Sunlite Co., Manufacturers v. Justice

257 S.W. 579
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1923
DocketNo. 8868. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 257 S.W. 579 (Sunlite Co., Manufacturers v. Justice) 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
Sunlite Co., Manufacturers v. Justice, 257 S.W. 579 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

JONES, C. J.

Upon a suit filed by him in the district court of Collin county, Tex., on January 12, 1921, appellee, T. F. Justice, recovered judgment for principal, interest, and attorney fees upon a note in the principal sum of $8,980 against the Sunlite Co., Manufacturers, as principal, F. S. Lauhach, (5. F. Brannon, and E. W. Kirkpatrick, jointly and severally as indorsers, and against M. P. Dewar in his capacity as receiver of the said Sunlite Co., Manufacturers. Appeal was duly perfected to this court by G. F. Brannon and E. W. Kirkpatrick, who are the appellants in this case. The judgment was secured on the 28th day of March, 1922.

*580 The following facts form tlie basis of this suit:

The Sunlite Co., Manufacturers, was transacting business under a declaration of trust, which constituted it a joint stock company. Its business was transacted from its principal office in the city of Dallas. Previous to the happening of any of the matters which culminated in the execution of the note in question, E. R. Brackett was elected president of the company and was made its manager, exercising the latter power by virtue of a power of attorney given him by the trustees or directors of the company. Appellee, Justice, was a resident of Damar county, and had become interested in the company in the fall of 1919, and established an office in Dallas, Tex. Upon a promise made by the said Brackett, appellee was induced to invest the sum of $5,000 in the stock of the Sunlite Co., Manufacturers, and also to sell stock to certain friends of his in Lamar county. The promise made was that at the December,. 1919, meeting of the trustees or directors of the company, he would be chosen a director and vice president of the company, and would have a voice in its management. The stock! he sold was sold on the representation that appellee would have such voice in the affairs of the company and would to that extent be responsible for its management. Though given positive assurance that he would be placed on the board of directors or trustees in the company at said December meeting, this was not done, and appellee was not permitted to sustain any other relation to the company than' that of an ordinary stockholder.

When appellee became certain that the promises made to him in reference to his being placed on the board of directors or trustees of the company and given the other official position would not be carried out, and believing that said promises were made to him only for the fraudulent purpose of securing his money and the money of his friends and associates, he demanded of the company, through its president, a return, not only of the money he had invested, but of the money he had caused to be invested by his representations as to the connection he would have with the company, tendering back his stock and the stock he had caused others to purchase through said promises made to him. He made this demand on the said company in the form of an ultimatum, to the effect that, unless it was complied with, suit would be entered against the company to compel it to receive back the stock and return to himself and said others the money that had been paid to the company in the purchase of said stock. The result of this demand by appellee on the company was an agreement that the company would refund the $5,000 paid by him, and would refund to each of those whose investment’ in the stock of the company had been so secured by appellee, and they in turn would deliver their stock to the company. This agreement was perfected by the company issuing to each party to the agreement its deferred note for the amount of money he had invested therein. The aggregate amount,of these notes was $11,980. The stock certificate held by each of the parties was indorsed and turned over to appellee to hold for cancellation. When these notes matured, the company was unable to discharge them, having only $3,000 which could be used for that purpose. -Further negotiations were entered into, with the result that $3,000 in cash was paid, and the remainder was to be represented by the execution of a note due in six months from date, signed by the company, and to be indorsed by a sufficient number of solvent sureties to make it bankable. This latter agreement was also entered into by appellee representing himself and the other holders of the said notes and Brackett representing the company in the same capacity as on the previous agreement. It was suggested by Brackett that the defendants in the suit could be secured as indorsers of the note. Appellee took some time to investigate the financial standing of the proposed indorsers, and then informed Brackett that, if the in-dorsement of. appellants could be secured, the note would be satisfactory. A few days afterwards he called at the office and a 'Mr. Scott, who then seemed to be in charge of the affairs of the company, presented to him the note forming the basis of this suit, with the indorsements of appellants Kirkpatrick and Brannon and that of E. S. Laubach and E. R. Brackett. This note and the $3,000 in cash were accepted by Justice as a settlement of the several original notes. This $3,000 was distributed by appellee to each of the holders of the other said original notes, and to himself, in proportion to the principal sum of the note held by each.

Before the execution of this note the company had agreed to move its place of business to McKinney, Tex., and had purchased for a cash consideration a tract of land from appellant Kirkpatrick for the purpose of erecting its plant thereon. Appellants apparently were very much interested in securing the location of the plant on this land; they being residents of the city of McKinney. At the time the indorsements on the note were secured from appellants, the said Brackett represented to them that the company had made a prior contract with Justice and other Lamar county holders of stock to move the plant to the city of Paris, and that they must be settled with or suit would be brought against the company to enforce this prior contract, and it would be impossible to fulfill the company’s obligation to locate the plant on the piece of land near McKinney; that this note was in settlement of their claims, and, if appellants would indorse it, it would be satisfactory to these people, and the company *581 would be able at once to fulfill its promise in respect to locating the said plant at McKinney. Each of appellants believed this representation and was moved to indorse the said note soley because of such representation, and would not have indorsed it had such representation not been made. These representations were false, and appellee denied any knowledge that they had been made to appellants, or that their indorsements had been secured through such means. While there is some evidence in the record tending to show that he did have such knowledge, the jury in its findings sustains appellee’s contention, and, as it is amply supported by evidence, this court must accept this finding and treat the case from the standpoint that the said representations made by Brackett were on his own volition and without the knowledge of appellee.

Approximately 60 days before, the note matured, appellants, by suit, enjoined appellee from transferring or disposing of the note. They interviewed him in his office at the time the writ of injunction was served on him, and informed him that he had been so enjoined, and wanted to know if he still had the note in his possession.

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Bluebook (online)
257 S.W. 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunlite-co-manufacturers-v-justice-texapp-1923.