Williams v. Terminal Hotel Co.

280 S.W. 505, 115 Tex. 278, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 138
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1926
DocketNo. 4424.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 505 (Williams v. Terminal Hotel 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
Williams v. Terminal Hotel Co., 280 S.W. 505, 115 Tex. 278, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 138 (Tex. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Judge POWELL

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

This cause is before the Supreme Court upon the following certificate from the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals of the Second District:

“Prior to January 5, 1923, H. W. Sterling, president of the Terminal Hotel Company, went to Dr. H. W. Williams, president of the H. W. Williams Wholesale Drug Company, and told Dr. Williams that he and his wife were the owners of more than a majority of the stock of the Terminal Hotel Company, and that he controlled and managed it, and that he wanted to get Dr. Williams to buy some of his stock. He mentioned a number of friends of Dr. Williams who he said were going to take stock, and he expressed a desire to have Dr. Williams as a director. Dr. Williams agreed to consider the matter, and inquired of Mr. Ben ,H. Martin, of the F. & M. National Bank, as to Mr. Sterling’s character. Mr. Martin told him that some well known banker from Texas had gone to Chicago, from which city Sterling apparently came, and that the result of his information was that Sterling was capable and trustworthy. This banker had written a letter to one of the other Fort Worth banks recommending Sterling very highly. On January 5, 1923, Sterling came back to see Dr. Williams with a certificate for fifty shares of stock, of the face value of §5,000, issued in the name of H. W. Williams, written out, signed by H. W. Sterling, president, and C. R. Roediger, secretary, and with the seal of the corporation affixed thereto. Dr. Williams paid for said stock §4,250, being 85c on the dollar.

“It seems that Sterling disappeared about this time, though the record is silent as to the reason or manner of his disappearance. But he does not appear personally in any of the transactions hereinafter stated. Dr. Williams demanded of the directors of the hotel company that they recognize his shares of stock, or that they repay him the amount he had paid therefor. It seems that the stock issued to Dr. Williams constituted an over-issue. That the stock owned by Sterling had been put up in the bank as security for a loan. The directors of the hotel company refused either to recognize the stock claimed to be *284 owned by Dr. Williams, or to pay him the value thereof, and suit was instituted by Dr. Williams to enforce one or the other of his demands. Upon a trial the court rendered judgment for defendant, and plaintiff has appealed.

“The court filed his findings of fact and conclusions of law, which are as follows:

“ ‘FINDINGS of fact.

“ T find that about January 1, 1923, H. W. Sterling was the president and C. R. Roediger was the secretary of the defendant The Terminal Hotel Company, a corporation. That on said date H. W. Sterling called at the office of the plaintiff H. W. Williams, who was then and there the president of H. W. Williams & Company,' a corporation, and introduced himself to plaintiff, which was the first time they had met. That plaintiff’s place of business was only two or three blocks from the office of the defendant Terminal Hotel Company. That H. W. Sterling told plaintiff that he owned a lot of stock in the Terminal Hotel Company, and that he absolutely controlled the stock in the hotel, and he wanted to sell some of his stock, that he, Sterling, had too much of it to carry and that if said Williams bought stock he (Sterling) wanted to make said Williams a director in said Company, and that plaintiff agreed to buy from the said H. W. Sterling $5,000.00 worth of such stock, on the basis of 85c per dollar share thereof, or a total of $4,250.00. That plaintiff understood that he was buying this stock from Sterling, as stock of the said Sterling, and that he was buying it from H. W. Sterling as an individual, for less than its par value.

“ T further find that thereafter and before the deal was closed, the plaintiff inquired at the F. & M. Bank in the City of Fort Worth and made inquiry of Mr. Martin, vice president of said bank, in regard to this man Sterling, and of the stock and. condition of the hotel,. and was informed by Mr. Martin that some banker from Texas went to Chicago, and that he, Martin, very well knew this other banker, and that he, the other banker, had given a letter or written a letter to one of the Fort Worth banks recommending this man Sterling very highly; that the F. & M. Bank was lending money to Sterling on his stock in defendant corporation as security. That Martin did not make any representations to plaintiff as to information he had on the interest that Sterling had in the defendant corporation, and that this was the extent of the information the plaintiff had. That plaintiff made no further inquiry and did not call at the *285 Terminal Hotel Company’s office or make any inquiry thereat in regard to whether or not Sterling owned the stock he was trying to sell plaintiff, and never made inquiry from any of its officers or stockholders as to whether or not any of their stock was ever sold; that he did not go through and look at any of the assets of defendant corporation to see what it owned; that Sterling showed him a statement of the assets of the defendant corporation, but plaintiff made no inquiry of any shareholder or officer of the defendant corporation to verify such statement, or made any check on it to determine if same was true or false, and that Sterling was a perfect stranger to plaintiff until he came to plaintiff’s office on January 1, 1923.

“ T further find that on said January 1, 1923, when plaintiff first met the said H. W. Sterling, plaintiff agreed to buy said stock. That on January 5th, 1923, the said H. W. Sterling returned to plaintiff’s office and delivered to plaintiff stock certificate No. 34 for 50 shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, regular on its face, each share being of the par value of $100.00-,• which said certificate was introduced in evidence and is shown in the statement of facts as ‘Exhibit No. 1.’ That plaintiff in payment therefor delivered check in the amount of $4,250.00, payable on its face to H. W. Williams, and endorsed by him — ‘Pay to the order of Howard W. Sterling,’ and that H. W. Sterling endorsed said check.

“ T further find that the stock certificate so issued to the plaintiff and delivered to him by said H. W. Sterling was an over-issue of stock in the defendant corporation, and that the defendant corporation received no benefit therefrom. I further find that the directors of said defendant corporation kept the stock book of said corporation and the corporate seal thereof in the office of the defendant corporation, and that the president and secretary of said defendant corporation had access thereto. Upon agreed statements of counsel for plaintiff and defendant, the Court finds that said Sterling requested the secretary of defendant corporation, C. R Roediger, to sign a blank certificate of stock, which he did so sign upon said request, the said Sterling stating at the time that he wanted to make transfer of some of his stock, and that without making such transfer upon the books of the defendant, the said Sterling filled out said certificate No. 34, and issued same to plaintiff H. W. Williams, and put the seal of defendant thereon, and delivered same to plaintiff without the knowledge or consent of said secretary of defendant, and that the said C. R.

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 505, 115 Tex. 278, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-terminal-hotel-co-tex-1926.