Thompson v. Schmitt

274 S.W. 554, 115 Tex. 53, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 130
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1925
DocketNo. 4123.
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 554 (Thompson v. Schmitt) 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
Thompson v. Schmitt, 274 S.W. 554, 115 Tex. 53, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 130 (Tex. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GREENWOOD

delivered the opinion of the court. Certified questions from the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals of the Ninth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, in an appeal from the County Court of Harris County.

The facts to be considered in determining the questions certified to the Supreme Court may be briefly stated as follows:

Appellees sued appellant as the holder of certificates of beneficial interest in the Dixie Co-Operative Mail Order House, an association operating in this State under a declaration of trust, to recover the amount of a verified account for goods sold the house or the trustees thereof.

*56 Appellant denied under oath that the Mail Order House was a joint stock association or a partnership, setting out all the provisions of the declaration of trust under which the business done in the name of the house was conducted, and claimed that said provisions exempted him from liability to appellees.

The County Court of Harris County rendered judgment for appellees against appellant for the amount of the account, and the appeal from that judgment is pending in the Court of Civil Appeals.

The case was tried on an agreement as to facts in substance as follows:

First: It is agreed that appellees, R. S. Schmitt and son, Roy E. Schmitt, are a co-partnership doing business under the name of R. S. Schmitt & Son, in the City of Houston, Harris County, Texas, and that the sworn account sued upon was entered into by and between R. S. Schmitt & Son and the Dixie Co-operative Mail Order House (not incorporated), and that said merchandise was purchased by the trustees in their official capacity, and sold in the ordinary course of trade, and is a true and correct account and is unpaid.

Second : It is agreed that the defendant, W. L. Thompson, was at the time, before and since the obtaining of said merchandise, a holder of certificates of beneficial interest in the said Dixie Co-operative Mail Order House (not incorporated), and that the said Dixie Co-operative Mail Order House (not incorporated) is a bankrupt and became bankrupt soon after the purchase of said goods.

Third: It is agreed that the Dixie Co-operative Mail Order House (not incorporated) was engaged in the buying and selling of merchandise under a declaration of trust filed for record May 28th, 1919, and recorded on May 30th, 1919, in Vol. 420, page 633, Deed Records, Harris County, Texas, and a purported amendment thereto, recorded in Vol. 460, page 560, Deed Records, Harris County, Texas.

By the declaration of trust, Charles H. Steding, Louis Minck, and H. A. Speed of Harris County agreed as between themselves and with all other persons who might afterwards become interested, as follows:

The purpose of the association, called “this trust” was “the purchase and sale, at either wholesale or retail, or both, of goods, wares and merchandise, and other similar personal property, and to carry on and conduct a business for the purchase and sale as aforesaid of goods, wares and merchandise and other similar *57 personal property, under the general plan commonly known as a mail order business, with the right at any time, and from time to time, to acquire, hold, use, sell and convey, or otherwise dispose of, such property and/or any other character of property real, personal, or mixed,, as may seem to the trustees provided for herein to be necessary or advisable in the conduct and carrying on of said business, including the collection of any indebtedness that may be owing to this trust.”

The capital to carry on the business of the association was to come from the issuance and sale by trustees of transferable certificates of beneficial interest in an aggregate amount not to exceed two million dollars, each certificate to have a par value of one dollar.

The business of the association was to be conducted by Steding, Minck, and Speed, and their successors, as trustees. The title to all property of the association was to vest in these named individuals and their successors, in trust for the holders of the certificates of beneficial interest. The articles expressly granted to the trustees complete power and authority to do business under the name of “Dixie Co-operative Mail Order House (not incorporated) ” to buy and sell merchandise, to contract debts, and to manage and control and dispose of anything and everything to be acquired under the articles’ terms. The trustees were empowered to declare and pay dividends to the holders of certificates of beneficial interest at any time sufficient cash or securities were in their hands and the trustees deemed it advisable.

The articles granted to the holders of certificates of beneficial interest the right to inspect an accurate record of all receipts and disbursements to be kept by the trustees, the right to receive dividends, and on termination of the association the right to have a division of principal and accumulated profits in the trustees’ hands.

The articles explicitly provided that all contracts, debts and obligations incurred by the trustees should be entitled to payment out of the property in their hands, but that “the holders of said certificates shall not at any time be personally or individually liable for the payment of any indebtedness incurred by the trustees hereunder, nor for performance of any obligations entered into by the trustees hereunder, nor for the torts of the trustees or the trust estate or their or its officers, agents, or employes. The trustees hereunder shall not at any time be personally or individually liable for the payment of any indebtedness incurred by them hereunder, nor for the performance of any *58 obligations entered into by the trustees hereunder nor for the torts of the officers, agents, or employes of this trust estate or the trustees. And the trustees shall, in each case in executing notes, deeds of conveyance or other instruments of writing of any character, specially stipulate that neither the holder’s of said certificates nor said trustees shall at any time be so held personally or individually liable.”

The association was to continue until May 1, 1936, unless sooner dissolved by the trustees, with the written consent of four-fifths in amount' of outstanding certificates of beneficial interest. By an amendment, the association was to continue for twenty-one years after the. death of the named trustees, unless incorporated by vote o'f four-fifths of the trustees or unless dissolved by the trustees with the written consent of four-fifths in amount of the outstanding certificates.

Fourth : It is agreed that W. L. Thompson was the owner of a building at 2200 Washington Avenue, in the City of Houston, Harris County, Texas, and was such owner at the time the Dixie Co-operative Mail Order House (not incorporated) was organized and became a tenant therein, in the year 1919, but that the said W. L. Thompson did not have any control over, nor participate in any manner whatsoever in the management or conduct of the business of the company in its affairs and exercised no management or control over the trustees or the trust property other than as landlord and tenant, and that the trustees had the legal title to the trust property.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 554, 115 Tex. 53, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-schmitt-tex-1925.