Southwest American Life Insurance Company v. Dunn

344 S.W.2d 948, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2195
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 1961
Docket3574
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 344 S.W.2d 948 (Southwest American Life Insurance Company v. Dunn) 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
Southwest American Life Insurance Company v. Dunn, 344 S.W.2d 948, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2195 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

COLLINGS, Justice.

J. C. Dunn brought this suit against the •Commerce Life Insurance Company, its successor, the Southwest American Life Insurance Company, and others, including the -company officers, R. K. Abbrat, W. A. 'Thomas and Vincent Caltigirone. Dunn •sought to set off the unpaid balance on a note which R. K. Abbrat had made and delivered to him against two notes which Dunn executed payable to Abbrat, which had been assigned to the Commerce Life Insurance Company. On motion of Southwest American Life Insurance Company, its -cause of action based upon two other notes executed by Dunn in 1953 and payable to •Commerce Life Insurance Company was •severed. Judgment was then entered setting off the unpaid balance due Dunn on the note made and delivered to him by Abbrat .against the unpaid balance on the notes made by Dunn, which had been assigned by Abbrat the payee to Commerce Life Insurance Company. Southwest American Life Insurance Company has appealed from •the judgment allowing the set off in favor -of J. C. Dunn.

The judgment allowing the set off is based upon the following findings of fact by •:the trial court:

“1. During the first two or three months of 1955, Plaintiff J. C. Dunn, needing funds for his business, contacted Commerce Life Insurance Company in Houston, Texas, relative to securing a loan.
“2. Prior to 1955, Dunn had borrowed substantial sums of money from this company, most of which had'been repaid, and at the time that Dunn made application for a loan there was outstanding the balance on notes given by Dunn to the Commerce Life Insurance Company in August, 1953.
“3. When loans prior to those of 1955 (the subject of the present judgment) had been negotiated the insurance company had been represented by its President R. K. Abbrat; its Vice President and Secretary, W. A. Thomas and its Vice President and Treasurer, Vincent Caltigirone; and one of these individuals continued as an officer in the successor company, the Southern Republic Life Insurance Company.
“4. In response to Dunn’s request for a loan of $100,000.00, Abbrat and Thomas talked to Dunn and he was told that the insurance company did not have sufficient funds on hand to pay out all of the $100,000.00 at one time and suggested a transaction intended to give Dunn the funds from the insurance company that he needed within a period of eighteen months in consideration of their repayment over a period of some fifteen years.
'“5. Pursuant to the plan and suggestion of R. K. Abbrat (with the apparent knowledge of Thomas, and possibly of Caltigirone) Dunn executed two promissory notes in principal amounts of $70,000.00 and $30,000.00 payable to Abbrat, respectively, both payable in annual installments over a period of fifteen years, upon the representation that Dunn would receive $100,000.00 needed for his business from the insurance company over a period of eight months; and R. K. Ab- *950 brat, to further assure Dunn that the $100,000.00 would be paid by the insurance company as promised, executed and delivered to Dunn his note in the principal amount of $100,000.00 payable in two equal installments on April 1, 1956, and October 1, 1956.
“6. The notes executed by Dunn were secured by Deed of Trust liens executed on real estate as the same is described in the Plaintiff’s Petition; and the note executed by Abbrat to Dunn was secured by shares of stock in a holding company which was represented by Abbrat to own the controlling interests of the Commerce Life Insurance Company.
“7. Abbrat immediately transferred Dunn’s note to the Commerce Life Insurance Company and the installment payments due during the year 1956 were made by Dunn to the insurance company, there being a credit on the principal of said two notes of $6,666.66.
“8. Subsequently, and during the year 1956 an extension of time for payment of the Abbrat note in the principal amount of $100,000.00 was requested of Dunn, and an agreement for extension was entered into, which was evidenced by letter executed by Abbrat, Thomas and Caltigirone. These three individuals were all parties to the transaction with Dunn.
“9. Dunn has received and given credit for the sum of $33,000.00 on the note payable to him, leaving a balance on principal of $67,000.00.
“10. Subsequent to the extension of time given by letter agreement (signed by Dunn as well as Abbrat, Thomas and Caltigirone), Dunn learned that a merger between Commerce Life Insurance Company and Southern Republic Life Insurance Company was being considered, and on advice of counsel, Dunn notified the Southern Republic Life Insurance Company of his claim of offset for the balance due on the Abbrat note. He notified the Southern Republic Life Insurance Company that he had never received the proceeds of his loan.
“11. Commerce Life Insurance Company merged with Southern Republic Life Insurance Company and, thereafter, both of these companies merged with, or were succeeded by, the company that is now known as Southwest American Life Insurance Company.
“12. At the time of the transaction of the loan in March, 1955, Abbrat was acting for the Commerce Life Insurance Company in accepting Dunn’s notes, in assigning them to the insurance company, and in the company’s, acceptance of the assignment of the notes; while acting for himself, he was-also acting for the insurance company-in the transaction through which they acquired the said two notes of Dunn in the principal amounts of $70,000.00- and $30,000.00, respectively.
“13. While Thomas and Caltigirone were not both present in all of .the phases of the transaction, the Court-finds that Abbrat, Thomas and Calti-girone were acting in concert in the-transaction of the loan with Dunn, and that each and all of them had knowledge of the transaction from the outset.
“14. The Court further finds that (in addition to Abbrat acting as well for the insurance company as for himself) Thomas and Caltigirone also acted for the company in the transaction in. question.
“15. Abbrat, Thomas and Caltigir--one were each and all officers of the Commerce Life Insurance Company-when the loan was applied for by Dunn,., when the transaction of the loan and exchange of notes was suggested and completed, as aforesaid, and when an> *951 -extension of the Abbrat note was negotiated with Dunn in 1956.
“16. The difference of the outstanding balances on the principal of the -notes that are involved is in the sum of •'$26,333.33, and this sum is arrived at by ■adding the balances on the two notes given by Dunn in the original amounts of $70,000.00 and $30,000.00, respectively, on which the balances are $65,333-33 and $28,000.00, respectively, making a total of $93,333.33, and deducting from the total balance the sum of $67,-000.00 which is the balance on the note given to Dunn in an original amount of $100,000.00.
“17.

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Bluebook (online)
344 S.W.2d 948, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwest-american-life-insurance-company-v-dunn-texapp-1961.