Waggoner v. Herring-Showers Lumber Co.

288 S.W. 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 13, 1926
DocketNo. 2709. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 260 (Waggoner v. Herring-Showers Lumber Co.) 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
Waggoner v. Herring-Showers Lumber Co., 288 S.W. 260 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HALL, C. J.

The appellee Lumber Company, a corporation, filed this suit originally against the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company, a corporation, joining as eodefendants R. M. Wagg'oner and Clois L. Greene. By an amended petition the appellee dismissed its action as to Greene because of the fact that he had been discharged in bankruptcy from the indebtedness claimed in this action. The case proceeded to trial against the Burk-Wag-goner Oil Company and R. M. Waggoner upon the amended petition.

This is one of the four suits heretofore filed by the creditors of the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company which have been appealed to this 'court, and which grew out of the efforts of the creditors of said company to collect debts due them from the company after it became insolvent. The former cases are Waggoner v. Magnolia Petroleum Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 252 S. W. 865; Oil Well Supply Co. v. Burk-Waggoner Oil Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 261 S. W. 830; Republic Supply Co. v. Waggoner (Tex. Civ. App.) 283 S. W. 537. The issues presented here are in some respects materially different from those presented and considered in the other cases, but the contentions urged will not require an extended preliminary statement of the pleadings.

The case was tried on the first amended original petition of the appellee, which declared upon a note signed by the Burk-Wag-goner Oil Company, payable to the appellee lumber company, in the sum of $961.59, with interest at 10 per cent., and the usual stipulations for 10 per cent. • attorney’s fees. The appellant Waggoner did not sign this note, but the record shows it was executed on October 23, 1920, by Clois L. Greene. The ap-pellee sought to recover against Waggoner upon an alleged oral agreement made between Waggoner and the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company on September 27,1920, to the effect that Waggoner and Greene would assume all debts of the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company in consideration of the transfer by said company to .Waggoner and Greene of all of its assets, consisting of real, personal, and mixed property. It is alleged that this agreement was made at a called meeting of the board of directors of the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company on September 27, 1920, at which time the proposition was made by, Greene and Wag-goner to take over the property of the company and assume its indebtedness. This meeting was called by Waggoner, the president of the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company. All of the directors were present, including R. M. Waggoner, president, S. A. L. Morgan, vice president, Clois Greene, general manager, V. D. Tennison, secretary-treasurer, and W. R. Ferguson.

Waggoner ' stated at this meeting of the board of directors that the company’s indebtedness aggregated about $300,000, and that its assets were not worth more than $100,000; that the assets consisted of certain oil leases in Wichita, Wilbarger, and Wise counties, and certain drilling outfits, houses upon the leaseholds, trucks, casing, and other personal property. He further stated that all of the indebtedness except about $80,000 was due from the company to Waggoner and Greene, and that outside creditors, among them being the appellee herein, were due about $80,000.

It is alleged that when the proposition was made by Greene in behalf of himself and Waggoner, that it was accepted by the board of directors of the company, and S. A. L. Morgan, vice president, together with V. D. Tennison, were instructed to execute a conveyance transferring all of the property to Waggoner and Greene, and an order was entered upon the minutes of the company to this effect. This order is set out at length in the opinion of this court in Republic Supply Co. v. Waggoner, 283 S. W. 537, 538, and, for the sake of brevity, will not be set out in full in this opinion.

After the meeting on September 27, and before the transfer as authorized was made by Morgan, on the 7th of October. 1920, it is alleged that Waggoner directed Vice President Morgan to make a conveyance of the property to Greene. This conveyance recites a consideration of $10 and other valuable considerations, paid by Olois Greene, and “the further consideration that the said Greene has assumed, and by these presents does assume. all the outstanding debts, liabilities, and obligations of said corporation wherever located, and whatever kind and character.”

The ease was submitted to a jury upon special issues. The findings are in substance, as follows: (1) R. M. Waggoner agreed at the director’s meeting that he would take over the assets of the corporation along with Greene and pay the corporation’s debts. The substance of the other findings of the jury is that Waggoner did not object to the proposal made by Greene before it was accepted by the board of directors, but that he told Morgan, before the conveyance was executed by *262 Morgan, transferring the property to Greene, that he would not take over the property of the corporation with Greene and assume and pay its debts as consideration therefor; that he also notified Tennison, Greene, and Morgan, prior to the 6th of October, 1920, that he was not in on the deal with Greene and would not take over the assets of the company and agree to pay its debts in consideration thereof.

Based upon these findings, the court entered a judgment against the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company and against R. M. Waggoner, jointly and severally, for the full amount of the note, principal, interest, attorney’s fees, and costs. The Burk-Waggoner Oil Company did' not answer in the action, and Waggoner alone has appealed from the judgment.

The first proposition urged is that under the findings of the jury and the undisputed evidence, judgment should have been rendered for Waggoner, because the finding is that he had repudiated the alleged oral agreement made with the board of directors to take over the real and personal property of the company and assume its debts, while said agreement was executory in its nature, by advising all parties concerned that he would have nothing to do with the trade. The abstract proposition of law insisted on is that a party to an executory oral contract for the purchase of real property has the right to repudiate it prior to its execution, and it cannot be enforced against him by one for whose benefit it was made, where the party sought to be charged pleads the statute of frauds in defense of the action.

Waggoner alleged in his answer that if anything was said at the meeting of the board of directors which led the other officers of the company to believe that he would agree to pay the corporation’s debts, in consideration of a conveyance to him and Greene of its assets, that he is not liable, for the further reason that immediately after the meeting- he informed each of the officers of the corporation that he did not intend to make any such agreement and would not accept the property and assume the debts against the company, and that afterwards Morgan conveyed all of the assets to Greene by an instrument in which Greene individually, assumed the company’s liabilities, and that Greene did not receive the assets either as a partner or joint adventurer with him. He further specifically denied that he received any benefit by reason of the conveyance of the assets to Greene. He pleaded the statute of frauds in bar of the claim asserted by ap-pellee, and by a verified piea denied that the note in question was executed by the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company, or by any one duly authorized to act for it in that behalf.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waggoner-v-herring-showers-lumber-co-texapp-1926.