This is a stock conversion suit against J. L. Patterson, Jr., appellant, brought by Jerold Wizowaty, Stuart Schube, and Charles Van Tassel, appellees. The district court entered judgment against appellant.
The three appellees formed a partnership called Concertina and entered into an oral agreement with appellant, as secretary and representative of the HLJ Corporation, to purchase six thousand shares of stock of HLJ for $6,000. Appellees alleged that their agreement contemplated that HLJ would subsequently purchase $6,000 worth of stock in International Artists Producing Corporation. The check for $6,000, payable to HLJ, was drawn on the bank account of Wizowaty, received by appellant, and deposited by him in HLJ’s account. A notation on the face of the check stated: “For purchase of 6000 shares in HLJ Corporation on behalf of CONCERTINA, a Texas partnership.” The next day, appellant drew a check against HLJ for $6,000 payable to International Artists. Wizowaty repeatedly made demand for the stock on appellant, but no stock was ever delivered to any of the appellees. Appellees sued HLJ and appellant, alleging alternatively fraudulent conversion, breach of contract, and rescission. Default judgment was entered against HLJ, and a severance was ordered as to Patterson. Trial was to the court, which entered findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court found
Appellant brings ten points of error. The first point is that the trial court erred in entering judgment for appellees, because there was no evidence of market value upon which to base damages under the theory of fraudulent conversion. We agree.
The measure of damage in a stock conversion suit is the market value of the stock at the time of the conversion. City National Bank in Wichita Falls v. Kiel,
Appellees’ petition alleges that, after the fraudulent conversion and before the filing of suit, the market value of their alleged shares in HLJ or International Artists was $10,250. However, the trial court specifically found that no evidence was presented of the market value of any stock at any material time. Appellees argue that, since the stock certificates and stock books were found never to have existed, the market value “must be inferred from the terms of the bargain.” No authority is cited for this proposition; on the contrary, if the consideration paid were circumstantial evidence of market value, then the requirement that market value at the time of the conversion be established would be rendered meaningless as the measure of damages. Appellees assert that the consideration itself rather than the stock may be treated as the object of the conversion under the authority of Beaumont Hotel Co. v. Caswell,
Appellees assert that the trial court also found rescission, in which the measure of damages is the consideration paid. The trial judge found that HLJ was the alter ego of appellant and rejected appellant’s additional requested finding of fact that appellees had waited an unreasonable length of time in order to rescind. Assuming the trial court found the contract to be
Since this case must be reversed, we believe it should be remanded for a new trial in the interest of justice. The trial judge specifically found that no stock certificates in HLJ were ever issued. This is strong evidence that HLJ never became an active corporation nor received consideration for which it issued stock. If there was never any equity or stock in this corporation to be owned, appellees’ suit for conversion of stock was based upon a wrong theory of law, unlike the typical stock conversion case which involves the conversion of stock in a functioning corporation,
e. g.,
Ligón v. E. F. Hutton & Company,
supra.
Under the facts developed below, appellees probably could have plead another cause of action, such as fraud or fraudulent conversion of the consideration. If a case must be reversed, a court of civil appeals has the discretion to remand it for a new trial in the interest of justice when it was tried on the wrong theory. Texas Rules of Civil Procedure 434; Morrow v. Shotwell,
Reversed and remanded.
