Slay v. Burnett Trust

187 S.W.2d 377, 143 Tex. 621, 1945 Tex. LEXIS 174
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1945
DocketNo. A-223.
StatusPublished
Cited by213 cases

This text of 187 S.W.2d 377 (Slay v. Burnett Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slay v. Burnett Trust, 187 S.W.2d 377, 143 Tex. 621, 1945 Tex. LEXIS 174 (Tex. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Smedley,

. of the Commsision of Appeals, delivered the opinion for the Court.

On December 11, 1923, Mrs. Mary Gouts Burnett, by trust indenture, conveyed to herself, Dr. Chas. H. Harris, Mrs. Ollie Lake Burnett, Mrs. Ella Hardin, W. H. Slay and John H. Sweatt, as trustees, property, both real and personal, of great value, for the use and benefit of Texas Christian University. The instrument authorized the trustees to take possession of the trust property and conferred upon them, in broad terms, authority to manage, sell, assign, convey and lease the property, to re-invest the proceeds, to collect rents, dividends, interest, and other revenues and any obligations arising or accruing in the conduct of the trust. It provided that Mrs. Mary Gouts Burnett should be chairman of the 'trustees and that upon her death or resignation W. H. Slay would become chairman, and further that if any trustee should die, resign or become incapacitated, his successor should be appointed by the settlor, Mrs. Burnett, if living, and after her death by the remaining or surviving trustees. The instrument was executed by all of the trustees as well as by the settlor, and they agreed to execute the trust according to the provisions of the indenture and with all due fidelity. Mrs. Burnett, the settlor, died December 18, 1924, and W. H. Slay became chairman of the trustees. At the time of the execution of the trust indenture W. H. Slay and his partner, U. M. Simon, were Mrs. Burnett’s attorneys, and upon the creation of the trust they became its attorneys.

The nature of the suit is thus stated "at the beginning of the elaborate and thorough opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals:

“Plaintiffs, Dr. Charles H. Harris, E. E. Bewley, Charles F. Roeser, Mark McMahon, and W. K. Stripling, as trustees of the Mary Gouts Burnett Trust, brought this suit for the use and benefit of said Trust and its beneficiary," Texas Christian University. The defendants are W. H. Slay, U. M. Simon, W. C. Proctor, Ray E. Longmire and Martha Roberta Sweatt, sole beneficiary and independent executrix of the will of John H. Sweatt, deceased, who died in July, 1941, while his deposition's were being taken in this case. The original petition was filed on March 7, 1941. Plaintiffs sought recovery on nine separate and distinct transactions occurring over a period of three years, *626 from 1936 to 1939, any one of which would constitute the basis for a law suit. These transactions may in the main be generally classified as those wherein plaintiffs sought recovery of alleged secret profits received by Slay, Simon and Sweatt, while Slay and Sweatt were trustees and Slay and Simon were attorneys for the Trust, which secret profits were alleged to have been divided with the other defendants; and those in which plaintiffs sought to recover damages for alleged losses on loans, occasioned by breaches of trust on the part of Slay, Simon and Sweatt as trustees and attorneys and in which the other defendants are alleged to have knowingly participated.”

No answer was filed by Mrs. Sweatt, independent executrix of the estate of John H. Sweatt, deceased, and no appeal was taken from the trial court’s judgment rendered against her. After, trial before, a jury for about six-weeks and the failure of the jury to agree upon answers to any of the many special issues submitted to it, the trial court discharged the jury, and, having concluded that the plaintiffs’ motion for a peremptory instruction should have been granted in substance, the trial court rendered judgment “on the undisputed evidence.”

It was adjudged that the plaintiffs take nothing on three of their several counts or grounds of recovery, and no complaint has been made of that part of the judgment. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs against the defendants Slay, Simon, Proctor, Longmire and Mrs. Sweatt for $4,079.00 and $80,911.-74, or the' total sum of $84,990.74 “on the Big Indian Syndicate transaction of March 31, 1936”; and against defendants Slay, Simon and Mrs. Sweatt for $25,000.00 “on the Public Service Corporation loan of September 4, 1937.” Judgment was also rendered in favor of plaintiffs against the defendants, or certain 'of the defendants, for various other substantial sums, on account of transactions in which profits were made by the defendants and losses were suffered by.the trust estate. These transactions, or some of them, will be discussed hereinafter in the consideration of the assignments of error.

On appeal by the defendants Slay, Simon, Proctor and Long-mire, the Court of Civil Appeals modified the trial court’s judgment on the Big Indian Syndicate transaction by deducting from the judgment against Slay and Simon $4,079.00 and $5,000.00, and from the judgment against Proctor and Longmire $328.76 and $5,000.00, holding that issue of fact were raised as to those items, and affirmed the judgment as modified. For the same reason the Court of Civil Appeals modified the judgment for $25,-000.00 on the Public Service Corporation loan by deducting $1,- *627 500.00 from it, and affirmed it for $23,500.00. The trial court’s judgment against Slay, Simon and Proctor for $14,000.00 on the Great Plains Oil & Gas Company transaction was reversed, and the judgment against Proctor and Mrs. Sweatt for $19,000.00 on the same transaction was affirmed. The judgment against Proctor and Mrs. Sweatt for $143,730.98 on the Proctor-Ward County loan was affirmed. The judgment for $146,288.71 against Slay, Simon, Proctor and Mrs. Sweatt on the Lynch loan was reversed as to Slay, Simon and Proctor. The judgment against Slay, Simon and Mrs. Sweatt on the Tex-Oil Producers loan was reversed as to Slay and Simon. The judgments on the loan made to Longmire and the Nantz-Wood loan was reversed. 180 S. W. (2d) 480.

Three. applications for writs of error were filed and have been granted: one by defendants Slay and Simon, one by defendants Proctor and Longmire, and one by the plaintiffs. To avoid confusion, the parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court rather than as petitioners and respondents. Disposition will first be made of three questions about procedure and parties.

The first point in the application for writ of error filed by the plaintiffs presents the contention that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in overruling their motion to dismiss the appeals of W. C. Proctor and Ray E. Longmire, who for the purpose of perfecting appeals filed affidavits stating, - in the language of Rule 355 of Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, that they were unable to pay the costs of appeal or any part thereof, or to give security therefor. To contest these affidavits the plaintiffs and the clerk of the trial court- filed their signed statements, not verified by affidavits, that they believed that Proctor and Long-mire were able to pay costs of appeal and to give security therefor, and in which they prayed the court to hear proof touching the same.

The court made an order-setting the contests for hearing on November 21, 1942. Another order of the court, entered on the date last mentioned, recites that the hearing of the contests is postponed until December 7, 1942, upon the motion of the at-' tomeys for Proctor and Longmire, to give them time within which to prepare and present proof touching the matters set forth in their affidavits.

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Bluebook (online)
187 S.W.2d 377, 143 Tex. 621, 1945 Tex. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slay-v-burnett-trust-tex-1945.