J. C. Strauss instituted this suit In the Eighty-Ninth district court of Wichita county, seeking to recover a judgment against the Easter Oil Corporation for the balance alleged to be due upon a promissory note executed on the 1st day of October, 1928', in the sum of $4,500, and payable on demand, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, and for 10 per cent, additional as attorneys’ fees. The plaintiff alleged that the note was long past due and no part thereof had been paid except $225, which was paid on January 21, 1931; credit therefor being allowed in the petition.
The defendant in answer pleaded substantially that the note was not that of the corporation for the reason (1) that it had been executed by the president and secretary without authority by the board of directors to execute the same; (2) that Alleine Kelley, the president of the corporation, who executed the note as such, was at the time a married woman, the wife of Kork Kelley, and that the note had been executed without the knowledge or consent of her husband and without his participation in the transaction, and therefore the note was unenforceable; (3) that, while Alleine Kelley had been elected as president of the corporation, yet, when the directors were assembled in meeting, the plaintiff, who was vice president of the corporation, would
To these pleas the plaintiff replied by supplemental petition that, if Alleine Kelley as president and Gordon West as secretary, who had executed the note for the corporation, did so without express authority of the board of directors of the corporation, they were at least impliedly authorized, in that they were the active officers and managers of the corporation, and transacted all of its business with the consent and acquiescence of the directors and stockholders; that the directors all knew of the indebtedness to plaintiff, and had full knowledge of the execution of the note after its execution, and they ratified the same, and at no time ever repudiated it as an obligation of the corporation; that if for any reason the court should hold that Alleine Kelley and Gordon West were not authorized either expressly or impliedly to execute the note, and the note was not an obligation of the corporation, then the plaintiff alleged in the alternative that he was entitled to a judgment for the money he had loaned the corporation with interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from the date of loaning the same, setting out specifically the dates and amounts advanced by the plaintiff to the corporation, which aggregated $4,500.
The defendant filed a supplemental answer in which it reiterated practically the same matters that it alleged in its first amended original answer as to the lack of authority on the part of the president and'secretary, and in addition thereto alleged that plaintiff had sold his stock in the corporation, receiving therefor $32,000, and that R. S. Allen, a stockholder, had put $60,000 in the corporation,- and had never drawn out anything; that H. E. Clark, another stockholder, had put $70,-000 in the corporation, and had never drawn out anything; and that Alleine Kelley and her husband had put in valuable tools and equipment, and had never drawn anything out of the proceeds; and that hence plaintiff should not be permitted to collect his indebtedness at this time, especially in view of the fact that defendant owed large sums of money to its creditors and that plaintiff’s debt should not be paid until the other creditors were satisfied, etc.
When the case was called for trial, the defendant, in order to be allowed to open and conclude the ease as to the introduction of the testimony and the argument, filed his admission of plaintiff’s cause of action as set forth in the petition, except so far as it may be defeated by the facts of the answer constituting a good defense.
Upon the conclusion of the evidence the court, upon a motion of the plaintiff, gave a peremptory instruction to find in plaintiff’s favor for the amount due on the note, with interest and attorneys’ fees as sued upon. The jury so returned its verdict, and the court thereupon entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $4,409.22, with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from the date of the judgment.
The defendant filed a lengthy motion for new trial, urging numerous errors, which was overruled, and to which ruling the defendant excepted and has duly prosecuted this appeal.
Eor reasons hereinafter stated, we will hut briefly discuss, several of the questions materially relating to the trial of the case as presented below and as presented here on appeal. One of appellant’s defenses presented below and urged here is that the note declared upon by the plaintiff was of no force and effect because executed by Alleine Kelley, a married woman without the joinder of her husband. As to this it must be said that, whatever may be the rule in other jurisdictions, it has been expressly provided by our Legislature that: “Charters may be subscribed by married women who may be stockholders, officers and directors thereof; and their acts, contracts and deeds as such stockholders, officers and directors shall be as binding and effective for all the purposes of said corporation as if they were males. The joinder and consent of the husband and privy examinations separate and apart from him shall not he required.” Article 1306, Rev. Civ. Statutes.
As shown in the evidence, one of the bylaws of the corporation duly adopted reads in part as follows: “The affairs and business of the corporation shall be under the management and control of a board of directors of seven members. * * * ”
It is undisputed that the note in question was executed and delivered by the president, Alleine Kelley, without having been so directed or authorized by a resolution or order of the corporation’s board of directors, hence the authority for the execution
It is urgently insisted in behalf of ap-pellee that appellant’s admission at the opening of the trial had the effect to preclude it of all relief in its behalf. And in this court it is insisted that the effect of the admission was to admit that the note declared upon was the note of the corporation; that it was valid, due, and unpaid, and hence that the court could do nothing else than give the peremptory instruction, citing Dashiel v. Lott (Tex. Com. App.) 243 S. W. 1072; Smith v. Traders’ National Bank, 74 Tex. 541,12 S. W. 221; Sanders v. Bridges, 67 Tex. 93, 2 S. W. 663; Smith v. Frost (Tex. Com. App.) 254 S. W. 926; Rector v. Evans (Tex. Com. App.) 288 S. W. 826; Finger v. Whitworth (Tex. Civ. App.) 294 S. W. 285; Ferguson v. American Bank & Trust Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 13 S. W.(2d) 459. The record indicates that the peremptory instruction of the court and the judgment were based largely on such contention, for the judgment recites the fact of the admission under the rule, and declares that under the undisputed evidence the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment upon the note sued upon.
We do not feel prepared, under the circumstances and pleadings in this case, to adopt the construction of the rule insisted upon in behalf of appellee. The answer of the defendant, among other things, was in effect a plea of non est factum. The effect of such a plea was to cast upon the plaintiff the burden of proving that the note in fact was the note of the corporation, and a reasonable construction of the rule would seem to be in such case that the admission merely relieved the plaintiff of the burden of so proving in the first instance, thus easting upon the defendant the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence the fact alleged in the plea that the note was not the note of the corporation, plaintiff thereafter only being required by its evidence to overcome in weight or balance the evidence relied upon by the defendant to show that the note was in fact not the act of the corporation. The defendant further pleaded that, if it was ever indebted to the plaintiff as evidenced by the note sued on, the note had been fully paid and satisfied. These pleas, we think, should be construed as in the nature at least of pleas in confession and avoidance. See Johnson v. Sherrill (Tex. Civ. App.) 271 S. W. 276; Wolff v. Cohen (Tex. Civ. App.) 281 S. W. 646; Swift & Henry Livestock Commission Co. v. Mounts (Tex. Civ. App.) 295 S. W. 932. Therefore, even under the strict rule invoked in behalf of ap-pellee, the court was precluded from giving the peremptory instruction to the jury if there was any evidence even tending to show that the note had been discharged. There was evidence tending to show that the corporation prior to the execution of the note had received from the Strauss-Alien Corporation, of which the plaintiff was a co-owner, certain drilling material for which Alleine Kelley testified she thought she was giving the note. Appel-lee, however, only testified that he presumed that the material referred to in the testimony of Mrs. Kelley had been paid for by the corporation. So that we are inclined to give a more liberal construction of the rule than that insisted upon by appellee and to hold that, even upon the theory upon which the case was tried, the court erred in giving the peremptory instruction. See Smith v. Traders’ National Bank, 74 Tex. 541, 12 S. W. 221; Dashiel v. Lott (Tex. Com. App.) 243 S. W. 1072.
We have thus far undertaken to dispose of the case briefly on the theory on which it was tried below, and, in accordance with our conclusions as thus far expressed, the judgment
The Easter Oil Corporation was organized on or about the — -day of April, 1928. The minutes of the first meeting of the board of directors appear to have been on the 25th day of April, 1928. The following were directors of the corporation: Reese S. Allen, J. A. Strauss, Gordon T. West, Jinks Smith, A. T. Kelley, Kork Kelley, H. E. Clark. Kork Kelley was an oil well driller, and owned equipment of the necessary kind, and he and his wife, Alleine Kelley, had secured the right in two oil leases of 80 acres each, situated in the Wichita county oil territory. They were, however, without the necessary cash to drill a well on either of the leases, and they approached Mr. Allen seeking to induce him to put in the necessary means to drill a well on one of the leases. Mr, Allen in turn communicated with Mr. H. E. Clark and later with appellee, Strauss, and it was finally agreed that the Kelleys were to put in the two 80-acre leases and the use of their equipment and. drill the initial well, and Clark and Allen to furnish the necessary money, the Kelleys to have a one-third interest, Clark a one-third, and Allen a one-third. At this state of the negotiations, Allen approached appellee, Strauss, and it appears, quoting from the testimony of Strauss himself, that:
“They (Clark and Allen) first talked about incorporating at $6,000 and I said you can not drill a well for $6,000, and this man Clark said, well we have the easing and this derrick, and this woman, calling her Alleine, drilled a well in the pasture and it did not cost but $6,000 and I said all right go ahead but I don’t want anything to do with it, he said ‘well, Strauss, do you think with that equipment we could drill a well for $10,000?’ And I said, ‘You possibly could’. And he said T believe I would be willing to try it for $10,-000.’ And I said I would not want to underwrite it but if you incorporate it for $10,000 and want me to, I will take one-fourth of the interest Mr. Allen has, if he wants me to.’ That was before it was incorporated. * * *
“Q. And you were one of .the original directors in the corporation? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. In the charter? A. Yes, sir.”
Appellee testified that he paid $800 in cash for one-fourth of Allen’s one-third of the corporation stock. We quote the following further testimony given by appellee Strauss:
“Q. Now after you started that, after you incorporated and bought the stock that you had agreed to buy from Allen, isn’t it a fact that all of you put more money into this, whether you call it a loan or what not, before you got production you put in more money? A. I think that is true, they got’ a fishing job before they got a paying well, it took more money than it ordinarily would have, and they had to have some money, and Mr. Clark and Mr. Allen had loaned them considerably more than I, they were both wealthy men and I am a man of very ordinary means, and when they were out of town, both of them, and the company had to have ready money for the labor and fishing tools, that is when they approached me for the loan and here is the checks that were issued by me to them out of my personal account and this material that you talk about that I took out, that was this stuff that was bought from the Strauss-Alien Corporation at fifty cents on the dollar.
“Q. The Strauss-Alien Corporation that was a company owned by Mr. Allen and yourself and some other people? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And that company put that material into the corporation — who put that stuff into the corporation? A. Well it was this way, Mr. Allen and I practically owned the Strauss-Alien Corporation. * * * We put those things in at exactly what we paid for them and then they paid for them at fifty cents on the dollar, that is the basis we worked on. * * *
“Q. When you agreed to go in the Corporation and buy one-fourth of the one-third of the stock, did you agree with anybody that you would furnish the money to the corporation if the capital stock of the corporation fell short of enough to drill the well? A. Certain not; if it had not been for the fishing job it would not have been necessary.
“Q. Was it contemplated by all parties at the time that they would be able to drill the well for $10,000? A. Yes, sir, because we had a certain amount of casing and together with other things we had on hand, and the rig of course, he and she thought they could drill it; they just happened to the fishing job, and did not have enough money. They had to get the stock holders to advance money to finish the well.”
The evidence shows that appellee advanced from time to time sums aggregating the amount for which the note declared upon was given under circumstances indicated’by the following quotation from his testimony:
“Q. Now who applied to you for these particular loans? A. Gordon West, Kork Kelley and Mrs. Kelley.
“Q. All three? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. All three were present every time? A. No, sir, I would not say that; I don’t remember about that in fact.
“Q. Well was all three of them ever presentPage 340when they applied to you for a loan? A. I don’t remember that but I remember that all of them asked for a loan; I remember that it was pretty hard to dig up and somebody had to dig it up.
“Q. Were you loaning it to the corporation? A. Tes, sir.
“Q. You would make the loans that you are talking about upon the request of either Mrs. Kelley or Gordon West or Kork Kelley? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You knew that the corporation, through its board of directors, never authorized anybody to borrow this money? A. Never heard that question raised until we came up here; never occurred to me that they would have the gall to try to deny it.
“Q. You don’t mean that the hoard of directors had had anything to do with the borrowing money from you? A. No, sir, it was-n’t necessary.
“Q. You mean to tell the jury, so far as you know, that the hoard of directors of that corporation had nothing to do with the loan? A. Well now, as for that, the majority of the board of directors were Mrs. Kelley, Gordon West, and Mr. Allen, and Mr. Allen had said to me once that he thought that I ought to advance some money, that he and Clark had advanced a lot and he had said he thought I should advance a little.”
The only reference to a directors’, stockholders’, or creditors’ meeting that we find is one in which the Kelleys and perhaps Clark and Allen and certain creditors expressed the will to pay the general creditors of the corporation 5 per cent, of their demands until fully discharged out of the dividends before anything was advanced or paid to Allen, Clark, or Strauss on their advancements. It further appears without dispute that, after the fishing job had been overcome, the Kel-leys continued and brought in a good well; that parties from Tulsa, Okl., offered for the properties of the corporation $450,000. This offer was not accepted. $140,000 was then offered for the stock owned by Allen and Strauss. Allen was not willing to accept that; Strauss resigned his position as vice president of the corporation, and sold his stock to a Mr. Ferguson for $32,500. During the fishing job and drilling operations appellee testified that he put in about as much time as did Mrs. Kelley on the lease. In this particular his language while testifying was as follows: “Well I was out there too a good deal of the time, after they had had the fishing job trying to help them straighten it out, I was out there as much as she was, I know that I was out there until nearly midnight the night the well came in.”
We do not want to be understood as holding that a stockholder in a corporation may not become a creditor thereof, but, as it seems to us, it is apparent that the relation of appellee to the corporation was not that of an ordinary stockholder who has loaned to the corporation money and received ttv corporation’s obligation therefor. One of the definitions of a “loan” that we find in Black’s Law Dictionary is the following: “The loan of money is a contract by which one delivers a sum of money to another and the latter agrees to return at a future time a sum equivalent to that which he borrowed.”
While appellee insists that the sums advanced by him were loans, it is clear that they were mere advances to certain co-owners of the corporation for the purpose of saving sums paid for stock and to bring about the profit in contemplation at the time of the organization of the corporation. Appellee was one of the parties engaged in the creation, existence, and prosecution of a joint undertaking to develop the oil leases in question with the hope of profit.
In 15 R. O. L. p. 500, pars. 1 and 2, under the title of “Joint Adventures,” it is said:
“ * * * The relation of joint adventurers is governed by the principles which constitute and control the law of partnership, and reference should be had in this connection to the treatment of that law contained in this work.
“While it is true that at common law co-adventurers in an enterprise were recognized in courts only when the element of partnership was disclosed and on proof of the essentials of a partnership, this is not the law at the present time, and, although courts in modern times do not treat a joint venture as identical with a partnership, it is so similar in its nature and in the contractual relationships created thereby that the rights as between the adventurers are governed practically by the same rules that govern partnerships.”
See, also, Texas Jurisprudence, vol. —, p.-, Title “Joint Adventures.”
In Thornton on the Law of Oil and Gas, vol. 1, p. 520, § 355, it is said: “If two or more owners of a mine unite in working it, without any partnership agreement, the act of working it together creates a mining partnership ; and the same is true of two or more holding interests in a lease of mining property. Whatever may be the rights and liabilities’ of tenants in common of a mine not being worked, said the Supreme Court of California, ‘it is clear that when the several owners unite and cooperate in working the mine, then a new relation exists between them, and, to a certain extent, they are governed by the rules relating to partnership. They form what is termed a mining partnership, which is governed by many of the rules relating to ordinary partnerships, but which has also some rules peculiar to itself, one of which is .that one person may convey his
In Thompson v. Duncan (Tex. Com. App.) 44 S.W.(2d) 904, 907, it is said in an opinion by Justice Reddy:
“Courts- do not treat a joint venture as identical with a'partnership, yet it is universally held that such relation is so similar in its nature to a partnership and in the contractual relation created thereby that the rights as to the members are governed by substantially the same rules that govern' partnerships” — citing authorities.
In Thompson on Corporations, 1922 Cumulative Supplement, p. 770, § 4462, it is said: “The relation of the stockholder to the corporation 'is purely contractual. The stockholder sustains a three-fold relation; to the corporation as a legal entity, to his fellow stockholders and to the creditors of the corporation. * * * The ownership of the stock confers the right to participate in the immunities and benefits of the corporation and in the choice of its officers and the management of its concerns, to share in its dividends and profits and to receive an aliquot part of the proceeds of the capital on the winding up and termination of the corporation.- * * * The stockholders stand on an equal footing both as to benefits and burdens. A fiduciary relation exists between the stockholders themselves and this imposes the duty to act honestly and in good faith toward each other in the exercise of their powers within the corporation.”
And again on page 773, § 4463: “A stockholder, as such, is not a corporate creditor, and hence is without any distinct right to any part of the corporate property and this though he may own a majority of or all the stock. His right is to share in the net profits and a proportion of assets of the corporation after payment of debts on the dissolution of the corporation.”
In Thornton on the Law of Oil & Gas, p. 472, § 320, it is said: “Under a contract specifying their individual interest in a leasehold and the business of operating it by tenants as co-partners in pumping and selling the oil produced from a well thereon, a bill for an accounting is the exclusive remedy for the settlement of their accounts.”
In the case of Stephenson v. Luttrell, 107 Tex. 320, 179 S. W. 260, it is said, quoting from the headnotes:
“One tenant in common who for preservation of the value of the property has been compelled to expend money in improving it' has the right to recover from his cotenant the proportion of the reasonable expense so incurred corresponding to such co tenant’s interest, and enforce the same as a lien against the property.
“The amount which a tenant in common may recover from his cotenant for expenses in necessary improvements made is such part of the money actually expended therein as is proportionate to the cotenant’s interest. He can not make profit from the transaction, nor charge his cotenant with more than such proportion of the expense by reason of the val-' ue of the latter’s interest being increased beyond that amount.”
In Hanrick v. Gurley, 93 Tex. 458, 54 S. W. 347, 55 S. W. 119, 56 S. W. 330, it is held that a defendant, claiming to be sole heir, who had paid from his private means to protect the estate, was not precluded from calling on his cotenants for contributions when they sought partition by the fact that he was administrator and might have paid from the funds of the estate and been allowed a credit in its settlement. See, also, Anderson v. Clanch (Tex. Sup.) 6 S. W. 760; T. & P. C. & O. Co. v. Kirtley (Tex. Civ. App.) 288 S. W. 619; Roberts v. Roberts (Tex. Civ. App.) 278 S. W. 937; Durham v. Scrivener (Tex. Civ. App.) 259 S. W. 606; Magruder v. Johnston (Tex. Civ. App.) 233 S. W. 665.
We conclude that appellee’s relation to the enterprise or adventure under consideration was, under the authorities, in the nature of a cotenant or partner. As such, he was not entitled, under the rules governing those relations to himself, to recover of the corporation his indebtedness until after the payment of the independent creditors of the corporation, the record indicating that at the time of the trial the corporation was indebted to outside creditors or creditors not interested in the enterprise to the extent of the sum of $60,000. Appellee’s assignee, Ferguson, is evidently entitled to his proportionate part of all dividends that may have or can be declared after the assignment and to have his rateable share of the property upon dissolution of the corporation. Apparently, at least, appellee, by the sale of his stock and the receipt of profits amounting to more than $25,000 over and above all sums paid by him for stock and his advances to secure protection, affected his purpose and anticipated reward in joining Allen, Clark, and others in the enterprise. At all events, whatever right, if any, he may have against his cotenants or partners in the adventure, he has no right of recovery at this time against the appellant corporation.
We infer from the evidence as a whole and from the argument of counsel on the submission of this cause that the properties involved are valuable and the leases susceptible of profitable development, and that the present indebtedness of some $60,000 has been incur
We finally conclude that the court erred in refusing appellant’s request for a peremptory instruction in its favor and that the judgment below should be reversed and now and here rendered for the appellant corporation.