Shaw v. McShane

33 S.W.2d 277
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 5, 1930
DocketNo. 3820.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 S.W.2d 277 (Shaw v. McShane) 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
Shaw v. McShane, 33 S.W.2d 277 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinions

* Writ of error granted. Judgment reversed (Com.App.) 50 S.W.2d 278. *Page 278 This suit was filed by the banking commissioner of Texas against the appellees on three promissory notes aggregating $7,311.94, less a credit of $450 on one of the notes. The notes were executed on different dates during the year 1923, payable to the Guaranty State Bank of Texarkana, and were signed by N. A. Shaw, E. D. Trigg, J. F. Rochelle, J. P. McShane, R. W. Rodgers, and V. A. Ghio. N. A. Shaw, one of the signers of the notes, died before the institution of this suit, and his widow, Mrs. Corine Shaw, independent executrix of his estate, was made a party defendant.

The defense is that the notes were executed by all the parties solely for the accommodation of the bank and without any consideration. In a trial before a jury upon special issues, a judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants. This appeal is prosecuted by James Shaw, who held the office of banking commissioner of Texas at the time the case was tried.

The testimony in which there is no material conflict discloses the following facts:

The Guaranty State Bank was organized under the laws of Texas in 1916 with a capital stock of $50,000. A large portion of its business consisted of loans to farmers in the surrounding territory. Among those to whom loans were made was W. R. Garland, who owned a farm situated in Miller county, Ark. The farm was purchased some time prior to 1921 for a cash consideration of $20,000, and eleven promissory notes for $5,000 each, aggregating $55,000.

Each of the notes stipulated for a retention of a vendor's lien on the land and was payable on different dates over a period of *Page 279 eleven years. The interest was to be paid annually. There was also a stipulation in the notes providing that in event of default in the payment of any installment of interest or principal when due, the holder of the notes had the right to declare the entire indebtedness due. Eight of these notes, aggregating $40,000, were sold and transferred by the holder to Lee Tayloe of Clarksville, Tex. The remaining three, aggregating $15,000, were transferred to the Guaranty State Bank as security for an indebtedness to that bank. It further appears from the evidence that in the contract transferring the notes there was an agreement between the interested parties that Tayloe should have a lien superior to that of the bank.

In March, 1922, Garland owed Tayloe the sum of $6,758.90 as accumulated interest on the notes. Tayloe threatened to exercise his option and declare the entire indebtedness due and foreclose his lien on the land in Miller county in the event payment was not then made. Garland notified the bank of his inability to pay the note, and Col. N. A. Shaw, one of the signers of the note sued on, who was at that time the president and in the active management of the Guaranty State Bank, undertook to procure the money for him in order to protect the security held by the bank as second mortgagee. The defendants Rochelle, Ghio, McShane, Rodgers, Trigg, and Shaw, were at the time directors of the bank and constituted the entire board, with the exception of one member who is not a party to this suit. Shaw, being unable to procure money from any other source, directed Trigg, who was the cashier, to pay over to Tayloe the sum of $6,758.90 out of the bank's money in payment of the interest due from Garland. That transaction occurred on or about March 14, 1922. In consideration of that payment, Tayloe executed and delivered to Shaw an assignment of his lien on the land to the extent of the payment made, but stipulated that this assigned lien should be inferior to the lien retained by Tayloe. At the time that payment was made to Tayloe, Shaw executed his personal note payable to the bank for an equal amount. That note was listed and carried on the books of the bank as a part of its assets. Two days later, and at the request of Shaw, Garland executed his note for a like amount payable to the bank. Garland's note, however, was not listed on the books of the bank among its bills receivable, but was kept in the bank's safe.

A short time after the execution of the note by Shaw, the defendants Rochelle, Rodgers, Trigg, McShane, and Ghio also signed the note executed by Shaw. Each of them testified that he signed the note solely for the accommodation of the bank and without any previous agreement or understanding that he would sign it. Each further testified that he received no benefit from that transaction. It is admitted that the notes here sued on are renewals of this original note signed by Shaw at the time the money was paid to Tayloe on Garland's debt.

By an appropriate reply to the defense of want of consideration, the appellant presents the issues hereafter discussed. At the conclusion of the testimony the appellant requested a peremptory instruction in its favor against all of the defendants. That was refused by the court and the case was submitted on special issues. The findings of the jury in response to those issues are, in substance, as follows:

First. That defendants Rochelle, Rodgers, Trigg, Ohio, and McShane did not agree to sign the original note for $6,758.90 before the money was paid by the Guaranty State Bank to Tayloe.

Second. That the original note above referred to was executed by the above-named defendants solely for the accommodation of the bank and for the purpose of protecting the assets of the bank.

Third. That there was an agreement between the above-named defendants and the active officers of the bank that all payments thereafter made by Garland to the bank should be applied as a credit on said note or renewals thereof.

Fourth. That the makers of the original note at the time they signed the same knew that $6,758.90 of the bank's money had been paid to Lee Tayloe to settle interest due him from Garland, and that such note was to be carried as an asset of the bank in place of, or to represent, the money thus paid out to Tayloe.

Fifth. That all of the makers of the original note were members of the board of directors of the bank and, at the time, owned as much as 50 per cent. of the capital stock of the bank.

Sixth. That before this money was paid to Tayloe on Garland's indebtedness for interest, Garland owed the bank a sum equal to or exceeding 25 per cent. of the bank's capital stock and certified surplus.

Seventh. That the bank did not part with anything, and that the defendants Rochelle, Rodgers, Ghio. Trigg, and McShane did not receive any benefit by reason of their signing the note for $6,758.90, and that they signed this note after the money had been paid to Tayloe.

Upon those answers the court entered a judgment in favor of all the defendants. The following are the propositions upon which the appellant relies for a reversal of the judgment:

First. That the court should have instructed a verdict in its favor "because as shown by the undisputed evidence, the execution and delivery of the notes sued on, as well as the *Page 280 parent note of which they are renewals, were attended by such circumstances, and the makers of the note bore such relation to the Guaranty State Bank, as that they were precluded from introducing any testimony to show that the notes, each of which recited a valuable consideration, were in fact executed without consideration and were, under the undisputed facts, estopped to deny their liability for the payment of such notes according to their legal tenor and effect."

Second.

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33 S.W.2d 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-mcshane-texapp-1930.