Tweedie Footwear Corporation v. Fonville

115 S.W.2d 421, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1008
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 1938
DocketNo. 12306.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 115 S.W.2d 421 (Tweedie Footwear Corporation v. Fonville) 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
Tweedie Footwear Corporation v. Fonville, 115 S.W.2d 421, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1008 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

The events producing the litigation that resulted in the judgment appealed from, in so far as pertinent to our present inquiry, are substantially these: The Jolesch Shoe Company (Texas corporation) was a wholesale and retail dealer in shoes, maintaining its wholesale or jobbing house in the city of Dallas, and operated about 16 retail stores in different towns and cities of the state. Mr. Isaac Jolesch, its president, with the view of obtaining additional capital with which to enlarge and better the condition of its business, consulted Mr. R. L. Thornton, president of the Mercantile Trust Savings Bank, of the city of Dallas, in regard to the fiscal questions involved, resulting in a tentative agreement on a plan outlined in a letter, dated May 25, 1928, by Mr. Thornton to Jolesch, which contemplated an amendment to the charter of the company increasing its capital stock from $185,000 to $285,000, the increase — $100,000 — to be preferred stock, with certain preferential rights over common stock, and to be secured or protected by a policy of insurance for $50,000 on the life of Mr. Jolesch, providing that, in the event of his death, the proceeds of the policy would be used to retire the preferred stock. On behalf of his bank, Mr. Thornton proposed to take over the entire issue of preferred stock at $95 per share (the par value being $100), and, through its securities department, sell the same. The letter of Mr. Thornton mentions other matters not deemed material.

On June 8, 1928, the plan, as outlined in the letter of Mr. Thornton, was approved by the stockholders and directors of the shoe company; the contemplated amendment to the charter, increasing its capital stock, was authorized; and the directors were authorized to procure the issuance of a policy of insurance for $50,000 on the life of Mr. Jolesch, for the benefit, primarily, of the holders of the preferred stock, providing that, in the event of the death of Mr. Jolesch before the stock was retired, the proceeds of the policy, when collected, or so much thereof as required, would be used to retire the outstanding preferred stock; and that, if insufficient to retire all the outstanding preferred stock, the fund should be applied pro rata. In due time the charter of the shoe company was amended, Mr. Isaac Jolesch subscribed for the entire issue of preferred stock, and, on February 29, 1928, transferred same to Mr. Thornton, president of the bank, pursuant to the arrangements previously made between the shoe company and the Mercantile Trust Savings Bank, through whose securities department the stock was sold; all of which being outstanding at the beginning of the present litigation, except 20 shares previously retired out of earnings, leaving a total of 980 shares, of the total par value of $98,000.

On June 30, 1928, after the beginning of the above proceedings but before the issuance of the stock, a policy of insurance for $50,000 was issued by the State Life Insurance Company of Indianapolis, Ind., on the life of Isaac Jolesch, taken out pursuant to and in compliance with the arrangement between the bank and the Jolesch Shoe Company, in which the company was named beneficiary. On October 10, 1928, after the issuance of the stock, as authorized by a provision of the policy, the beneficiary was changed, the Mercantile Trust Savings Bank was named beneficiary, as trustee for the preferred stockholders; and later, on February 2, 1933, the beneficiary was again changed, the Mercantile Bank Trust Company of Texas was named beneficiary, as trustee, the name of the bank in the meantime having been changed by an amendment to its charter. The premiums on said policy, over $10,000, were paid by the Shoe Company out of its surplus.

On February 4, 1933, prior to the death of Mr. Jolesch, the Jolesch Shoe Company was placed in the hands of a receiver by the Fourteenth district court of Dallas county, at the suit of a creditor. The receivership did not result from the insolvency of defendant company. The record discloses that it was solvent throughout all the transactions mentioned and, after the receivership, the company was found by the court to be solvent, as shown by an order to that effect entered in its minutes. The court authorized the receiver to continue the business of the Shoe Company, with full power and authority to buy and sell for cash or on credit, as deemed advisable by the receiver, and particularly to carry out and perform all contracts and obligations of defendant company; to enter into new contracts, incidental to the operation of the business, as deemed for the best interest of the estate, and to make such payments and disbursements out of *Page 423 the assets deemed proper for the preservation and operation of the business.

After the death of Mr. Isaac Jolesch, the Mercantile National Bank of Texas, as trustee (the latter having succeeded the Mercantile Bank Trust Company of Texas — that is, the state bank having become nationalized) in due time filed appropriate proof of death, collected the amount of insurance — $50,000 — and, on December 9, 1935, in its capacity as trustee, begun in the receivership suit the present proceedings, in the nature of a bill of interpleader, asking for instructions as to the disposition of the $50,000 proceeds of the policy; the same being in the nature of a class suit, to which certain creditors of the defendant company were made parties, as representative of that class, among others, the Tweedie Footwear Corporation, plaintiff in error; also, representatives of the class comprising holders of the preferred stock of the Jolesch Shoe Company were brought in as defendants; also, representatives of the class comprising the creditors of the estate of Isaac Jolesch, and representatives of the class comprising the heirs and beneficiaries of the estate of Isaac Jolesch, were made defendants. The intervener also alleged that it held 20 shares of the preferred stock as trustee for Eleanor W. Nance; that it owned in its own right 381 shares of the preferred stock; and that it was a creditor of the Jolesch Shoe Company, and a creditor of the estate of Isaac Jolesch, deceased.

The heirs and beneficiaries of the estate of Isaac Jolesch filed disclaimers; the other parties named as defendants filed pleadings, setting up their respective claims to the fund and the claims of those belonging to that class. The Mercantile National Bank at Dallas, in its own behalf, set up its claim as a preferred stockholder, and as a creditor of both the Shoe Company and the estate of Isaac Jolesch; also as trustee for Eleanor W. Nance, owner of 20 shares of the preferred stock.

On December 30, 1935, the trial court took jurisdiction of the $50,000 fund tendered by the bank, as trustee, and directed that same be held by the bank as an officer of the court, subject to final orders, and, in same order, found that the parties who had filed claims to the fund, either as creditors of the Jolesch Shoe Company, as holders of its preferred stock, or as creditors, heirs, or beneficiaries of the estate of Isaac Jolesch, deceased, were fairly representative of each of said classes, that the suit was properly brought, and that each class was properly before the court.

The record discloses that plaintiff in error did not sell goods or extend credit to the Jolesch Shoe Company until in March, 1932, more than three years after the consummation of the transactions called in question. In its answer to the plea of intervention by the bank, plaintiff in error answered for itself and as representative of the creditor class, and, in addition, filed on its own behalf a cross-action against certain parties to the suit, claiming a preferred right to the insurance money, to the extent of its claim — to wit, $4,296.16 — against the Jolesch Shoe Company.

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Related

Robinson v. Bradley
141 S.W.2d 425 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1940)
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134 S.W.2d 1042 (Texas Supreme Court, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.W.2d 421, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tweedie-footwear-corporation-v-fonville-texapp-1938.