Shaw v. Snyder Independent School Dist.

67 S.W.2d 376
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 22, 1933
DocketNo. 1183.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 67 S.W.2d 376 (Shaw v. Snyder Independent School Dist.) 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. Snyder Independent School Dist., 67 S.W.2d 376 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, Justice. ■

The First State Bank & Trust Company,- of Snyder, Tex., was, at the time it became insolvent, the depository for Snyder independent school district, owing the latter a little more than $20,000. Ernest Taylor, together with H. P. Wellborn and Sam Hamlett, was surety for the bank on the depository bond. Taylor owed the bank personally a note for $10,000, and, being a stockholder, was liable as such, for the benefit of the creditors in the sum of $24,900. After the affairs of the bank were taken over by the banking commissioner for liquidation and the stockholders’ assessments made, Taylor, under sanction of an order of the district court, deeded a number of tracts of land to the banking commissioner in full settlement and discharge of the $10,-000 note, and the $24,900 stockholders’ liability. The deed was made in pursuance of a contract which provided in part as follows: “It is agreed and understood that the First State Bank & N-ust Company was depository for the Snyder Independent School District, and Ernest Taylor* Sam Hamlett, and H. P. Wellborn, sureties on the bond of said bank to secure the deposits of said district have been sued on said bond, and that said sureties will undoubtedly be liable on said bond for a large amount of money for the reason that said defunct bank will make default in the payment of said funds to the extent of probably 75 percent of said deposit. In view of this fact, it is the contention of Ernest Taylor that he and the other bondsmen are entitled, by law, to direct that the sum paid on his said note," be by the Special Agent, paid to the School Board at Snyder to apply as a credit on the liability of said bondsmen on said bond. It is therefore agreed that the said Ernest Taylor for himself and the other bondsmen, to-wit, H. P. Wellborn and Sam Hamlett, does not waive any equitable or legal right he or they may have to direct and require the proceeds of his said note above described to be paid to the School Board on its deposit, and thus applied as a credit or setoff against the liability of said bondsmen on said bond by reason of the default of said First State Bank & Trust Company, principal on said bond, and neither the said Ernest Taylor, nor the other bondsmen shall be es-topped from hereafter asserting any legal or equitable right that they, or any of them have under the law, prior to the delivery of said deeds, to have the proceeds of said note, or the proceeds of the property above described ■applied in full to the payment of the debt due the Snyder Independent School District by said First State Bank & Trust Company. It being understood that the said A. J. McKin-non, Special Agent, does not admit the right ■of. setoff, but it is the intention of the parties that Ernest Taylor shall not hereafter be •estopped from asserting any equitable or legal right of setoff: he now has in the premises, .because of this conveyance and settlement.”

This suit was brought by said Snyder independent school district against James Shaw, banking commissioner, A. J. McKinnon, special agent, the First State Bank & Trust Company, Ernest Taylor, ,H. P. Wellborn, and Sam Hamlett to ascertain the amount of plaintiff’s deposit, and to recover against each and all the defendants, jointly and severally, such amount, and to have decreed and fore *377 closed an equitable lien on the land conveyed as aforesaid by said Taylor to the banking commissioner.

Defendant Ernest Taylor filed his cross-action agreeing to the contentions of the school district, averring that his said contract with the banking commissioner provided that the proceeds of the land which he conveyed “should be applied on the Snyder Independent School District and offset against the said $11,000.00 note (meaning the above described note for $10,000), and said property was so conveyed for that purpose and agreed to be devoted in that way if same could legally be done.” His prayer was “that the funds arising from the sale of the property so conveyed by him be applied to the Snyder Independent School District debt, and that same be offset against the $11,000.00 debt, and he here now, as heretofore, directs the same to be done, and asks the court that in the judgment rendered in this cause that the Snyder Independent School District be given a lien on said property to the extent of said $11.000.00 debt,” etc.

Upon the trial, the court gave judgment in favor of the school district against said sureties on the depository bond for the sum of $20,539.83, and against the other defendants, including the banking commissioner, for a foreclosure of a lien on said land. The banking commissioner, A. J. McKinnon, special agent, and the First State Bank & Trust Company have appealed.

As we see it, two questions are presented for our decision: (1) Does the contract in pursuance of which Taylor conveyed certain lands to the banking commissioner in full settlement and discharge of his liability to; the hank on his $10,000 note, and of his liability as a stockholder to the creditors of the bank in the sum of $24,900, by its terms require the banking commissioner to apply the proceeds of said land on the debt due by the bank and the sureties on its depository bond to said school district? (2) If said contract does so provide, is the provision valid and enforceable in this suit?

It is not necessary to determine whether, if Taylor, instead of paying his indebtedness to the insolvent bank and to the creditors represented by the banking commissioner by the conveyance of the lands, he had paid the debt for which he was liable as surety for the depository bank, he could have set off the amount so paid against the $10,000 note due the bank. He did not pay anything to the school district, and the question of what his rights would have been had he done so is entirely outside the scope of the present inquiry. It seems plain enough to us that the contract under which Taylor, by conveying his lands, paid, his debt to the insolvent bank and also his stockholder’s liability, does not even purport to bind the banking commissioner to apply the proceeds of the land in payment of the debt due by the bank and its sureties to the school district. The agent of the banking commissioner making the contract therein expressly refused to agree that such proceeds should be so applied. All the contract provided was that it and the conveyance of the land thereunder should constitute no waiver of such right, if any, or estoppel to assert same; it being recited that “said A. J. McKinnon, Special Agent, does not admit the right of set-off,” etc. Hence it is clear that the validity of Taylor’s claim of right of set-off must stand or fall on its own merits with neither aid nor hindrance from the contract. All that Taylor gained by the contract by way of possible aid to his assertion of said right was that he would not be met with any plea of waiver or estoppel. We therefore pass to a consideration of the second question.

If we have accurately stated the only questions presented, and have reached the proper conclusion upon the first of said questions, it would appear that the second is rendered immaterial. But, even if the contract' should be construed as evidencing an agreement of the banking commissioner to apply the proceeds of the land on the debt of the school district, in our opinion he had no legal authority to make such an agreement. The school district had only the right to share pro rata with other depositors in the assets of the insolvent bank.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Snyder Independent School District v. Shaw
88 S.W.2d 85 (Texas Supreme Court, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.W.2d 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-snyder-independent-school-dist-texapp-1933.