177 S.W. 176 | Tex. App. | 1915
The note and deed of trust of appellant were executed without consideration. The Oil Works Company was indebted to the bank on open account as well as on note. Ripley was not liable on the open account; he did not owe the Oil Works Company anything. On the contrary, the Oil Works Company was largely indebted to him. The Feed Pen Company did not owe the Oil Works Company, and did not owe the bank. The transaction was simply one of a corporation undertaking to secure the debt of another corporation, and, in doing so, to use its funds for a purpose other and different from that for which it was incorporated. This it could not legally do. Article 1164, Rev. Stat.; Transportation Co. v. Pullman Co.,
It is contended by appellee, and was so found by the court, that the promise to execute the note and deed of trust on behalf of the Feed Pen Company, and the advancement of the money to the Feed Pen Company, was a sufficient consideration to sustain the note and deed of trust. The agreement to execute these instruments was made by Ripley before the corporation was formed, and was not binding upon the corporation. It was an agreement that the corporation would do that which it had no lawful right to do. If, as contended by appellant, the real purpose in forming the Feed Pen corporation was to execute a deed of trust on this land to secure this indebtedness, then such corporation was formed for an illegal purpose, and was so formed with the knowledge, consent, and advice of appellee. Ripley and wife did not receive anything for the land except the stock of the Feed Pen corporation, and there was no agreement that they should receive any other consideration. The land did not exceed in value the amount of its capital stock, to wit, $9,000. Ripley gave two shares of stock, one each to Wills and Martin, who were named as directors in the charter. There was never any formal meeting of the directors of the Feed Pen Company. At the time the deed of trust was executed the attorney for the bank wrote a resolution authorizing the board of directors of the Feed Pen Company to execute this deed of trust, and the same was signed by Ripley and Wills. This resolution, however, stated that the consideration for the execution of the deed of trust was the cancellation of a prior deed of trust held by the appellee on this land to secure an indebtedness of $10,000, and such is the consideration recited in the deed of trust. At the time of the execution of this deed of trust the bank, its attorney, and Ripley supposed that this prior deed of trust had never been released; but, as a matter of fact, it had been released by the bank some seven years before. Wills knew nothing of the agreement to execute this deed of trust for money to be used in payment of the indebtedness to the Oil Works Company, or for any other purpose than that recited in the deed of trust. Martin was out of the state and had no connection with the transaction and no knowledge of it.
As is seen from the above statement, the appellant received no benefit from the transaction. The money was never withdrawn from the bank, but simply credited on the books to appellant, and then charged off and credited to the Oil Works Company. If this transaction was ultra vires (and we hold it so to have been), it was incapable of ratification, as will appear from the authorities above cited. In fact, there has been no attempt on the part of the directors of appellant to ratify this transaction.
Mrs. Willie Ripley intervened, claiming the land in question as her homestead, and alleging that her husband had refused to join her in this intervention. The evidence shows that F. E. Ripley, husband of intervener, purchased 320 acres of land, of which the land in question is a part; that at the time of the purchase, January, 1901, Ripley intended to establish his homestead on a portion of this tract. In 1905, he sold all of said tract except the 58 42/100 acres in controversy in this case, and thereafter intended to build a home upon this land, whenever he should be able to build such a home as he wished to, and the intervener joined in such purpose. She and her husband had *178
frequently gone over the land looking for a building site, and had tentatively selected several sites thereon, but otherwise they had done nothing to dedicate this land, or any part thereof, to homestead purposes. While actual residence is not necessary, under all circumstances, to fix the homestead character upon land, yet a mere intention to occupy land at some time in the future as a homestead, unaccompanied by any act evidencing such intention, is not sufficient to give such land a homestead character. Wiseman v. Watters, 142 S.W. 134; Cameron v. Gebhard,
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the trial court, as between intervener and appellee, is affirmed in so far as it denies the intervener homestead rights in the land, and reversed in so far as it decrees foreclosure of mortgage lien against her; and the judgment as between appellant and appellee is reversed and here rendered for appellant.
Affirmed in part and in part reversed and rendered.