40 S.W.2d 1 | Tex. | 1931
We refer to the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals for a complete statement of this case.
Suit was brought by the Herring-Showers Lumber Co. against the Burk-Waggoner Oil Co., a corporation, and R. M. Waggoner and Clois L. Greene, on a debt of the corporation. It was instituted against the two individual defendants by reason of transactions hereinafter described. R. M. Waggoner was the president of the corporation, and Clois L. Greene its general manager. Both were members of the board of directors, and with S. A. L. Morgan, vice president, V. D. Tennyson, secretary-treasurer, and W. R. Ferguson constituted the board. On September 27, 1920, the corporation was hopelessly insolvent and had quit, or was about to quit, its corporate business. On that date it owed approximately $300,000, and had about $100,000 in assets, consisting of personal and real property. On the date named there was a regularly called meeting of the board of directors of the company, held at its office in Wichita Falls, at which were present all the directors above named. At this meeting certain transactions took place, a memorandum of which was incorporated in the minutes. Recitations from the minutes are as follows:
"The meeting was called to order by the President, R. M. Waggoner, who then proceeded to make a statement to the board of directors of the condition of the company's affairs, showing that the indebtedness of the company was approximately $300,000.00 and that the assets of the company amounted to less than $100,000.00, and that the company was without funds to proceed any further. He also stated that practically two-thirds of this indebtedness due by the company was due to R. M. Waggoner and Clois L. Greene, who had advanced various sums of money from time to time to the company.
"Clois L. Greene thereupon stated to the board of directors that it was his wish to keep the company from going into the hands of a receiver and that if it met with the approval of Mr. Waggoner he and R. M. Waggoner would take over the assets of the company, including all of its machinery, wildcat leases, and other property, and work out of these assets as much as they could and that they would assume the indebtedness to the end that the creditors of the company be paid in full, and the said R. M. Waggoner thereupon stated that the suggestion met with his approval.
"Thereupon director S. A. L. Morgan made a motion that the Board of Directors accept the proposition of Messrs. Greene and Waggoner to take over the property and assets of the company and assume all obligations of the company for the outstanding indebtedness, which motion was seconded by director W. R. Ferguson, and the motion was then put to *610 the board of directors by S. A. L. Morgan, vice president, and all the directors voted in the affirmative.
"Director W. R. Ferguson thereupon made a motion which was seconded by director Clois L. Greene, that S. A. L. Morgan, as vice president, and V. D. Tennyson, as secretary, prepare and execute all papers on behalf of the company necessary and proper to carry out the agreement between the company and the said R. M. Waggoner, and Clois L. Greene, which motion was carried by the unanimous vote of the board of directors.
"Director S. A. L. Morgan made a motion, which was seconded by director W. R. Ferguson, that the secretary be instructed to prepare a financial statement setting forth the company's financial condition and the disposition of its assets and indebtedness, and that a copy of the same be sent to all stockholders, which motion was carried by unanimous vote.
"No other business coming before the Board, the meeting was declared adjourned."
After this meeting of the board of directors the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company ceased to be a going concern, and transacted no further business.
In accordance with the minutes, Mr. Morgan, as vice president of the company, and Mr. Tennyson, as secretary, prepared and executed a conveyance of all the property, personal and real, of the corporation; but instead of conveying it to Waggoner and Greene, conveyed it to Greene alone. This instrument reads as follows:
"THE STATE OF TEXAS ) COUNTY OF WICHITA. )
"KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS:
"THAT BURK-WAGGONER OIL COMPANY, a corporation, for and in consideration of the sum of ten dollars and other valuable consideration paid by CLOIS L. GREENE, and the further consideration that the said Clois L. Greene has assumed and by these presents does assume all the outstanding debts, liabilities, and obligations of said corporation wherever located and whatever kind and character, has granted, bargained, sold, conveyed, assigned, and delivered, and by these presents does grant, bargain, sell, convey, assign, and deliver unto the said Clois L. Greene all of the property and assets of Burk-Waggoner Oil Company of whatever kind and character and wherever located, including all oil and gas leases and leasehold estates in Wichita, Wilbarger, and Wise Counties, Texas, together with all machinery, lease houses, and other equipment of whatever kind and character located thereon, including the following, to-wit:
"1 Packard truck, complete with trailer;
1 Rotary rig, complete with drill pipe and boiler;
1 Rotary rig, dismantled; *611
3 Standard rigs, complete, with all extra and fishing tools, boilers, and other equipment;
3 Strings big hole pipe, each string approximately 3000 feet in length;
1 Jones roadster automobile;
1 Buick 5 passenger automobile;
"Together with any debts and obligations that may be due the company from other parties, it being the intention by this instrument to transfer and assign to the said Clois L. Greene all the assets of said Burk-Waggoner Oil Company of every kind and character whether real or personal or mixed in consideration of his paying off and discharging the debts and obligations of the company.
"TO HAVE AND TO HOLD unto the said Clois L. Greene, his heirs and assigns, forever.
"WITNESS BURK-WAGGONER OIL COMPANY, this 6 day of October, A.D. 1920.
"(Signed) BURK-WAGGONER OIL COMPANY,
"By S. A. L. Morgan, "Vice President.
"ATTEST: V. D. TENNYSON, Secretary."
Waggoner denied making the oral agreement, in so far as he was concerned, evidenced by the minutes. Morgan and Ferguson testified positively to the agreement shown in the minutes.
The case was submitted to a jury, and the jury found, in response to special issues, that Waggoner did agree at the directors' meeting that he would take over the corporation assets along with Greene and pay the corporation's debts; but that before the execution of the instrument conveying the property of the corporation to Greene, Waggoner told the latter, and also Morgan and Tennyson, the vice president and secretary respectively of the corporation, that he would not take over the corporation assets and agree to pay its debts. In other words, the jury found that Waggoner informed the officers and directors named, after the officers and directors named, after the adjournment of the directors' meeting, but prior to the date of the transfer of the property to Greene, that he, Waggoner, would not go into the deal with Greene and would not take over the assets and agree to pay the debts of the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company. Morgan denied that Waggoner made any such statement to him, but did say that the latter requested him to have the conveyance made to Clois L. Greene, instead of to both Greene and Waggoner, and that for this reason alone the conveyance was made to Greene instead of to Greene and Waggoner.
Upon the verdict of the jury the trial court entered a judgment in favor of the Herring-Showers Lumber Company and against the Oil *612 Company and Waggoner. The suit was dismissed as to Greene, who had previously been adjudged a bankrupt. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court.
Against the oral contract of assumption evidenced by the record, Waggoner urged the statute of frauds. The Court of Civil Appeals overruled the contention, saying:
"The contract of Waggoner and Greene with the Board of Directors, that they would pay the debts of the Oil Company in consideration of the transfer to them of all the company's property, real and personal, was not within the terms of the statute of frauds, and is therefore not governed by the provisions of that act requiring such contract to be in writing. By their assumption it made the debt their own and they became the principal obligors to the creditors of the company."
But for the fact that the contract of assumption on the part of Waggoner and Greene embraced real estate, we would be in accord with this holding.
The agreement of one party with another to pay the debts of the latter to a third party, upon a valuable consideration, is not within, and therefore not prohibited by the statute of frauds. Bank of Garvin v. Freeman,
However, the contract involved in the instant case is not a simple contract of assumption upon a valuable consideration. The consideration moving from the corporation to Waggoner and Greene was not only the transfer of the personal property of the corporation, but the conveyance of its real property as well. The contract, therefore, as a whole, was one necessarily within the statute of frauds, not binding on Waggoner and Greene until the execution of some instrument by them evidencing the agreement, or the execution of a transfer or some other instrument showing the sale of the real property by the corporation, duly accepted by them. R. S., art. 3995; Sprague v. Haines,
The Court of Civil Appeals concluded that the notice by Waggoner to the corporation's officers that he would not be bound by the oral argument was insufficient to prevent the rights of the defendant in error, as a creditor, from accruing, and, therefore, regardless of the status of the contract as between the corporation and Waggoner and Greene, it was binding on Waggoner as to the creditors of the company. In this we think the Court of Civil Appeals erred. It is quite true that the formal acceptance of a creditor may not be necessary to bind a subsequent purchaser of the property where he has by an enforcible contract assumed the debt, and that the institution of a suit might be a sufficient acceptance. This, however, is not the case before us. Here there was never an enforcible contract between Waggoner and the corporation. On the contrary, the agreement was one for the conveyance of real estate in violation of the statute of frauds. Since at the time Waggoner notified the officers of the company that he would not execute the contract, there had been no acceptance by the creditors, then regardless of the validity or binding effect of the contract Waggoner was free to do what the jury found he did do, — that is, decline to go forward with the trade. We think the rule is estalished in this state that, even as between a vendor and a vendee, a contract of purchase and sale of real estate, although executed as required by law, involving an assumption of liability, may be rescinded without any continuing liability in favor of the creditor, so long as the creditor has not accepted. Edwards v. Beals (Texas Com. App.),
The parol agreement to convey the real property here involved to Waggoner and Greene was, as we have said, plainly in violation of the statute of frauds. When Waggoner notified the officers of the corporation, as found by the jury, that he would not consummate the trade, the *614
parol contract was rescinded and at an end, as between the corporation and Waggoner. Simpson v. Greene (Texas Civ. App.),
The beneficiaries for whose advantage the contract was made could not acquire a better standing to enforce such contract than that occupied by the contracting parties themselves. Dunning v. Leavitt,
What we have said requires a reversal of the judgments below, but we are of the opinion that we ought not to render the case. The statute provides that the Supreme Court shall reverse and remand, rather than reverse and render, a cause, when the justice of the case demands another trial. R. S., art. 1771. Under this we have held that we will remand rather than render final judgment where justice will probably be better subserved. Faulkner v. Reed (Texas Com. App.),
The pleadings of the defendant in error, while predicating upon an assumption of debt by Waggoner, state the facts, and, in addition to the prayer for specific relief, ask for other relief "either at law or in equity, special and general." We will not undertake to fully state the pleadings. We believe the petition sufficient as against a general demurrer to have authorized a recovery in this case against Waggoner in some sum of money, notwithstanding the jury findings as to rescission in Waggoner's favor, and we ought to reverse and remand rather than reverse and render the case, under the statute and authorities cited above.
It will be recalled that at the time of the meeting of the board of directors on September 27, 1920, the corporation was hopelessly insolvent; that it then ceased to transact business, and was for all practical purposes dissolved, although the certificate of dissolution was not filed until long after that meeting. Such being the status of the corporation's affairs, it is obvious that all of its assets, personal and real, became a trust fund for the payment of the debts of the corporation, upon which the defendant in error, as well as other creditors, had an equitable lien. 11 Texas Jurisprudence, p. 84, sec. 421 and cases in notes; 10 Texas Jurisprudence, *615
p. 680, sec. 70 and cases cited in notes; Lyons-Thomas Hardware Co. v. Perry Stone Mfg. Co.,
We think the board of directors, as directors and trustees, had the right to sell the property to Greene or Greene and Waggoner, in order to have the debts of the corporation paid; but the property passed, under the facts of this case, charged with an equitable lien in favor of the creditors of the corporation, dischargeable only upon the payment of the creditors in full or pro rata from the funds received from the corporate property, in the absence, of course, of some element of estoppel on the part of the creditors. Clevenger v. Galloway Garrison (Texas Civ. App.),
In the last cited case the New York Court of Appeals held that the directors of a corporation, who without notice to creditors had sold the entire corporate property to a purchaser who assumed the payment of the creditors, were liable to the creditors. In discussing the question that court in part said:
"No notice of the transfer was given to creditors, nor was any property retained by the directors with which to meet the plaintiff's claim or any other indebtedness which might legally be established against the corporation. At the time of the transfer, however, the purchasing corporation did agree to assume all the then existing debts and liabilities of the selling corporation. This agreement was the sale provision made by the directors for the payment of the creditors of the corporation which they represented.
"The narrative of the transaction leaves no doubt that what the directors of the Brooklyn New York Ferry Company sought to bring about was a voluntary dissolution of the corporation, and the distribution of its assets, without taking the steps to that end which are prescribed by law. Notwithstanding their failure to proceed under the statute, they contend that a creditor of a corporation has no standing to compel them to pay a claim of which they were ignorant at the time of the transfer of the corporate property, in the absence of proof of actual fraud on their part. It is true that there is no allegation or finding of fraud; but there is evidence that the officers of the company had knowledge of the injury to the plaintiff which was the basis of his claim. The liability of the directors is predicated, not on the ground that their action in making the transfer was fraudulent, but upon the proposition that it is a violation of duty on the part of the directors of a corporation, to devest it of all its property without affording a reasonable opportunity to its creditors to present and enforce their claims before the transfer shall become effective. This is the proposition involved in the judgment in this case, which we are asked to reverse. We think it is sound in law, and should be upheld.
* * * * * *
"A creditor cannot be deprived of his equitable lien thereon by an agreement between the corporation and a transferee of the property that the latter shall assume and pay all the corporate debts. The consent of the creditor to accept the substituted debtor is essential to make such an agreement valid as against him. Hence the fact that the Brooklyn Ferry Company of New York agreed with the Brooklyn New York Ferry Company to assume all the debts of the latter did not justify the directors of the selling corporation in disposing of its assets without making some other provision for the payment of its creditors. The plaintiff was left in the position of the creditor so aptly described by Werner, Jr., in Hurd v. *617
New York Commercial Steam Laundry Co.,
In so far as the case before us is concerned, the record fails to disclose any notice to creditors of the transfer of the corporate assets to Greene, or to Greene and Waggoner. The minutes of the directors' meeting of September 27, 1920, show that notice was to be sent to the stockholders, but they are silent as to any such action with reference to creditors. Apparently the directors took no steps to see that the vendee of the corporate assets paid the creditors, either in full or to the extent of the value of the assets of the company.
Clois L. Greene did not pay the creditors of the corporation, or at least did not pay all of them. In fact, he became a bankrupt, and therefore unable to pay. Neither Waggoner nor other directors, in so far as this record shows, took any steps to see that the assets of the corporation transferred to Greene were devoted to the payment of the debts of the corporation. In fact, the record fails to show what became of the real properties of the concern. Some months after the transfer to Clois L. Greene, it appears that Greene gave a bill of sale to a large part of the personal property to Waggoner, and the latter, in consideration therefor, paid a debt, or furnished the money with which to pay a debt of the corporation, to the Wichita State Bank, of which Ferguson was president, in the sum of $60,000. Under the facts of this case, it is a justiciable issue as to whether or not it was the duty and obligation of Waggoner, as a director, and therefore as a trustee for the creditors of this failed corporation, *618 to see that the amount thus realized from the sale of the property transferred to him by Green was paid pro rata to the creditors of the corporation; and if his failure to do so damaged its creditors, whether or not he is responsible to them to the extent of the amount realized for these assets. Moreover, whether or not Waggoner took the property received from Greene charged with an equitable lien in favor of the creditors, dischargeable only by a proper distribution by him and the other directors of the funds thus realized from the corporate assets, whether or not he converted that property so that it could not be or cannot be reached by creditors, and if so whether or not he should be responsible for its conversion to the defendant in error, are all justiciable questions under the record now before us.
What we have said as to the possible liability of Mr. Waggoner as a director of the corporation and trustee for the creditors for failure to see that the assets delivered to Clois L. Greene were devoted to the payment of the debts of the corporation on a pro rata basis, applies, in so far as the record before us shows the facts, to all the directors. The liability of Waggoner, by reason of the purchase of the assets and their conversion, if he did convert them, is another and different issue, which might not involve all the directors.
On the whole, it may be said that the record before us presents a justiciable issue as to the liability of Waggoner apart from his liability on a contractual assumption of debt, which has not been fully developed. We are clear, therefore, we ought not to render the case.
The judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and district court, as to all parties, are accordingly reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court.