Wagner v. Marple

31 S.W. 691, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 505, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 123
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 15, 1895
DocketNo. 1826.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 691 (Wagner v. Marple) 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
Wagner v. Marple, 31 S.W. 691, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 505, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 123 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

TARLTON, Chief Justice.

We take from the appellants’ brief .the following substantially accurate statement of this suit:

“This is an ordinary action, brought October 17, 1893, by appellee, F. M. Marple, against W. D. Wagner, D. G Smith, J. E. Ledbetter, and Eugene Stearns, for conversion of personal property, alleged by Marple to belong to him and to be of the value of $2600. All of the defendants pleaded the general denial, and defendants Smith, Ledbetter, and Stearns pleaded that the property was in the possession of the Quanah Publishing Company, a corporation duly incorporated under *507 the laws of the State of Texas, having its principal office in the city of Quanah, Hardeman County, Texas, and that the Quanah Publishing Company was the legal and equitable owner of said property; that Smith was president, Ledbetter vice-president, and Stearns secretary and treasurer of the publishing company; that neither of the defendants assert or claim, or ever asserted or claimed, any ownership, possession, or right of possession in or to the property; that they were owners and possessors of a majority of the stock of the publishing company; that its capital stock was $2000, and they owned 150 shares of the par value of $10 per share, and that they have no other or further connection with the property than as president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer of the publishing company. To this answer plaintiff pleaded the general denial; denied that defendants Smith, Ledbetter, and Stearns were directors of the Quanah Publishing Company, and prayed, in the event there was no conversion, that he have judgment for possession of the property and the value of its use. To this supplement defendants interposed a general denial. Trial by the court,- and judgment in favor of Marple against defendants W. D. Wagner and Duncan G. Smith for $1200 and costs, and that plaintiff take nothing against defendant Ledbetter and Stearns. From this judgment defendants Wagner and Smith have appealed.”

Conclusions of Fact.—On July 29,1889, the Quanah Publishing Company was incorporated under the general statutes of the State of Texas. According to its charter, it was formed for the purpose of establishing a newspaper in the town of Quanah, Hardeman County, and of doing a general publishing business for the use of the public. Its charter provided that it should exist for the term of twenty years; that its business should be transacted by three directors, who shall be elected by the stockholders annually on the first Monday of July; the capital stock to consist of 200 shares of $10 each, of which 40 per cent should be paid on the date of organization, 30 per cent six months from that date, and 30 per cent twelve months from, that date. On October 7, 1891, the stock and shares of the corporation were owned by F. M. Marple, plaintiff and appellee, he having purchased all of the stock, and assumed to pay the indebtedness of the Quanah Publishing Company. • After its organization, in 1889, the Quanah Publishing Company engaged in the publishing of a newspaper known as the Quanah Tribune, in the town of Quanah.

On October 7, 1891, it was the desire of the plaintiff, F. M. Marple, who owned all the stock of the corporation, and also of the officers of the corporation, to dissolve and discontinue it, and to this end the officers and the board of directors of the corporation, by and with the consent of F. M. Marple, the sole owner of the stock, who co-aperated in the transaction, passed a resolution authorizing the sale of the newspaper and its attachments, which included all of- the property owned by the corporation, and in controversy in this suit, to the *508 plaintiff, Marple; and in accordance with that resolution, the corporation, through its duly authorized officers, for the recited consideration of $2000, executed a bill of sale to the appellee, which, on November 7, 1891, was duly acknowledged and filed for record.

After the execution of this transfer, and by virtue thereof, Marple took actual possession of the property and proceeded to publish the paper in his individual name. He thereafter removed it from Mercer street into a different building, on Johnson street, where it has since been. On October 8, 1892, he leased the printing office and outfit, including all the property in controversy, to W. D. Wagner and S. J. Osborne for the term of one year, at the rate of $25 per month, payable monthly in advance, with the understanding that the lessees, at the end of the term, should have the option of purchasing the property or of returning it to the plaintiff. Wagner, one of these lessees, was the acting president of the Quanah Publishing Company at the date of the sale to the plaintiff. In the spring of 1893 Osborne was released from his obligation to the plaintiff, at the request of himself and of Wagner, and it was agreed between the three that the appellee should look alone to Wagner to carry out the lease contract.

At the expiration of the lease, Wagner, who was indebted for several months’ rent to the plaintiff, declined to exercise the option of purchasing the property. A demand, on or about thé 14th of September, 1893, was thereupon made of him to return it. This demand he refused, on the alleged ground that he had delivered the property to Duncan G. Smith, president of the Quanah Publishing Company.

On May 17, 1893, W. E. Johnson recovered judgment against the plaintiff F. M. Marple, in the Justice Court of Hardeman County, for $36. On August 30, 1893, alias execution issued on this judgment, which was delivered to the constable of precinct number 1, Hardeman County, who attempted to levy it upon 85 shares of stock owned by F. M. Marple in the publishing company. The certificates of these shares of stock were then in the possession of William F. Brice, in the town of Quanah. The levy was made by constable taking possession and levying upon the certificates of stock and advertising them for sale. The constable sold and delivered the certificates and shares of stock, as' he denominated them, to D. G. Smith, J: E. Ledbetter, and Eugene Stearns, who bid the sum of about $40 for them, and received the certificates, with a bill of sale from the constable purporting to convey to them the 85 shares of stock in the Quanah Publishing Company. From the sale to plaintiff as already described, until this purchase by Smith, Ledbetter, and Stearns, there had been no act • performed by the Quanah Publishing Company, nor transaction in any way recognizing its existence.

Sometime prior to the sale by the Quanah Publishing Company, to plaintiff, one J. E. Decker, then a stockholder in the company, hypothecated with the City National Bank of Quanah 65 shares of the stock of that corporation, which at the time were owned by him. These *509 shares were hypothecated as collateral to secure his note to the bank. Plaintiff purchased this stock from Decker, and thereupon assumed the payment of Decker’s indebtedness to the bank, and in lieu of Decker’s note executed and delivered to the bank his individual note. Upon this a balance remained due and unpaid, for which the bank at the time of the trial below held the 65 shares of stock in the Quanah Publishing Company.

We infer that these shares were simply delivered to the bank, unaccompanied by any transfer by Decker in the first instance or Marple thereafter, or by any indorsement in blank or otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 691, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 505, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-marple-texapp-1895.