Whiteman v. Bishop

289 S.W. 730
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 1926
DocketNo. 3300.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 289 S.W. 730 (Whiteman v. Bishop) 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
Whiteman v. Bishop, 289 S.W. 730 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

On January 2,1922, Ira Bishop, Oma Puckett, J. H. Wooley, and E. B. Pool executed and delivered to the appellant, H. S. Whiteman, the following note:

“$3.000.00 Annona, Texas, January 2, 1922.
“January 1st after date I, we or either of us promise to pay to the order <5f H. S. Whiteman of Annona, Texas, three thousand dollars at the First State Bank, Annona, Texas, for value received, with interest from maturity until paid at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum, payable annually. And if this note is not paid at maturity and is sued on or placed in the hands of ■an attorney for collection, I, we or either of us promise to pay an additional sum of 10 per cent, •on the amount of this note as attorney’s fees, having deposited and pledged with said bank as collateral security for the payment of this note ■sundry notes, which property is pledged at a valuation of $-. * * *
“Ira Bishop. Oma Pucket.
“J. H. Wooley. B. B. Pool.”

That portion of the note which provided for the sale of the collateral in the event the debt was not paid at maturity is omitted as immaterial. The word “bank” appearing in the body of the note is probably due to the fact that a bank note form was used. The proof shows that all of the parties to the note were stockholders of the First State Bank of Annona, which had a capital stock ■of $25,000. They were all directors except Wooley, who was the largest stockholder. Whiteman was president, Bishop was vice ■president, and Pool was the cashier and the managing officer of the bank.

Since the special answers of the defendants are important in determining the issues involved and also furnish a history of the transaction which terminated in the execution of the note sued on, they are here set -out in full.

After a general demurrer and a general denial, Puckett and Pool pleaded specially as follows:

“That on said date and at the time of the execution of the note upon which plaintiff bases his cause of action, the board of directors were in session, with plaintiff present and acting as chairman of said meeting; that the other defendants were present, with L. B. Pool acting as secretary of said meeting; that said board meeting was being held in the directors’ room of said bank; that there was present, also, at said meeting one - Kennedy, a state bank examiner, who just finished examining said bank, and who found, after requiring that several notes be ‘charged off,’ that the capital stock of said bank had been depleted in the sum of $3,000 below the amount required by law for it to continue business; that said bank examiner called on said board of directors to make good said deficiency; that none of said directors had such an amount of money, except the plaintiff, H. S. Whiteman; that said examiner proposed that the plaintiff, H. g. Whiteman, place in said bank to its credit such sum of money and that a note be drawn in favor of said Whiteman for said km of money and that the directors present sign said note as makers and that good notes belonging to the bank and then in the nóte case sufficient in number and value be turned over to the said H. S. Whiteman to be collected by him and the proceeds applied to the full payment of the note then and there executed, and such note was to be paid in such manner and not by these defendants as aforesaid; that there were among the assets of said bank and in its note case at that time about $40,090 in good notes owing to said bank by solvent makers; that such plan.to raise $3,000 for the use and benefit of said bank, as suggested by said examiner, was approved by all the directors present including the plaintiff; that said examiner drew the note, or had it done, for defendants to sign, and drew a check payable to the bank for plaintiff to sign; that the notes to be turned over to plaintiff were in the note case, which was on the table around winch said board of directors was meeting; that defendants Bishop, Pool, and Puckett signed the note to plaintiff, and plaintiffs signed the check payable to the bank, in accordance with the above outlined scheme; that said examiner took the check, and the defendant L. B. Pool suggested that the notes be withdrawn from the note case and turned over to plaintiff, as was agreed upon, and undertook to do so, whereupon said examiner turned over to said Pool the cheek with instructions to credit the bank with same, and suggested that he, the said bank examiner, would attend to the turning over to plaintiff the notes; that these defendants, except Pool, left the bank and did not know that the plaintiff, Whiteman, had not received the notes, as was agreed, for quite a while thereafter; that later the plaintiff and the defendant Pool took notes from the note case sufficient in number and value to cover the amount of plaintiff’s note, and wrote ‘H. S. Whiteman’ on each of same, whereupon they were informed by said bank examiner that he would close the bank if said notes were turned over to the plaintiff, according to the agreement; that said Whiteman and *732 Pool did not turn over to plaintiff said nfate-s, according to the agreement, as they had authority to do, and said notes were permitted by plaintiff to remain in the note case of said bank, and when said notes were collected the proceeds went into the general funds of Said bank and were not applied to the payment of plaintiff’s note, as was agreed upon by all the parties to the transaction, including plaintiff; that these defendants relied, in signing the note herein sued upon, on the full carrying out of the plan as above set out to replenish the depleted capital stock of said bank, and entered into the plan believing that the same would be fully carried out and that the said Whiteman would have the full amount of money advanced by him refunded to him through the collection of the notes that it was agreed should be turned over to him; that these defendants entered into said arrangement and signed said note without any consideration whatever moving to them or either of them; that the same was all done to keep the bank in a going condition; that previous to the above transactions the board of directors had passed a resolution and spread the same upon the. minutes of said board authorizing the officers of the bank to use its assets to borrow money and to pledge the same for debt.”

'In addition to’ adopting the above answer, Wooley pleaded as'follows;

“And for further special answer herein' this defendant says that on the 2d day of January, 1922, he had occasion to enter the directors’ room of the First State Bank of Annona, Tex., in which, at that time, the directors of said bank were having a meeting, as alleged in the special answer of the other defendants herein; that while in said room one Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiteman-v-bishop-texapp-1926.