Thomas v. Barthold

171 S.W. 1071, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1383
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 24, 1914
DocketNo. 8014.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 1071 (Thomas v. Barthold) 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
Thomas v. Barthold, 171 S.W. 1071, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1383 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

H. D. Thomas recovered a judgment against C. C. Barthold, G. M. Bowie, G. S. White, and John Prince for $750 expended by him in the purchase of 7% shares of preferred stock in the Weather-ford Gas, Light, 1-Ieat & Power Company, a private corporation, of whom defendants were officers and directors, and from the further judgment rendered in the case denying him a recovery for the additional sum of $1,500, the amount paid by him for 15 shares of common stock in the same corporation, he has prosecuted a writ of error.

The basis of the claim asserted by plaintiff consisted in allegations, substantially, that defendants as officers of the corporation, and as constituting a majority of four out of a total of five of its board of directors and controlling and managing its affairs, were guilty of negligent mismanagement of the business of the company, thereby causing losses which rendered all of plaintiff’s stock worthless. One of the specifications of such mismanagement alleged to have of itself wrecked the company consisted in the act of defendants in borrowing $25,000 upon the promissory note of the company secured by mortgage upon all its assets, for the payment of which debt it became necessary thereafter to sell all the assets of the company and terminate its operations. This issue was presented in the court’s charge, but the verdict shows a finding for the defendant thereon.

Another contention presented in plaintiff's pleadings and submitted in the court’s charge was that defendants wrongfully sold all the assets of the company for an inadequate consideration to the Crystal Ice Company, another corporation, which was likewise controlled by the defendants, who were officers thereof, and who constituted a majority of its board of directors; that such sale terminated the business of the selling company, leaving it without assets, and thus rendering plaintiff's capital stock worthless. In the court’s charge this issue was presented to the jury, who were told that such sale was unauthorized in law if made without plaintiff’s consent, and that, if it should be found from the evidence that plaintiff sustained damage by reason of the sale, a verdict should be returned in plaintiff’s favor for the amount of damages so sustained by him. Upon this issue the jury likewise found in favor of the defendants.

Another contention made by plaintiff’s pleadings and submitted in the court’s eharge to the jury consisted in allegations that he was induced to subscribe for the 7% shares of preferred stock and to pay $750 therefor by reason of certain misrepresentations made to him by defendants, to induce him to subscribe for same, and of the falsity of which he was excusably ignorant at the time. The verdict of the jury shows a finding for plaintiff upon this issue, and the judgment in plaintiff’s favor was predicated upon that finding.

In plaintiff’s petition other issues of neg•ligent mismanagement were tendered, but the same were not submitted to the jury in the court’s charge; the issues noted above being the only ones submitted.

Numerous objections have been made by defendant in error to the consideration of the assignments presented in plaintiff in error’s brief, including objections for improper grouping, that propositions submitted under the assignments are not germane thereto, etc. It will not be necessary for us to consider such objections further than as hereinafter indicated, in view of our conclusion that plaintiff in error’s assignments present no reversible error.

[1] In plaintiff in error’s motion for new trial filed in the trial court, it was alleged that the verdict of the jury was contrary to the law and the preponderance of the evidence in several particulars set out in separate paragraphs of the motion, and different assignments of error have been presented, each embodying one of those paragraphs. Each of those assignments reads: “The verdict is contrary to the law and the preponderance of the evidence in this” — following that statement with one of the paragraphs of the motion for new trial noted above. It is a sufiieient answer to all these assignments, to say that the fact that the verdict was contrary to a mere preponderance of the evidence would be no ground for sustaining the assignment of error in this court, since the rule is that, if there was any evidence beyond a mere scintilla to reasonably support the verdict, the judgment could not be disturbed by this court on the ground of insufliciency of evidence to support it. Furthermore, as a counter proposition to these assignments, the evidence shown in the statement of facts was abundantly ample to sustain the finding of the jury denying the plaintiff a recovery upon the two issues first noted above.

[2] It might be said that the first three assignments are improperly grouped, since they raise different questions of law. However, independent of that objection, the'three propositions submitted under those assignments cannot be sustained. The first of those propositions presents the contention that plaintiff was induced to subscribe for his 15 shares of common stock by fraudulent misrepresentations made by the defendant. Even the plaintiff’s own testimony, independent of that óf the defendants, tends very strongly to show that no misrepresentations were made by the defendants in order to induce plaintiff to subscribe for the common stock. Two other propositions are submitted under the first three assignments, which are, in effect, that defendants were legally bound *1073 to account to the plaintiff for a part of the secret profits made by them upon the franchise granted to the corporation by the city of Weatherford to transact its business in that town. The evidence does show that the franchise was obtained without .the expenditure of any money by the defendants, who, after first obtaining the same, transferred it to the corporation, taking capital stock in the corporation in payment therefor. The propositions now under discussion proceed upon the theory that, as the franchise cost the defendants nothing, the stock issued to the defendants therefor was without any consideration, and that accordingly defendants should be held to an accounting therefor. A sufficient answer to these propositions is that no evidence was introduced tending to show the value of the franchise at the time it was acquired by the company. For aught that appears in the record, it may have been worth more than the face value of the stock issued to the defendants as a consideration therefor.

[3] The fifth assignment reads as follows:

“The court erred in charging that but 6 per cent, could be recovered on the preferred stock, or but $2,250 exclusive of cost.”

This assignment is likewise improperly grouped with the fourth, which is that the verdict is contrary to the law and the preponderance of the evidence, and the proposition submitted thereunder might be disregarded on that ground. However, the first proposition under that assignment, namely, that the sale of all the assets by the gas company to the ice company was for an inadequate consideration, was at all events a disputed issue, and the negative of which seems to have been supported by evidence as cogent as that introduced to support the affirmative, to say the least.

[4]

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Related

Clinton Mining & Mineral Co. v. Jamison
256 F. 577 (Third Circuit, 1919)
Barthold v. Thomas
210 S.W. 506 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1919)
El Paso & Southwestern Co. v. La Londe
173 S.W. 890 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 1071, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-barthold-texapp-1914.