Weathersby v. Texas & Ohio Lumber Co.

180 S.W. 735, 107 Tex. 474, 7 A.L.R. 1440, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 176
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1915
DocketNo. 2425.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 735 (Weathersby v. Texas & Ohio Lumber Co.) 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
Weathersby v. Texas & Ohio Lumber Co., 180 S.W. 735, 107 Tex. 474, 7 A.L.R. 1440, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 176 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice YABTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

B. L. Weathersbv owned 80,000 shares of stock in the Jasper County Lumber 'Company, which was in the hands of a receiver. He was an endorser on two notes which it owed to W. W. Willson, in the aggregate sum of $3,503.96. He filed a plea of intervention in a receivership suit which was pending against the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co., in which he asked for judgment in his favor against the said Texas & Ohio Lumber Go. for the said sum, alleging that said company purchased from him an option which he owned to purchase from George B. Smalley, 3,743 acres of timber land in Jasper County, and that as a part consideration for the purchase of his said option said Texas & Ohio Lumber Co. agreed and contracted to protect him against the payment of said notes; and that when he caused the owner of said land, George B. Smalley, to deed it to the Texas & Ohio Lumber Go. it took said land charged with a lien in his favor to secure said protection; that he had been sued by said Willson on said notes, and a judgment had been rendered against him for the said amount, and that he had paid and discharged said judgment. In his plea of intervention he asked for judgment in his favor against the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co. in said amount, with interest thereon, and for a foreclosure of said lien on the said 3,743 acres of land.

The receiver answered said plea of intervention by denying any contractual relationship between the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co. and Weathersby. He alleged that the 3,743 acres of land was purchased by Ap *477 plegate, and the deed was taken in his name as trustee for the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co.; that a cash payment was made by the promoters of the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co.; that the contract to hold the intervenor, Weathersby^ harmless, by reason of his having to pay off the said notes, was signed without the authority of the board of directors of the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co., and without any knowledge on their part of the conditions of such contract.

The District Court rendered judgment against Weathersby. He appealed to the honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the First District, where the judgment of the trial court was affirmed. A writ of error was granted by this court upon the view that the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co. was bound by the contract of its promoters to protect Weathersby against liability on said notes. We will now consider this question, which is the only one presented for decision.

The undisputed evidence shows that in April, 1906, A. P. Laughlin, and several other parties, acting together, had in contemplation and were arranging for the organization of a lumber company corporation, which, when organized, would purchase timber lands to be used in the operation of the business of said corporation. The corporation was organized and chartered in June, 1906, and said Laughlin was elected its president, and H. D. Applegate was elected its vice-president. Prior to the actual organization of the corporation, among the lands Laughlin contemplated buying for the prospective corporation, was 3,743 acres of timber land in Jasper County, which was owned by one George W. Smalley. Laughlin engaged one H. D. Applegate, afterwards' vice-president of the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co., as a promoter for the prospective company, and directed him to contract for the purchase of this tract of land for such company. However, he could ntit purchase the land direct from Smalley, as he ascertained, for the reason that Weathefrsby held a legal contract with said Smalley, which gave said Weathersby an option to purchase said land, and said option had not expired. So that Applegate and Laughlin ascertained that they could only secure said land by purchasing said option from Weathersby, or by contracting with him to waive said option in their favor. Accordingly, on April 25, 1906, said Applegate, the promoter of the prospective corporation, made a written contract with said Weathersby, through the latter’s agent, John H. Kirby, by the terms of which Weathersby agreed to release his option on the land in their favor, and that Smalley should convey the land direct .to said Applegate as trustee for his said associates and the prospective corporation. In this contract the consideration moving to Weathersby was the purchase from him by Applegate and his associates of 80,000 shares of the capital stock of the Jasper County Lumber Co., which said Weathersby owned, at its par value of $8,000, which was to be paid in cash; and further, that said Weathersby would be protected by said Applegate and said prospective corporation against loss as an endorser or guarantor upon any of the promissory notes, accounts or obligations of the Jasper County Lumber Co., which was in *478 the hands of a receiver. In obedience to said contract said Weathersby did procure said George E. Smalley to convey by deed said land to said Applegate, which deed was executed, but not delivered, on June 8, 1906, but was delivered after the execution of the contract of September 18, 1906, which was of the following nature. It was executed by the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co., by A. P. Laughlin, president. It was also signed by H. D. Applegate and A. P. Laughlin individually. By its terms it confirmed said contract of April 25, 1906, which was made by said Applegate and said Kirby, as agent for Weathersby. Said new contract of September 18, recited that the one of April 25 had been made, and named the consideration which was to be received by Weathersby as stated above, and recited that through said contract of April 25 Weathersby had promised to deliver a deed to said land to the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co., and that said lumber company was now desirous of having said deed from Smalley, the owner of said land, delivered to it, and it then in said September contract agreed to pay to Weathersby all the considerations recited in said April contract, including the protection of Weathersby against paying the said notes, said September contract reciting a lien on said land to secure Weathersby against liability on said notes.

This contract of the Texas & Ohio Lumber Company of September 18 was made long subsequent to the organization of the corporation, whose charter was secured in June, 1906, and when said contract was made Laughlin ánd Applegate were its duly elected and acting president and vice-president, respectively.

The deed to the Smalley land at the date of the execution of the said September contract had not been delivered to Applegate by Weathersby, or his agent, Kirby, who had refused to deliver it until such time as the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co. itself would become responsible to Weathersby for the considerations mentioned. After the execution of this September contract Kirby delivered the deed to Applegate, -and thereafter Applegate conveyed the land to the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co.

There is no merit in the contention made by the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co., defendant in error, or its receiver, that there was no consideration for the September contract. The consideration was plainly expressed therein. It stated, in substance, that in order to secure the deed to the said land the Texas & Ohio Lumber Co.

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 735, 107 Tex. 474, 7 A.L.R. 1440, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weathersby-v-texas-ohio-lumber-co-tex-1915.