Southwestern Surety Insurance v. Ferguson

131 S.W. 662, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 332, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 221
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 131 S.W. 662 (Southwestern Surety Insurance v. Ferguson) 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
Southwestern Surety Insurance v. Ferguson, 131 S.W. 662, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 332, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 221 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

KEY, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal, authorized by recent legislation, from a perliminary ex parte order granting a writ of injunction as prayed for in the plaintiff’s petition. Though not required to do so both parties have filed briefs in this court, and we copy the following statement from appellee’s brief:

"Appellee Jas. E. Ferguson, plaintiff below, on August 10, 1910,'pre-sented to the Hon. John D. Bobinson, judge of the District Court of Bell County, Texas, in chambers, a petition for an injunction, alleging, among other things, in substance, that he is the owner of a majority of the stock of Temple State Bank, of which he is president; that in July, 1909, W. B. Munson, G. L. Blackford and S. P. Anclcer, as the organization committee thereof, proposed to appellee the organization of a corporation which was afterwards organized and known as Southwestern Surety Insurance Company of Oklahoma, and in pursuance of the plan of organization said committee named the Denison Bank & Trust Company as trustee for the proposed corporation, said trustee to receive for said company moneys paid and notes executed for the capital stock in said company pending the organization thereof. That in consideration of the obligation of the proposed company, made by its organization committee pending its organization and made upon its organization and *333 since it was incorporated by its president, said Munson, its secretary, said Ancker, and its treasurer, said Blackford, and its directors, officers and duly authorized agents, to keep at all times on deposit with said Temple State Bank an equal share of all moneys of such company on hand and available, and relying solely on such promises, representations and assurances as the main consideration moving and inducing him thereto, which was well known to said organization committee and said company and said trustee and their officers and directors, the appellee on the — day of August, .1909, subscribed for 250 shares of the capital stock of the proposed company, for which he paid and agreed to pay $5625 and paid $1406.25 in cash and executed his note for the balance and that said cash and note was delivered by said trustee to the appellant Southwestern Surety Insurance Company of Oklahoma upon its organization, and when it was organized in November, 1909, the said Munson as its president and the said Ancker as its secretary and the said Blackford as its treasurer, being thereunto duly authorized, assured appellee that the promises theretofore made appellee with reference to such deposits, when and upon which his said subscription payment and note was made, would be faithfully kept, and having reduced his note by payment to $4044.75 and relying upon said promises and assurances, appellee executed his note on January 24, 1910, in renewal of said balance, said renewal note maturing on May 1, 1910. That said company has not complied with its said obligations, promises or assurances and that said bank has not had such or any equitable share of said moneys and said company ‘is now threatening to entirely withdraw from said bank all and every of the funds and moneys now to its credit in said bank, in direct violation and in total disregard of its said promises, representations and assurances which are also the promises, representations and assurances of its said officers and duly authorized agents, and which said acts of its officers and agents it accepted the benefits of and ratified and confirmed, although said company has during all the time since its incorporation had on hand very large sums and great amounts of money and said bank has never received and there has never been deposited therein by said company and to and for its credit an equal amount of the moneys and funds in cash and on hand belonging to said company, but that the amount of such funds and moneys received by said bank and held to the credit of the company has been small, in small amounts, and wholly out of proportion to the amount to which the bank under the said promises and assurances was entitled from time to time.’ That on June 30th, 1910, said company had .on hand $135,781.84 and at many times before and subsequent thereto said company had in its hands large sums of money at different times in excess of said amount, and that said bank has not had on deposit to the credit of said company, the equal share, proportion and amount of said funds to which it was entitled under said promises, assurances and contract. That said representations and assurances with reference to keeping such deposit of said company in Temple State Bank were made by the organization com *334 mittee, the Southwestern Surety Insurance Company of Oklahoma, the Denison Bank & Trust Company, and their officers, agents and representatives thereunto duly authorized, for the sole purpose of defrauding and deceiving the appellee, and that said representations, promises and assurances were by said company fraudulently and deceitfully made and that appellee was by said assurances deceived and thereby induced to subscribe for stock, pay said amounts and execute said note, and that the ratification and renewal by said Southwestern Surety Insurance Company of Oklahoma of the promises made by its organization committee after the incorporation of said company, was made by said company in pursuance of the plan and design to deceive and cheat the appellee, and that said company used all of said promises merely as false pretenses to induce the appellee to subscribe for said stock, pay said money and deliver his note, by all of which appellee was defrauded and deceived in accordance with the fraudulent design from the beginning of the organization committee, for the benefit of said company, and which deceit was expressly ratified by the company,- and that the company was thus guilty of such actual fraud as authorized the appellee to have the entire contract and the subscription for said stock rescinded, the subscription canceled, the money repaid and the note canceled. That the failure of the said company to comply with the said contract with appellee has destroyed the object of said contract, and that appellee is because of such fraudulent failure in accordance with the deceitful design, entitled to recover said money, to the cancellation of said note and subscription and in the event said note is collected of appellee by an innocent purchaser for value before maturity, appellee would be entitled to recover the amount of such payment over against said company, the said company having asserted to plaintiff that it transferred said note before maturity to an innocent purchaser for value. That said Southwestern Surety Insurance Company wholly disregarding its said obligation and assurances Threatens and declares that it will at once withdraw the $5000 now to its credit in said bank . . . and will discontinue all deposits whatever with said bank, renounce its said contract, promises and assurances altogether.’ That appellee called upon said company and tendered to it a rescission of said contract and has offered to arrange for and cause to be paid to it by said Temple State Bank said $5000 upon the return to appellee of said $1406.25, and the cancellation and surrender of said note, and appellee in all things has offered and insisted upon a rescission of said contract.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W. 662, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 332, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-surety-insurance-v-ferguson-texapp-1910.