Walker v. Dawley

4 S.W.2d 159
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1928
DocketNo. 11840.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 159 (Walker v. Dawley) 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
Walker v. Dawley, 4 S.W.2d 159 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

This is the second appeal in this case, both appeals having been prosecuted by plaintiff, from judgments in favor of the defendants. The disposition of the former appeal is shown in Stevens v. Dawley et al., 254 S.W. 810, in an opinion written by Chief Justice Hall of the Amarillo Court of Civil Appeals. The pleadings of the parties and issues of fact set out in that opinion were substantially the same in both trials, and therefore will not be repeated here, save and except that the plaintiff in the last trial was A. G. Walker, substitute trustee for the Marigold Oil Refining Company, in place of M. E. Stevens, the former trustee and former plaintiff in the case.

The relief sought by plaintiff was the recovery of a portion of the proceeds of the sale of a certain oil and gas lease on four acres of land in Wichita county, evidenced by a contract and a deed of assignment executed by George W. Dawley to the Brinkley Producing Refining Company of New York City. As shown in the opinion on the former appeal, at the time of the execution of the instruments therein shown, title to the lease was owned as follows: Joseph and M. O. Danciger, three-eighths; the Marigold Oil Refining Company, nine thirty-seconds; E. D. Davenport, three thirty-seconds; J. P. Bartley and the Kansas Gulf Company, one-eighth — the lease being subject to a royalty interest of one-eighth of all the oil in favor of the lessor who owned the fee-simple title to the land covered by the lease.

The contracts appearing in the former appeal were introduced in evidence on the last trial, together with others, including an instrument executed by E. D. Davenport and M. O. Danciger and by Stanley Watson acting in behalf of George W. Dawley purporting to be an assignment of the same lease by E. D. Davenport and M. O. Danciger to Stanley Watson for the benefit of George W. Dawley for a consideration of $300,000, payable as follows: $25,000 cash; $75,000 October 1, 1919; $75,000 November 1, 1919; $75,000 December 1, 1919; and $50,000 January 1, 1919 (evidently 1920). That instrument was dated September 11, 1919.

George W. Dawley's contract to sell the lease to the Brinkley Producing Refining Company, noted above, was dated September 10, 1919, and the consideration to be paid therefor was $650,000, payable as follows: $30,000 cash; $150,000 in capital stock in the assignee corporation; $80,000 October 1, 1919; $85,000 November 1, 1919; $90,000 December 1, 1919; $100,000 January 1, 1920; $115,000 February 1, 1920. His deed of assignment to that corporation in fulfillment of that agreement was dated September 15, 1919.

In plaintiff's amended petition on which he went to trial, the following were named as defendants, to wit: George W. Dawley, E. D. Davenport, H. L. Hunter, M. O. Danciger, J. O. Danciger, R. W. Tolbert, Stanley Watson, J. M. Reynolds, and W. J. Dawley. But the suit was dismissed as to all the defendants except George W. Dawley, E. D. Davenport, H. L. Hunter, and R. W. Tolbert.

For cause of action, plaintiff alleged, in substance, that a conspiracy was entered into by all the defendants to cheat and defraud the Marigold Oil Refining Company, in pursuance of which all the foregoing instruments were executed. According to allegations in the petition, the three instruments executed, in favor of George W. Dawley were fictitious and were resorted to for the fraudulent purpose of cheating the Marigold Oil Refining Company by making it appear that the interest of that company in the lease had been in fact sold on a basis of $300,000 for the entire interest in the lease and with the intention then and there to sell the interest of that company on a basis of $650,000 for the whole, and to wrongfully appropriate the difference in those prices to their own use and benefit. According to further allegations, that fraudulent purpose and scheme was accomplished by the sale of the lease to the Brinkley Producing Refining Company through George W. Dawley, who then held the legal title thereto, and by a division among the defendants of the Marigold Oil Refining Company's pro rata part of the difference between $300,000 and $650,000.

The trial was before a jury, and the following are the special issues with instructions submitted to them with their findings thereon, to wit:

"(1) A `conspiracy' is an agreement or understanding between two or more parties with the mututal assent and understanding of all, for the purpose of doing some injury to another, and in this case the conspiracy charged is an agreement or understanding which the plaintiff alleges the defendants entered into for the purpose of taking certain moneys belonging to the Marigold Oil Refining Company and converting it to the use and benefit of the defendants.

"(2) A `fraud,' as that term is used herein, denotes any act, omission, or concealment which involves a breach of legal duty, trust, or confidence justly imposed, and which is injurious to another, or by which an undue and unconscientious advantage is taken of another. It may be inferred or shown by the facts and circumstances and the nature of the transaction or transactions shown, the relation of the parties, and all the evidence before you. It cannot under any circumstances be presumed against a party, for all men are presumed to act in good faith until the contrary appears, and he who charges fraud must prove its existence by legal and competent evidence to the satisfaction of *Page 161 the jury. It may be established by circumstantial evidence, as well as by direct and positive proof.

"(3) In all cases where fraud and conspiracy is charged against two or more persons, in order to sustain such charge, the jury must believe from the evidence that both or all of such parties were involved in it; acts indicating fraud in only one of them would not bind the others unless the evidence shows that such others knew of and participated in them or that they were done with the purpose of carrying out or effecting a common purpose or design, between the parties, and that such purpose or design resulted in damage to the plaintiff. You are charged that the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to establish by a preponderance of the evidence the affirmative of each of the above special issues, and, if plaintiff has failed to do so as to any of said issues, then your answer should be in the negative, as to such issue or issues.

"Special issue No. 1: Did any or all of the defendants George W. Dawley, E. D. Davenport, and R. W. Tolbert enter into a conspiracy to defraud the Marigold Oil Refining Company of Texas out of any money? Answer: No."

"Special issue No. 4: Did the defendant E. D. Davenport receive and appropriate to his own use any money which did not belong to him and which was rightfully the property of the plaintiff, Marigold Oil Refining Company? Answer: No."

"Special issue No. 6: Did the defendant George W. Dawley receive and appropriate to his own use any money which did not rightfully belong to him and was the property of the plaintiff, Marigold Oil Refining Company? Answer: No."

"Special Issue No. 8. Did R. W. Tolbert receive and appropriate to his own use any money which was not rightfully his, and was the property of the Marigold Oil Refining Company? Answer: No."

And in obedience to a peremptory instruction, the jury further found:

"We, the jury, find in favor of the defendant H. L. Hunter."

Upon that verdict judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants George W. Dawley, E. D. Davenport, R. W. Tolbert, and H L. Hunter, and plaintiff has appealed.

Appellant seeks a reversal of the judgment on two propositions of law only, which are as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-dawley-texapp-1928.