OPINION
In this case we must decide whether the sole shareholder of an existing corporation that has had its charter forfeited for failure to pay franchise taxes, but that has not been dissolved, can become a successor in interest to the corporation, such that the shareholder may bring suit personally and recover individually on the corporation’s cause of action. We hold that he may not.
This is a suit on an oral agreement. Appellant, El T. Mexican Restaurants, Inc., ap *249 peals from a $31,918.06 judgment on the verdict in favor of appellee, J. Roland Bacon, who was the sole shareholder of J. Roland Bacon, Inc. El T. brings five points of error complaining of capacity and standing, limitations, sufficiency of the evidence, jury charge, denial of new trial in light of newly discovered evidence, and prejudgment interest rate. We reverse and render judgment that Bacon take nothing.
I. The Dispute
Appellee, J. Roland Baeon, was an independent insurance agent who had operated as a sole proprietorship from 1968 until he incorporated in 1977. Upon his incorporation, he became the sole shareholder of J. Roland Bacon, Inc., through which he carried on his insurance business. In 1981, appellant, El T. Mexican Restaurants, Inc., entered into an oral agreement with the Bacon corporation for the Bacon corporation to obtain insurance coverage for El T. The Bacon corporation was to receive a commission from its sales of policies.
Bacon testified that the Bacon corporation obtained coverage for El T., advanced premium payments to the carriers on El T.’s behalf, and billed El T. for premium payments due, which El T. did not pay. At trial, El T. did not dispute its obligation to reimburse, but claimed that it had already paid the Bacon corporation the premiums owed. The jury found otherwise, and returned a verdict in favor of Bacon individually. The trial court rendered judgment on the verdict and Bacon recovered in his individual capacity.
II. Course of the Litigation
Bacon testified that he decided not to continue doing business as a corporation and chose not to pay corporate franchise taxes in 1984. The Secretary of State forfeited the Bacon corporation’s charter that year. Bacon did not plead or testify that he had dissolved the corporation, nor that it had been dissolved involuntarily; neither does he argue dissolution on appeal.
Baeon contends that this cause of action accrued to the Bacon corporation in 1983, when El T. did not pay its debt to the Baeon corporation. In 1985, Bacon filed this suit in the name of the Bacon corporation. In 1990, Bacon amended the petition, deleting the Bacon corporation and substituting himself as “successor in interest” on the corporation’s 1983 cause of action. El T. answered this substitution with a challenge to Bacon’s right to recover individually on the corporation’s cause of action.
At trial, El T. moved for directed verdict, asserting that neither the corporation nor Bacon could recover on this cause of action. The court denied the motion for instructed verdict.
III.Arguments and Analysis
El T. asserts, among other points of error, that: (1) Bacon has no right to recover individually as a shareholder on the corporation’s cause of action; and (2) the suit was void from the outset because the Bacon corporation had no capacity to bring the suit in the first instance.
Standard of Review for Instructed Verdict
In its first point of error, El T. asserts the trial court erred in denying its motion for instructed verdict. An instructed verdict is proper when no issue of fact is presented by the evidence, or where no other verdict than the one requested could properly be sustained.
Szczepanik v. First Southern Trust Co.,
Standing and Capacity
Standing is a party’s justiciable interest in the suit,
Pankhurst v. Weitinger & Tucker,
Bacon claims to be a successor in interest to the corporation, which, if true, would provide him with the standing needed to recover individually on this cause of action. For the reasons discussed in our analysis below, we hold that Bacon is not a successor in interest to the corporation and has no standing to bring this suit for himself. The corporation had standing, but no capacity, as our analysis will demonstrate.
Suit Not Void from Corporate Incapacity
The Bacon corporation sued El T. on the oral agreement in 1985, after the forfeiture of both the corporate privileges to sue and the corporation’s charter.
2
Thus, it lacked capacity to sue. However, a plaintiffs incapacity does not make a suit void. Lack of capacity must be challenged with a verified plea in abatement or it is waived. Tex. R.Civ.P. 93;
Bluebonnet Farms, Inc. v. Gibraltar Savings Ass’n,
El T. did, however, challenge Bacon’s right to recover individually as a shareholder on the corporation’s cause of action, when Bacon substituted himself as plaintiff. El T. has asserted at trial and on appeal that Bacon does not own this cause of action and cannot recover on it individually. We construe this as a challenge to Bacon’s standing as an individual shareholder of an incapacitated, but still existing, corporation. The standing issue is dispositive of this appeal, as shown below.
Shareholder Was Not a Successor in Interest
When Bacon substituted himself as “successor in interest” to the corporation in the 1990 second amended petition, he alleged this forfeiture of corporate privileges as the reason for his substitution, as follows:
COMES NOW, J. ROLAND BACON, as successor in interest to J. Roland Bacon, Inc., Plaintiff in the above entitled and numbered cause complaining herein of EL T. MEXICAN RESTAURANTS and EUGENE YBARRA, Individually (“Defendants”), and for cause of action would show unto the Court as follows:
I.
Plaintiff is an individual residing in Harris County, Texas[J
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II.
The charter of J. Roland Bacon, Inc. was forfeited by the Secretary of State as of February 20,1984. J. Roland Bacon, as the sole shareholder of that corporation, maintains beneficial title to that corporation’s assets and thus J. Roland Bacon is *251 entitled to prosecute this lawsuit to protect his property rights.
(Emphasis added.)
This was the petition by which Bacon himself entered the suit. 3 As these words show, Bacon, claimed his right to substitute himself individually in the place of the corporation as “successor in interest” on the grounds that the Secretary of State had forfeited the charter of the Bacon corporation. As a result of such forfeiture, according to Bacon’s petition, Bacon himself acquired beneficial title to the corporation’s assets, which would include all causes of action. He claimed that this beneficial title was enough to legally entitle him to prosecute this suit to protect his property rights and to recover the judgment in his own name.
Bacon argues that, as sole shareholder, he owns the cause of action. This is not the case. Although Bacon owns all the stock in the Bacon corporation, the corporation itself holds the assets, including its causes of action.
White v. Independence Bank, N.A.,
Bacon himself, as shareholder, cannot recover a cause of action that belongs to the Bacon corporation. 4 For Bacon to recover on this cause of action, he must have acquired it from the Bacon corporation. Bacon claims that the vesting of beneficial title eon-stitutes the acquisition of the corporate cause of action.
Devolution of Capacity Without Standing
When the corporation forfeited its privileges to sue in state courts, the title to its assets bifurcated; legal title remained in the corporation and beneficial title vested in Bacon himself as shareholder.
Regal Constr. Co.,
Capacity to sue devolves upon the shareholders of a corporation when that corporation becomes incapacitated. Standing to sue, however, does not devolve upon the shareholders, and they must sue as representatives of the corporation, which still owns legal title to its cause of action.
This entitlement to go into court
for the corporation
does not amount to the right to
recover individually
on the corporate cause of action. Bacon relies upon
Regal Construction
for his claim that he is entitled to
recover
personally on the corporation’s cause of action. In that case, the construction company was incorporated and in good standing at the time it filed suit on an oral contract against the Hansels.
However, Regal Construction is distinguishable from this case on three grounds. First, and most important, the Hansels never *252 challenged Allen’s right to prosecute the corporation’s suit as its sole shareholder. Id. Hence, in Regal Construction this Court did not have to determine whether the sole shareholder had such a right to recover.
Second, Allen maintained that suit “for the benefit of the corporation.” Id. This is consistent with our conclusion that the corporation has standing even after its incapacity, but that the shareholder has only capacity but not standing. Bacon made no such pleading that he was suing for the benefit of the corporation or as its representative. 5 Indeed, he emphatically asserted that he, as an individual, was successor in interest.
Finally, Allen intervened to assert his own economic injury; the opinion suggests that Allen himself was a party to the contract. Allen’s own individual economic injury would be the basis of his standing to recover personally under the contract. We have no such pleading or showing in the present ease. Thus, Allen apparently sued in a dual capacity: (1) as an individual for his own injuries arising from the contract, for which injuries he had standing to sue individually; and (2) as a shareholder representative for the benefit of the corporation, Regal Construction Company, which had standing to sue under the contract but no capacity to sue. Id. at 153-154. Regal Construction is distinguishable from the present case and does not control.
We note again that legal title to all corporate assets
remains in the corporation
after the bifurcation.
Regal Constr. Co.,
Because the legal title to the corporation’s assets remains in the corporation, we conclude that the “property rights” that the shareholders are entitled to protect in this scenario are the value of their shares, which may be indirectly affected by injuries to the corporation.
See Hajdik v. Wingate,
None of Bacon’s authorities support his claim that he is a “successor in interest.” The forfeiture of privileges for failure to pay franchise taxes creates only a temporary change of status because the privileges may be revived under Tex.Tax Code Ann. § 171.258 (Vernon 1992). The same is true of the forfeiture of corporate charter, which may be revived under Tex.Tax Code Ann. §§ 171.312-171.314 (Vernon 1992). Only dissolution of the corporation would be permanent. 7 If a shareholder acquires beneficial title to corporate assets by the corporation’s forfeiture of corporate privileges, when such privileges may still be revived, this shareholder is not properly a “successor in interest” that can recover personally on a corporation’s cause of action.
Stages of Corporate Decay
As the above analysis shows, Texas statutes and case law provide four distinct stages *253 through which a corporation may pass. In order progressing toward non-existence, these are as follows.
Stage 1 — Fully Functional: A corporation may be in good standing with (a) the right to conduct business in this state and (b) the privilege to sue and defend in Texas state courts.
Stage 2 — No Privilege to Sue: A corporation may forfeit its corporate privileges to sue and defend in state courts, yet still maintain its charter to conduct business in this state. Tex.Tax Code Ann. §§ 171.251-171.252 (Vernon 1992 & Supp.1994);
Hardwick,
Stage 3 — No Right to Conduct Business: In addition to forfeiting the privilege to use state courts, a corporation may also forfeit its charter, by which the State had granted the corporation the right to do business in this state. Tex.Tax Code Ann. §§ 171.301-171.302, 171.309-171.310 (Vernon 1992);
see Regal Constr. Co.,
Stage 4 — Dissolved: A corporation may be dissolved either voluntarily or involuntarily. Tex.Bus.CoRpAct Ann. arts. 6.01-6.07, 7.01 (Vernon 1980 & Supp.1994).
The successive forfeitures of corporate privileges and rights are distinct acts, and neither constitutes a dissolution of the corporation. Until the corporation is dissolved, it maintains legal title to its assets.
Regal Constr. Co.,
A Cause of Action in Search of a Plaintiff
This suit alleged a breach of an oral agreement between two corporations. Our analysis shows that the Bacon corporation, which would have been the proper party plaintiff with standing to sue, had become incapacitated from prosecuting this cause. Bacon himself sued on this cause, but he could not recover on the corporation’s cause of action by suing as successor in interest, because he did not have legal title to the corporation’s assets. Bacon had capacity to bring the suit, but without standing, he could not do so on his own behalf, but only as a representative for the corporation.
See White,
*254 IV. Conclusion
We hold that a sole shareholder who refuses to pay franchise taxes for his corporation, and does not dissolve the corporation, does not become a successor in interest to the corporation. Thus, he has no standing to sue for injuries to the corporation.
Bacon could not recover individually on the corporation’s cause of action. Therefore, the trial court erred in denying El. T’s motion for instructed verdict. We sustain El T.’s first point of error. We need not address El T.’s remaining points of error.
We reverse and render judgment that Bacon take nothing.
Notes
. Standing requires that a party have some interest peculiar to himself individually and distinguishable from the interests of the general public.
Pankhurst,
. A corporation that fails to pay its franchise taxes forfeits its right to sue in Texas state courts. Texas Tax Code Ann. §§ 171.251-171.252 (Vernon 1992);
Hardwick v. Austin Gallery of Oriental Rugs, Inc.,
. Bacon also filed a third amended petition, which asserted no other basis for his capacity to sue but simply repeated the paragraphs quoted above.
. Bacon cannot recover on a breach of a legal right belonging to the corporation.
See Pankhurst,
. Bacon could have brought this suit in a representative capacity for the incapacitated corporation.
See Pankhurst,
. The Bacon corporation's forfeitures legally barred it from assigning its cause of action to Bacon for prosecution in Texas courts.
See Pratt-Hewit Oil Corp. v. Hewit,
.Even after an involuntary dissolution by the Secretary of State, the corporation has a 12-month window of opportunity during which it may be reinstated. TexBus.Coep.Act Ann. art. 7.01(E) (Vernon 1980). This is not the equivalent of reviving the corporate charter under Tex Tax Code Ann. §§ 171.312-171.314 (Vernon 1992).
. Any recovery on a corporate cause of action must be available to pay the corporation's debts.
White,
. The corporation owned the legal title to the cause of action and, hence, had standing to sue, but it could not do so because it lacked capacity after forfeiture or its privileges. Bacon, as shareholder and owner of beneficial title only, had no standing to sue individually on the corporation’s cause of action.
See Wingate,
. Bacon had three ways to recover against El T. on this cause of action. First, he could have paid the past-due franchise taxes, along with the relevant penalties and interest, and revived both the corporate charter and the corporation’s privileges to sue in Texas state courts. Tex.Tax Code Ann. § 171.258 (Vernon 1992). Then the Bacon corporation would have been in good standing and could have maintained its own cause of action. Bacon chose not to pursue this option. Second, Bacon could have dissolved the Bacon corporation and properly acquired both its assets and its liabilities. TexBus.Corp.Act Ann. arts. 6.01-6.07 (Vernon 1980 & Supp.1994). He would have become the successor in interest and could have maintained the cause of action himself and properly recovered in his own name. Third, Bacon could have sued in a representative capacity for the incapacitated Bacon corporation.
See Pankhurst,
