Texas Plains Building & Loan Ass'n v. Colonial Corp.

135 S.W.2d 153
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 1939
DocketNo. 5142.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 135 S.W.2d 153 (Texas Plains Building & Loan Ass'n v. Colonial Corp.) 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
Texas Plains Building & Loan Ass'n v. Colonial Corp., 135 S.W.2d 153 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

The appellant, Texas Plains Building & Loan Association, was organized under the laws of Texas as a building and loan association in the year 1-926. In 1930 it sold to appellee, Colonial Corporation, its “permanent” capital stock of the par value of $66,000 and from time to time issued other classes of its capital stock to investors and borrowers as provided by its charter and the law under which it operated. During the year 1929 the Association encountered financial difficulties which continued to grow worse and in 1934 it had a large number of borrowers who were unable to pay the notes and discharge real estate liens which it held upon property owned by them. In consequence of this condition the Association was forced to acquire by foreclosure a-nd otherwise title to a large number of tracts or parcels of real estate consisting of town property located at Amarillo and neighboring towns and in the fall of that year its holdings of real estate amounted approximately to $255,000 of its total assets of approximately $795,000. This condition precluded the Association from pursuing its normal operations and on November 16, 1934, the stockholders held a meeting at which it was decided to reorganize the Association by bringing about the incorporation of a new building and loan association with a capital stock equal to one-half of appellant’s capital stock. The ultimate purpose of the reorganization and creation of the new corporation was to establish a building and loan association under a Texas charter which would possess assets of such nature as would be approved by the Federal authorities so that the new association could itself reorganize and take advantage of the benefits of the Federal statutes enacted by Congress for relief of building and loan associations whose assets, by reason of the general economic depression, had assumed stalemate proportions.

The new association that was organized as a result of the action of the stockholders of appellant took the name of Great Plains Building & Loan Association and appellant transferred to it approximately one-half of its assets, such half, however, consisting of notes, liens and securities that were in good standing and not delinquent, retaining those notes, liens and securities that were delinquent and retaining also the real estate which it had been forced to acquire. The capital stock of the Great Plains Building & Loan Association was issued to the stockholders of the. Texas Plains Building & Loan Association in lieu of one-half of their stock in the latter concern and their holdings in the Texas Plains Building & Loan Association were thus reduced in amount to one-half of what they formerly had been. Soon after the organization of the Great Plains Building & Loan Association, it also was reorganized under the corporate name of First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Amarillo!

Appellant, Texas Plains Building & Loan Association, continued to encounter difficulty in collecting the amounts due and continually maturing upon its outstanding-loans, and likewise it encountered great difficulty in disposing of its vast amount of real estate holdings. The State Banking Commissioner was dissatisfied with these conditions and insisted upon the sale and disposition of the various items of real estate so as to adjust appellant’s assets in such manner as would be safe and in keeping with the general purpose of the law *155 under which it was operating. The record shows there was little or no market for real estate such as that owned by appellant and that it could be sold only if offered at prices materially below its book value as shown on appellant’s books, which book value consisted of the amount of money appellant had invested in it.

• Under the law and its charter appellant was permitted to exchange its real estate for its capital stock, the real estate to bring not less than its book value and the capital stock to be acquired at not more than its withdrawal value. In an effort to extricate the Association from this pressing situation, Wm. Oliver, its president, acquiesced In by a majority, if not all, of its directors, ■evolved a plan by which the amount of purchase price offered by a prospective purchaser of an item of its real estate, which usually was considerably less than its book value, would be received by Oliver and deposited in a special account in a bank other than the one in which appellant kept its deposits, under the name of Wm. Oliver, trustee, the money to be used by him in the purchase from other stockholders of capital stock in appellant owned by them to an amount sufficient to equal the book value of the real estate being sold and then exchanging the real estate desired by the purchaser for the capital stock which had thus been acquired. The prospective purchasers being unwilling, however, to part with their money upon an indefinite and uncertain contingency, the plan finally devolved into one whereby the president of appellant would take the purchaser’s money and immediately deliver to him a deed to the property being purchased by him, deposit the money in the trustee account, proceed then to acquire with it a sufficient amount of the capital stock of appellant from other stockholders to equal the book value of the item of real estate sold, and cancel the certificates of stock thus acquired. A form of written contract was prepared for Oliver’s use in these negotiations and the first few 'of them were closed by the use of the written contract. Through carelessness or a lack of appreciation of the necessity of using the written form of contract, however, as the negotiations proceeded, these transactions became entirely oral, the purchaser paying to Wm. Oliver such an amount of money as he would agree to pay as consideration for the item of real estate being purchased by him and immediately receive from Oliver a deed to the property. The money would then be deposited to the trustee account arid in some instances it would be several weeks or months before a sufficient amount of the capital stock of appellant association could be acquired with the money paid by the purchaser to offset the book value of the property sold. The stock was acquired principally through brokers and at prices materially below its withdrawal value.

On the 20th of April, 1938, after an exhaustive examination and audit of the books and affairs of appellant Association, the Banking Commissioner addressed to the Association a lengthy communication in which he complained bitterly of the conduct of appellant’s president and directors in disposing of its real estate and acquiring its stock in the manner described and requested the removal of Wm. Oliver as president and of all of its directors. He requested also' “That those shareholders who were induced to sell their stock at figures far below its actual worth through the Wm. Oliver trustee account be allowed to recall their certificates of shares by returning to the association the amount paid to them through the Wm. Oliver trustee account.” Other requests and orders were made but these constitute the principal ones which are involved in this litigation. In compliance with the requests and orders of the Commissioner, the president and all of the directors resigned except S. G. Dye and M. L. Dye who, by agreement, were retained as directors on account of the fact that they represented the Colonial Corporation which held the $66,000 of the permahent capital stock- of appellant Association. Other directors consisting of H. E. Fuqua, P. L. Reppert and E. A. Simpson were elected.

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Related

Texas Plains Building & Loan Ass'n v. Colonial Corp.
136 Tex. 393 (Texas Supreme Court, 1941)
Texas Plains Building & Loan Ass'n v. Colonial Corp.
151 S.W.2d 193 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1941)

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135 S.W.2d 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-plains-building-loan-assn-v-colonial-corp-texapp-1939.