Stein v. Sims

283 S.W. 319, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1068
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 7, 1926
DocketNo. 2649.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 319 (Stein v. Sims) 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
Stein v. Sims, 283 S.W. 319, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1068 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HALL, C. J.

The appellees, M. H. Sims and wife, sued the appellant, F. L. Stein, who is alleged to be a citizen of Ohio, in the district court of Wichita county.

The substance of the first amended original petition is that on the 25th day of February, 1922, Mrs. Sims, through her husband, employed the defendant, Stein, to secure a loan of $30,000 for,her, and for his services agreed to give him 5,000 units or shares *320 •of stock in what is known as the Owens Royalty Trust, a joint-stock association, engaged in holding in trust oil royalties and •oil interests, with the State Trust Company •of Wichita Palls as sole trustee; that Stein represented that he could place the certificates of stock with a money lender, whose name is unknown to plaintiff, provided plaintiff would give a bonus of 30,000 shares of said stock; that she sent him seven certificates, indorsed in blank, representing 5,000 shares each, one of the certificates to pay Stein for his services; that the husband of plaintiff, Mrs,. Sims, did not execute the transfer of the shares of stock to Stein, as required by the laws of Texas, Y. S. O. S. art. 4621; that the money was borrowed from a Mrs. Kunzman, who did not demand or receive the 30,000 shares, but that the same were appropriated by the defendant, Stein, who had frauduently represented that they were demanded by the lender, Mrs. Kunzman.

' Plaintiff further alleges that $900 in dividends had been paid to Stein on said shares of stock. This amendment was filed Decem-mer 1, 1923. The original petition is not in the transcript. She prays for the recovery of the $900 in dividends. She further prays that the transfer of the 30,000 shares of stock be canceled.

December 3, 1923, Stein answered plaintiff’s original petition by a general demurrer and a general denial, but filed no further pleading.

H. C. Weeks, as amicus curte, filed a plea, alleging that, after Stein had entered his appearance as a defendant, and filed his answer to the original petition, plaintiff filed her first amended original petition asking judgment against Stein in the sum of $900; that thereafter, on December 4, 1923, plaintiff caused a copy of said first amended original petition to be served on defendant at his home in Franklin county, Ohio; that thereafter, on June 14, 1924, plaintiff filed her second amended original petition, wherein she asks judgment for several thousand dollars as usurious interest, and $2,500 exemplary damages not claimed in her original and first amended original petitions. He further alleges that Stein is a nonresident of the state of Texas, and was on the 30th day of October, 1923, and at all times subsequent and prior thereto ; that a new cause of action is asserted from that declared upon in the original petition, by reason of which facts the court is without jurisdiction of the defendant, Stein, to enter a personal judgment against him based on any cause of action other than that set forth in the original petition. The court sustained the plea filed by the amicus curte, Weeks, and ordered plaintiff’s second amended original petition stricken from the record.

The case was submitted to a jury upon the following special issues;

“No. 1. At the time of the transfer of certificates of Owens Royalty Trust, were such certificates the separate property of Mrs. E. M. Sims? Answer: Yes1.
“No. 2. Did the defendant agree to receive as full compensation for his services 5,000 units should he secure a loan, of $30,000 for plaintiff? Answer: Yes.
“No. 3. Did the defendant, Stein, have to give any person 30,000 units of Owens Royalty Trust in connection with the loan of $30,-000 for the plaintiff? Answer: No.
“No. 4. Did the defendant,. Stein, represent to plaintiff or her agents that it was necessary for him to give 30,000 units of Owens Royalty Trust to other parties in connection with the loan of $30,000 for the plaintiff? Answer: Yes.
“No. 5. In the transactions between the Simses and Stein, was it material to the Simses who should get the 30,000' units1 by Owens Royalty Trust, provided the $30,000 should be forthcoming? Answer: No.”

Other issues were submitted at the request of the defendant, which the jury failed to answer.

The trial resulted in a judgment in" favor of plaintiffs for the sum of $900, with interest at 6 per cent., and it was further decreed that the certificates of stock to the extent of 30,000 then in the hands of the trustee, together with the dividends, were the property of Mrs. Sims, and the court decreed the cancellation of the certificates held by Stein.

Plaintiffs sought recovery upon two distinct grounds, viz.: First, that the shares of stock which were transferred to the defendant, Stein, were the separate property of Mrs. Sims, and, because her husband did not join her in such transfer, the attempted assignment was void under the statute, and Stein acquired no title to the 30,000 shares; second, because Stein was her agent to negotiate a loan of $50,000, and by reason of his fraud in representing that the lender would require 30,000 shares, when no such requirement was shown, that he had fraudulently obtained said shares by way of secret profit, and, because of his disloyalty in representing her, she was entitled to recover both the shares of stock and the dividends which had been paid to Stein.

Having arrived at the conclusion that the judgment should be sustained upon the ground" of fraud, we will discuss only that phase of the case.

On the 18th of February, 1922, Sims, with his wife’s consent, wrote Miss Mary Beatty at Columbus, giving her a glowing account of the wonderful profits which might be realized in a purchase from the owners of the royalty due them upon the Owens property, in which he states that $30,000 will be needed to finance the enterprise. • Accompanying this letter was a prospectus, which was not introduced in evidence, but in the letter it is suggested that Miss Beatty would lay the proposition before Stein, president of a bank at *321 Columbus, and that there is an opportunity “for the boys at the Ohio National Bank” to make a nice profit without risk or much effort. He explains that he cannot buy the royalty until the $30,000 is in sight or can be depended on, and prefers to finance .it through Ohio parties, because an attempt to do so at Wichita Falls might result in such parties going around him and in his spilling the beans.

Miss Beatty says she took the proposition up with defendant, Stein, and, as submitted, it was that Sims would give some one who would advance the $30,000 some units in the Owens Royalty Trust; that the proposition was that the party who made the loan was to receive the 30,000 units, the interest on the loan to be 8 per cent.

On February 23d, after receipt of the letter, Miss Beatty wired Sims at Wichita Falls as follows:

“Saw Stein who is in position to recommend and can positively put the proposition over. Insists upon having a commission for placing the mattdr. Customer will want 30,000 units, leaving nothing for Stein. If terms can be made with Stein, I will, guarantee the funds at any time.”

On February 24th, Sims replied to that telegram as follows:

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283 S.W. 319, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stein-v-sims-texapp-1926.