. Seharbauer and the other directors alone. Consequently the cause presented for review is between the county and the directors of the company.

The grounds upon which it is alleged that the directors are individually liable are that at the time of the pretended incorporation of the company under the laws of Arizona all of its stockholders were citizens of Texas; that, so far as paid for in this state, its corporate business, including the election of directors and officers and the keeping of books and records, was done in this state; that its general headquarters and principal place of business was in Port Worth, Tex.; that the directors, without any bona fide intention of transacting business in Arizona, went into that territory and procured from it a pretended charter for the purpose of transacting business in Texas; and that the pretended incorporation was a fraud upon the laws of Arizona.

It is further alleged that Arizona laws under which the company was organized, provided that no corporation should be formed for the transaction of any kind of insurance business, except live stock, without a subscribed capital stock of at least $100,000, 25 per cent, of which must be paid in before the issuance of any policy by the company; that it was the original plan for the company to be incorporated under the laws of Texas; but that afterwards, about March 20,1911, it was determined by the stockholders, directors, and executive committee of the company, following an investigation of the laws of various states and territories, that it would be to the interest of the stockholders to have the company incorporated under the laws of Arizona, because they could file with the insurance department of that state notes executed by the stockholders in payment of stock, whereas under the Texas laws that could not be done, and because under a charter obtained in Arizona the company could transact more different kinds of insurance business than could be transacted under a charter obtained in Texas; that about March 23, 1911, the directors of the bonding company filed its charter in Arizona; that it became incorporated under the laws of that territory (if their action in regard thereto did -not invalidate its incorporation); that by the charter so filed the company was attempted to be organized to do a fidelity, guaranty, and surety business and other business in any part of the world with an organized capital stock of $300,000; that afterwards about June 17, 1911, the company filed its statement with the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking of the State of Texas, and on that day a permit was issued to it to transact business in Texas; that annual statements .of the company were made as required by law and filed with the Commissioner, who issued to it licenses or permits to transact business in the state each year, the last permit being issued about February 25, 1915; that such companies were required by the laws of Texas to place on deposit with the State Treasurer $100,000 in good securities as a prerequisite to the issuance of permits; that prior to June 13, 1911, the directors of the company deposited with the Treasurer a large lot of securities of the apparent values of $150,172.50; that the depositing of said securities was an evasion of the laws of the state of Texas, in that the bonding company and its promoters sold a large amount of the capital stock of the company, and instead of receiving cash therefor, took from the purchasers thereof their notes in payment, and that it was these notes and other securities that were so deposited with the Treasurer.

Failure to comply with the Arizona laws as to paying up the capital stock was alleged ; also, the filing of false and fraudulent statements with the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking of the State of Texas for the purpose of procuring permits to do business in this state. The deduction drawn by the pleader was that the company had no lawful authority to do business in Texas, and that in consequence thereof, and of the execution of the bond, the directors became liable as partners for the payment of any obligations incurred by the company, even though it may have been legally incorporated in Arizona.

The provisions of the contract to build the bridges and the abandonment of the work by the contractor and the completion of the work by the county were alleged.

Plaintiffs in error answered by general demurrer and special exceptions, and a denial of those allegations not admitted in the answer. They pleaded specially that the company was both a de jure and de facto corporation incorporated under the laws of Arizona; that at all tunes after the incorporation until the appointment of a receiver it was authorized to do business in the state of Texas, and that it did business lawfully and regularly [535]*535as a corporation not only in Texas, but in the states of Alabama, California, Louisiana, and tlie territory of Arizona, as well; that in the matter of executing'and, accepting the bond, the company acted as a corporation only, and was treated by the county as a corporation, and in no other capacity; that the pleadings of Lampasas county constituted a collateral attack upon the validity of the incorporation of the company and its licenses and permits to transact business in Texas, whereby the county was estopped to deny that it was a corporation. There were other defensive pleas to which it is not necessary to refer.

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Bluebook (online)
235 S.W. 533, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scharbauer-v-lampasas-county-texcommnapp-1921.