Wilmut v. Franklin

268 S.W. 971
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1924
DocketNo. 11197.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 971 (Wilmut v. Franklin) 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
Wilmut v. Franklin, 268 S.W. 971 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

H. Wilmut, plaintiff below, filed suit in the district court of Archer county against J. T. Franklin, Harris-Otis Co., E. M. Hooper, L. M. Capps, L. W. Bigham, and the American Railway Express Company for injunction. He alleged that Franklin was the agent of Harris-Otis Co., the name alleged in plaintiff's reply to the defendants' answer to be Stranahan, Harris Aotis, a corporation, and it will be hereinafter so styled; that the Geraldine Commons school district issued $22,000 worth of bonds, payable at stated periods from 1934 to 1954, bearing 6 per cent. interest per annum. He alleged that he had offered, on July 23, 1924, to the trustees of the school district, to wit, L. M. Capps, L. W. Bigham, and George Parrish, to buy said bonds, and had offered to pay par value with accrued interest, plus $1 premium interest payable semiannually, at the county depository of Archer county. He alleged that the proposition was made in writing, and that the trustees, in writing, on July 24, 1924, accepted the same; that plaintiff had always stood in readiness to purchase said bonds, and at the time of filing the suit was then able, ready, and willing to purchase the same, and that he had called upon said trustees and the county superintendent of Archer county and had offered to pay for said bonds upon delivery; that Capps and Bigham, without consulting their associate Parrish, and without notifying him of their intent, in conjunction with the defendant Hooper, who seems to have been the county judge and ex officio county superintendent of Archer county, had undertaken to breach their contract and had had bonds duly issued, registered, and signed by the proper officers, and, on August 8, 1924, said bonds were sent by the American Railway Express Company, by the defendant Hooper, to be delivered to Stranahan, Harris Aotis, Inc., upon the payment of the principal and accrued interest thereon, although higher and better bids therefor had been received; that under the law, such bonds must be sold to the highest and best bidder. He further alleged that Hooper and Franklin had actual knowledge of the plaintiff's contract with the trustees to purchase said bonds, and the acceptance thereof by the trustees, but that they had induced Capps and Bigham to undertake to violate said contract by causing said bonds to be sent to Stranahan, Harris Aotis, Inc., whose domicile he alleged was in Toledo, Ohio; that the bonds, were at the time of filing the suit, in the care of the American Railway Express Company at Toledo, and had not yet been delivered to Stranahan, Harris Aotis, Inc., but would be so delivered unless restrained by the injunction prayed for; that said bonds had been unlawfully delivered to said express company, first, because they belonged to the plaintiff, and, second, because the said Capps and Bigham acted without any authority in undertaking to dispose of them or to deliver them to the said Stranahan, Harris Aotis, Inc. He prayed for an injunction restraining each and all of the defendants from interfering with his contract of purchase and his right to have said contract carried out and the bonds delivered to him upon the payment of the contract price therefor.

The petition was verified, and, upon being presented to the district judge of Archer county, a temporary restraining order was issued, plaintiff being required to give bond in the sum of $1,000.

The defendants moved to dissolve the temporary injunction, alleging that prior to the *Page 972 application for the writ, and its issuance by order of the court, the bonds described in plaintiff's petition had been sold to Stranahan, Harris Aotis, Inc., of Toledo, and that all the acts of the trustees, L. M. Capps, L. W. Bigham, and the county judge, E. M. Hooper, and the defendant Franklin, which were sought to be restrained by plaintiff in his petition and which the court did restrain, or seek to restrain, by his temporary writ, had been committed, and said bonds, at the time of the application for an injunction and of its issuance, were in the hands of the defendant, the American Railway Express Company, outside the state of Texas and in the state of Ohio; that said defendant American Railway Express Company is a foreign corporation, and that the trial court had no jurisdiction to grant an injunction to restrain its officers and agents who were nonresidents of the state of Texas from delivering said bonds to the consignee in Toledo. Defendants further denied that the plaintiff had a valid and binding contract at the time of the filing of said application for injunction, for the reason that prior to the execution thereof by the trustees of said common school district, said trustees, acting through a majority thereof, had made and executed a valid and binding agreement for the sale of said bonds of the defendant J. T. Franklin, acting for and in behalf of said Stranahan, Harris Aotis, Inc., and that said contract was in full force and effect at the time of the attempted agreement to sell said bonds to said plaintiff; that, by reason of said prior sale to said Franklin, the said trustees were without authority in law and in fact to make another sale of said bonds to plaintiff; that plaintiff knew at the time of the execution of his purported contract that said prior sale had been consummated, and that said bonds belonged to said Stranahan, Harris Aotis, Inc. Defendants further denied that said bonds had been unlawfully delivered to said express company, and that the same belonged to plaintiff; and expressly denied that said Capps and Bigham acted without authority in making the contract for the sale of said bonds to Stranahan, Harris Aotis, Inc., and in delivering the same through the county judge to the said American Railway Express Company, to be delivered to said buyer. This answer was verified by the affidavit of J. T. Franklin.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Montgomery v. City of Alamo Heights
8 S.W.2d 258 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 S.W. 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmut-v-franklin-texapp-1924.