Smith v. First Nat. Bank of Flatonia

95 S.W. 1111, 43 Tex. Civ. App. 495, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 137
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 95 S.W. 1111 (Smith v. First Nat. Bank of Flatonia) 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
Smith v. First Nat. Bank of Flatonia, 95 S.W. 1111, 43 Tex. Civ. App. 495, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 137 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

This is a suit by B. M. Smith against the First Rational Bank of Flatonia and T. T. McCommon to recover $1,050 and interest upon the following facts, as alleged in plaintiff’s second amended original petition and supplemental petitions.

Plaintiff and a number of other persons by subscription made up $1,050 for the purpose of investing the same, with other persons, in the purchase of a tract of oil land in Jefferson County, Texas. The other persons subscribing to this $1,050 have transferred their claims to plaintiff. When collected the money was remitted to the First Rational Bank of Flatonia accompanied by a letter to its president, T. T. McCommon. The bank was acting as preliminary treasurer holding the money subscribed until it should be authorized by the proposed organization to pay out the same in the purchase of the land. It is alleged that the land was never purchased by the proposed organization nor was the bank ever authorized to pay out the money or to buy any land, nor was the proposed corporation ever created, but on the contrary at a meeting held at Seguin, Texas, of persons principally interested, in May or June, 1901, at which one Willeford, cashier and acting for the *497 bank, was present, the purchase oí the land under consideration was disapproved and the proposed enterprise abandoned. It is alleged that the terms upon which the money was remitted were stated in the letter accompanying the remittance and addressed to MeCommon, president of the bank, as folloivs:

“In accordance with several conversations with your representative, Mr. W. R. King, over telephone, relative to the organization of the oil company, in which I am told yourself, Mr. Jonathan Lane and others associated with you are chiefly interested, I send you by today herewith $1,050 currency, to cover one and one-half shares of organization stock, subscribed by following named persons.”

The letter then proceeds to state the subscribers who have been named above, and then proceeds: “In effecting permanent organization the Victoria Contingent will be gratified by being remembered in the directory,” and suggested certain names as directors. Prompt acknowledgment of receipt was requested. The bank through Willeford, its cashier, promptly acknowledged receipt of the money saying: “This is to say this fund is held by this bank for the parties until company is organized and you can so show each one.”

It is further averred that the money was sent in the promotion of an enterprise in which Jonathan Lane was one of the persons chiefly interested, that he is now and was at the time a lawyer and man of large affairs, of reputation and character and the money was remitted to be used in an enterprise in which he ivas and should be concerned, and that plaintiff and his associates did not know that he was not concerned in this enterprise, and not a subscriber to, its stock, until after the defendants converted the money to its own use. That the money has been paid over to one T. W. Lane in purchase of certain land in Jefferson County, and that said Lane was unknown to plaintiff and his associates and he never intended to enter into any enterprise with him. - That Jonathan Lane was not in fact interested in the enterprise and did not subscribe for any of the stock, and for that reason defendant bank had no authority to pay over the money; that the enterprise was never consummated, nor was any corporation or other organization ever effected, and no authority given by the inchoate organization to the bank to pay over the money, but on the contrary the inchoate organization was abandoned after having directed the bank not to pay out the money and after the bank had agreed not to do so.

In a second count of the petition it is alleged that it had been proposed to purchase a tract of land in Jefferson County having supposed oil possibilities, but the plaintiff and his associates assumed that Jonathan Lane was concerned in the enterprise. The land was claimed by T. W. Lane, that it was understood that the title to the land should be examined by competent counsel; that an abstract was prepared and examined by Dibrell & Mosheim, attorneys, by whom the title was reported as not good and merchantable. That if the contract of purchase was binding upon plaintiff and his associates the same provided for an examination of title which was to be satisfactory to the proposed purchasers and their counsel which was, known to defendants, and the title being bad and not merchantable the consideration had failed and the *498 defendant had no authority to accept a deed from Lane or to pay out the money, and had no authority to pass upon the title or pay out the money even though the title was good.

Defendants answered by general demurrer and special exception, which need not be more specifically mentioned, and generally denied all the allegations of the petition not specially admitted, setting out a history of the transaction. The basis of the suit is substantially as follows:

On or about April 19, 1901, one W. R. King undertook to secure money from persons who might desire to subscribe a sufficient sum with which to buy from T. W. Lane fifteen acres of land in Jefferson County, known as lots 1, 2 and 5, block D, Charles Williams survey, supposed to be oil producing land, said Lane offering to sell for $10,500. The plan upon which King proceeded was to form a company of persons who should buy the land and operate oil wells thereon.

The plan presented by King was that the money was to be divided into fifteen shares of $700 each, called organization stock. W. R. King, E. A. Arnim, for Arnim & Lane (a firm composed of E. A. Arnim and Jonathan Lane), T. W. Lane, W. Willeford and T. T. McCommon, each should and did take one share and King was to dispose of the other ten shares. When disposed of the oil company was to be organized whose capital stock should consist of said fifteen acres of land, at a valuation of $150,000 represented by 150,000 shares at $1.00 each, of which 75,000 shares were to be held by the holders of the fifteen shares of organization stock, and the remaining 75,000 shares to be called “Treasury Stock,” and a sufficient amount thereof sold by the company to raise the money to develop the property. The holders of the “organization stock” were to elect the officers and control the oil company when organized. The money collected by King from sale of “organization stock” should be deposited with the defendant bank until all of the shares were sold, when T. W. Lane should make and deliver a deed for the land to the contemplated oil company and the money should be paid over to him.

On or about April 23, Í901, the Victoria people (being plaintiff and those whose interests have been assigned to him) acting as a body, caused one J. E. Buchanan to remit to defendant McCommon, president of defendant bank, $1,050 to cover one and one-half shares of organization stock, accompanying the remittance with the letter heretofore referred to, receipt of which was acknowledged by Willeford, cashier of the bank, as follows: “I have just been asked to come to Seguin this eve to organize and your letter will be placed with them.

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.W. 1111, 43 Tex. Civ. App. 495, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-first-nat-bank-of-flatonia-texapp-1906.