295 S.W. 311 | Tex. App. | 1927
The appellant vigorously asserts that at the trial from which the instant appeal was taken, the learned trial judge did not submit the case in the manner as directed by the appellate courts, and the points presenting this complaint will be hereinafter discussed.
The Court of Civil Appeals on the former appeal conceived the vital question in the case to be whether the directors on May 4, 1920, intended to release Frost and Llewellyn and remanded the case for trial of that issue. However, strong intimation was made that the directors were without power to release Frost.
The Supreme Court granted a writ of error, and the commission remanded the case with instructions to submit to the jury the issue of the intention of the directors to release Frost and Llewellyn at the time of the approval of the notes substituted for the $11,000 note, or of any renewals of such substituted notes, and further held that the evidence was sufficient to support a finding either way on the question of intention. Distinguished counsel for appellants press for our consideration the authorities cited in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals on the former appeal, and assert that the facts found and the release pleaded are insufficient to relieve Frost from liability because of his trusteeship for the bank. If the question of Frost's liability on the Davidson note, taken in part substitution for the $11,000 note above described, was open for decision, we would experience great difficulty in deciding that the directors of the bank could release one of their members from his liability by taking the notes of one already liable for the debt, when such action did not appear to be beneficial to the bank, but at most was of doubtful propriety. Under the authorities, the only circumstance that could possibly uphold such a transaction would be the chattel mortgage taken on the automobiles. Their value is not shown, nor whether they were exposed for sale at retail. If the latter, the mortgage would furnish scant security. First National Bank v. Thompson (Tex.Com.App.)
The authorities seem to hold that the directors of a bank are trustees and their acts relating to the corporation's property are controlled by the principles governing other trustees. San Antonio G. S. Ry. Co. v. S. A. G. Ry. Co.,
Therefore, in order for the act of a board of directors, dealing with a transaction between the corporation and another of their number, to be valid, not only must the transaction be approved by a majority of the board uninterested and with knowledge of all material facts, but the transaction must be beneficial to the bank as it then appeared. Tenison v. Patton,
A board of directors is without power to release one of their number from his liability to the corporation for the indirect misappropriation of the assets of a corporation to the use of the director sought to be released. Cook on Corporations (8th Ed.) vol. 4, § 730, p. 3135.
If the act of the directors in dealing with Frost's liability should be placed on the same plane as though he were a stranger to the bank, there would be no difficulty in agreeing with the view of the commission that the evidence is sufficient to show that the board had prior to April, 1921, ceased to look to either Frost or Llewellyn for the debt in question. It appearing to us that it is the view of the Supreme Court that the liability of Frost and Llewellyn is to be determined by the rule last referred to, therefore our limited duty is to determine whether the learned trial court substantially followed the instructions of the Supreme Court in retrying the case.
The case was submitted to the jury upon 14 special issues, all of which were answered in the affirmative and established the following state of facts: That a majority of the directors, other than Frost, in session after March 30, 1920, accepted the note of Davidson and Armstrong in settlement of the balance due on the $11,000 note of the Davidson Motor Company, intending to release Frost and Llewellyn, and thereafter, on April 5, 1921, accepted renewals of the substituted notes, with the intention to release the parties last named; that after March 30, 1920, said majority knew that Frost and Llewellyn had retired from the partnership in question; that Frost agreed to release Llewellyn and intended to do so in the transactions heretofore referred to; that by custom and business dealings, Frost and his successor. W. I. Smith, possessed authority to loan the moneys of the bank and change the form of obligations and the securities thereof; that Llewellyn believed that Frost had authority to release Llewellyn ; that Smith, successor to Frost, knew, either before or after he was president, that Frost and Llewellyn had retired from the firm named; that Smith accepted the renewals on the Davidson and Armstrong notes, intending to release Frost and Llewellyn from the $11,000 note of the Davidson Motor Company; that Smith, as president and also the directors, in filing suit on the note into which the Armstrong note had been merged, intended to release Frost and Llewellyn from the $11,000 note of the *314 Davidson Motor Company to the extent of the amount of $2,280, the amount of the Armstrong note.
No issue was submitted as to the loans made by Frost after the dissolution of said partnership, which loans were represented by the notes for $2,534.85 and $3,683.75.
Numerous exceptions were taken to the special issues submitted; a number of special issues and instructions were requested, and other rulings challenged, and, in support of the objections made, 24 propositions are presented. Most of the objections to the issues submitted are that they are immaterial. These objections can be eliminated, for, if, discarding immaterial questions submitted, there remains sufficient material findings of fact, no reversible error would appear.
Objection was lodged to the issue submitting the issue of approval by the directors of the renewal notes and to the failure to give appellant's requested issues confining the issue of ratification to the directors' meeting of May 4, 1920. What has been said disposes of this complaint.
The opinion of the commission plainly held that ratification could be predicated upon any renewal of the debts under consideration. Appellant seriously insists that this is a departure from the rule generally declared by the previous decisions of the Supreme Court, and that it is a dangerous innovation in the law to permit a board of directors to release one of their number from his liability for money borrowed by him from the bank and substitute the sole liability of an insolvent person already bound. If this is the effect of the decision, recourse must be had to the Supreme Court, for, as stated, the opinion of the commission so plainly directed.
The opinion of the commission referred to held that defendant was entitled to an instruction calling the jury's attention to the liability of Frost and Llewellyn at the time they retired from the firm, and defining what the law requires to constitute "novation." To procure the advantage of this holding, appellant requested a special charge, informing the jury that Frost and Llewellyn remained liable after the dissolution noted; that Frost could not release either himself or Llewellyn; that the question to be determined was whether the appellant ratified Frost's act in attempting the release, and that in deciding this question it was incumbent upon appellees to show that in the action taken in the May meeting the board of directors acted with full knowledge of all the facts; that is, they knew, not only of the dissolution of the partnership, but the terms thereof, and with such knowledge intended to ratify the attempted release. This preliminary instruction was followed by an issue submitting the question of ratification at the May meeting. The submission of the same issue, without the preliminary statement, was asked in a separate request.
The first special issue requested and stated in substance above was incorrect, in that it required the jury to find that the board knew all the facts and all the terms of the dissolution. Ratification may be predicated on an acceptance with knowledge of material facts. Davis v. Nueces Valley Irr. Co.,
The court, in the issues submitted, clearly assumed the liability of appellees until released at a meeting of the board subsequent to March 30, 1920. This, in part, submitted the issue as contended for by appellant; it then developed upon appellant to request a correct charge if it desired the matter further amplified. The refusal to limit the issue of ratification to the May meeting cannot operate to the prejudice of appellant, inasmuch as the jury found in appellee's favor on the issue of an intention to release by accepting the renewals on April 5, 1921. Even if the jury had found in appellant's favor on the issue of an intention to release at the May meeting, appellees would still be entitled to judgment under the decision of the commission on the finding of an intention to release by accepting the renewals on April 5, 1921.
Serious questions are presented with reference to the issues submitted as to the knowledge held by the board of directors and Smith, vice president, of the dissolution of said firm, and also the failure of the court to submit the issue of appellee's liability on the loans made by Frost to Davidson after such a dissolution. The issues submitted and now being considered are:
"Special Issue No. 7. Did a majority of the directors of the First State Bank Trust Company, other than H. N. Frost, who participated in the directors' meeting for said bank, subsequent to March 30, 1920, know that H. N. Frost and J. C. Llewellyn had retired as partners from the Davidson Motor Company?" Answer: "Yes."
"Special Issue No. 10. Did W. I. Smith, either before or at the time he was president of the First State Bank Trust Company, know that H. N. Frost and J. C. Llewellyn had retired from the Davidson Motor Company as partners?" Answer: "Yes."
These issues were objected to on the ground that an affirmative answer could be predicated on knowledge acquired after the filing of the suit. These issues and the answers considered above mean nothing. It is undisputed that after March 30, 1921, the directors did learn of the dissolution. They certainly learned it when appellee's answer was filed, if not before. Their knowledge should at least have been restricted to not later than April 5, 1921. The finding that Smith learned of the dissolution, either before or after he became president, is subject to the same criticism. As stated, Smith became president on June 1, 1920, and remained so up to the time of the trial. It is the rule, *315 however, that the charge of the court must be considered as a whole and not by piecemeal. Considered in connection with the repeated submission of the question as to whether Frost and Llewellyn had been released by directors and by Frost, it must be considered that the jury understood that the matter of knowledge inquired about related to a time previous to the acts of ratification relied on.
If the liability of Frost and Llewellyn depended upon the application of the law relating to novation as between creditor and debtor generally applied and apart from the fiduciary relationship of Frost to the bank, as seemingly treated in the opinion of the commission, the trial court was perhaps justified in not submitting the issue as to loans made by Frost after the partnership between Frost, Llewellyn, and Davidson was dissolved and represented by the notes for $2,534.85 and $3,683.75. The uncontradicted evidence showed an approval of these loans by the directors, and we construe the verdict as meaning that Smith, at that time, had notice of the retirement of Frost and Llewellyn from the Davidson Motor Company before the loans were made. Smith's testimony shows that Davidson gave him (Smith) information clearly indicating that Frost and Llewellyn had retired from said firm. It is true the directors said they approved these loans on Frost's positive assurance that he and Llewellyn were liable thereon, but this issue was neither submitted nor requested.
If Frost had been instructed by the board not to make any loan to Davidson and did so after the partnership was dissolved, and thereafter secured the approval of the directors of the loan upon the representation that he (Frost) was personally liable thereon, it would be difficult to find anything in the authorities that would entitle him to release when it was discovered that his act without authority had resulted in a loss to the bank, but, as stated, the case was not submitted nor requested to be submitted on this theory. On the other hand, if Frost's liability to the bank is to be treated on the same basis as that of a stranger, then the court's action was undoubtedly correct, for in such a case the knowledge of Smith would be imputed to the bank. Goldstein v. Union National Bank,
Appellant offered the proof of two of the directors of the bank that if they had known of the material facts surrounding the substitution of the Davidson note and the Armstrong note, for the $11,000 note of the Davidson Motor Company, they would not have agreed to the substitution as they did. The proposed testimony was, on the objection of the appellees, excluded, and error assigned thereon. The evidence should have been admitted. International Land Company v. Parmer,
The testimony of these witnesses plainly showed that they would not have accepted the notes in question if they had known of the dissolution of the Davidson Motor Company or if their act in accepting the substituted paper would have any effect on Frost's and Llewellyn's liability. On the other hand, they were permitted to testify that they accepted the substituted paper upon Frost's positive assurance that he and Llewellyn were still liable thereon. That had the same effect as the other, except that it is stronger, while the rejected testimony is negative only.
William Frost, administrator, was permitted to testify that after his father's death he had a conversation with W. I. Smith, then president of the bank, in which Smith informed him that the bank was holding the Frost estate and Llewellyn liable for Davidson's debt to the bank, and that the witness asked Smith who was pushing it and who was wanting to file suit, and Smith then informed the witness that Mr. Brock and Dr. McCracken, two of the directors, were behind it and were the ones pushing the matter. It is believed that Smith, being the president of the bank and, under the law, having control of its litigation and under the findings of the jury, having been invested by the board of directors with full power and authority in the direction and management of appellant's affairs, that his declarations, if material, are the voice of the corporation and not hearsay, which were the objections urged.
Complaint is made of the action of the court in permitting the appellees on cross-examination to read from the books and records of the First State Bank Trust Company various entries offered to contradict plaintiff's witnesses, and then allowing the defendants, in making out their case, to again read the same records and documents to the jury. These matters are largely and wisely left to the discretion of the trial court, and before such matters can become the subject of appellate review, a clear abuse of the court's discretion must be shown. In this case, Frost was dead and appellees were under the necessity of securing their testimony from the books and files of the appellant bank. We are unable to say that the court abused his discretion with reference to this matter.
Objections were made to the testimony of Llewellyn and Davidson respecting the dissolution of the partnership between themselves and Frost. The appellant's claim is that Frost, being adversely interested in said transaction, could not bind the bank, and the witnesses were parties to the suit, therefore incompetent, under the statute (now article 3716), to testify to a transaction with Frost, then deceased. It appears that *316
Davidson and Llewellyn were not incompetent under said article, considering the position they occupied at the time, to testify to the transaction between Frost, Llewellyn, and Davidson, wherein the partnership then existing between them was dissolved. Hoxie v. Farmers' Mechanics' National Bank,
The other assignments relate to the sufficiency of the testimony, and our views relating to that matter have been expressed in passing upon the other questions involved.
Finding no reversible error, all of the assignments are overruled and Judgment of the trial court is affirmed.