Starke, Guardian v. Guffey Petroleum Co.

86 S.W. 1, 98 Tex. 542, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 138
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1905
DocketNo. 1384.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 86 S.W. 1 (Starke, Guardian v. Guffey Petroleum Co.) 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
Starke, Guardian v. Guffey Petroleum Co., 86 S.W. 1, 98 Tex. 542, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 138 (Tex. 1905).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

The honorable Court of Civil Appeals made the following statement of the contents of the plaintiff’s petition, which has not been challenged in this court, and we adopt it:

“On August 24, 1892, G. W. Carroll, G. W. OfBrien, Emma E. John, J. F. Lanier and Patillo Higgins were the joint owners of 2700 acres of land in the Yeatch survey in Jefferson County, Texas. The owners believing it to be rich in oil, gas and other minerals, and that its resources could best be developed by a corporation, secured a charter under the general laws of Texas, under the corporate name of the Gladys City Oil, Gas and Manufacturing Company. (For convenience it will hereinafter be called “The Gladys Company.”) Its authorized capital was $200,000, the shares being of the par value of $100 each.
“The original incorporators were the owners of the land above named and the land constituted its entire capital. Each of the incorporators owned an interest in the corporation equal to their interest in the land. Mrs. Emma E. John owning practically a one-eighth interest. The land was conveyed by the owners to the corporation. Some of the stock was retained in the treasury, but none of it was ever sold.
“Mrs. John died on the-day of --, 1895, and her children Alfred and Irma John, minors, became the owners of her shares. Mrs. Starke prior to the institution of this suit duly qualified as the guardian of their estate.
“By its charter its corporate purposes were recited to be 'The erection of buildings and the accumulation and loan of funds for the purchase and sale of real property in the city of Gladys and its suburbs and the transaction of a manufacturing and mining business.’
*547 “The Gladys Company never attempted to exercise the power of erecting buildings and the accumulation and loan of funds for the purchase and sale of real estate in Gladys City and its suburbs or elsewhere. Ho such town or city was in existence, the land was not within two miles of any town or city, and they renounced such power and never undertook to exercise any corporate power but that of mining. This they elected to exercise by a distinct agreement among the incorporators.
“It is averred that the other powers above named were inconsistent and could not have been lawfully conferred.
“The incorporators were named in the charter as directors for the first year. They thereafter organized and began to bore for oil on the land in question, but their efforts were futile.
“Carroll, O’Brien and Patillo Higgins were directors of the corporation continuously until September 11, 1901. Mrs. E. E. John was a director until her death in 1895. Her interest in the corporation descended at her death to her two children before named, and Mrs. Starkeupon her appointment as their guardian in 1895 became a director in her stead.
“Then follow allegations of the subsequent appointment of other directors, and it is averred that by-laws were enacted prescribing notice of directors’ meetings and the manner of service, the manner of holding called meetings providing among other things that no business shall be transacted at any called meeting of the board except such as is specified in the call, and it is averred that the defendants had notice of these bylaws.
“On October 20, 1892, the board of directors enacted a by-law forever reserving to the Gladys Company all mineral, oil and gas rights in and under the lots belonging to the company, and it is averred that this bylaw has never been repealed. It is also alleged that Lucas and his assigns knew the lease was executed under the circumstances alleged and of the existence of the above by-laws. That on the 20th of June, 1899, G. W. Carroll, G. W. O’Brien and C. T. Heisig, three of the directors at that date, acting without a director’s meeting and without authority from the board or stockholders, executed in behalf of the Gladys Company to one A. F. Lucas a lease for one year empowering said Lucas to enter upon a part of the land of the company and prospect for oil and other minerals. That the land included in this lease practically covered all the oil and mineral lands on the property of the Gladys Company. That this was well known to Lucas and Patillo Higgins, a director of the Gladys Company at the time, and Higgins was interested in the lease. That of this contract petitioner had no notice. This contract gave Lucas the option within one year to buy the land thus leased-for $33,150. That this contract was wholly without consideration. We do not set out more fully the alleged connection of Higgins with this lease, because as will hereinafter appear it becomes immaterial.
“This lease and option is alleged to be void because ultra vires, made *548 without authority of the directory or stockholders, and because Higgins as one- of the directors had a private interest in the lease.
“It is further averred that under this lease Lucas entered upon the leased land (which amounted to about 600 acres), began to sink a well and thereby satisfied himself that it was very rich in petroleum oil. That he then believed the mineral deposits extended under the entire Veatch and Humphrey surveys. That knowing that his lease was void he fraudulently concealed his discoveries and suggested to the directors Carroll and O’Brien that the oil was in small quantities and of inferior quality, and he could not afford to go further without a lease of their entire holdings for a long period of time. That he thereby fraudulently induced Carroll and O’Brien on the 27th of February, 1900, to execute in the name of the Gladys Company a twenty-year lease on the holdings of the company in the Veatch survey, less amounts previously sold, for a royalty of 10 per cent of the product which might accrue in the course of the development.
“This lease is assailed also as not having been made eitlier by authority of 'the board of directors or of the stockholders and as ultra vires.
“That thereafter on the 18th of September, 1900, Carroll, G. W. O’Brien, and Chenault O’Brien, assuming to act respectively- as president, vice-president and secretary of the company, substituted for the lease of February 27, 1900, another twenty-year lease with like stipulations. That this lease was procured by Lucas aided by Carroll because Carroll had obligated himself to make up to Higgins a certain interest which Higgins claimed as against Lucas in the lease of 1899, and Lucas and Carroll acting in furtherance of their private interest to avoid their obligations to Higgins, and to this end all former leases were canceled and abandoned.
“This lease is assailed upon the same grounds as the former lease, and upon the further ground that Carroll was acting in his own interest and not in the interest of the Gladjrs Company, of which he was a director.
“The lease last mentioned is the last in the series of transactions complained of. By its terms in consideration of a royalty of 10 per cent of the product to be turned over to the Gladys Company, A. F.

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Bluebook (online)
86 S.W. 1, 98 Tex. 542, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starke-guardian-v-guffey-petroleum-co-tex-1905.