Brown v. Smallwood

86 A.D. 76, 83 N.Y.S. 415, 1903 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2306
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 86 A.D. 76 (Brown v. Smallwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Smallwood, 86 A.D. 76, 83 N.Y.S. 415, 1903 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2306 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

McLennan, J. :

The facts, so far as material, may be summarized as follows: The plaintiff, who resided with his wife, Elizabeth T. Brown, was a lawyer engaged in the practice of his profession in the city of Buffalo, N. Y. . On the 11th day of January, 1897, the Citizens’ Bank of Le Roy, 2L Y., of which the defendant was president, issued to Elizabeth T. Brown a certificate for ten shares of the capital stock of the bank, of the face value of $100 each. On the back of the certificate was a blank assignment and. power of attorney. On January 26, 1897, this certificate was pledged to the bank as security for the payment of a note of $500 indorsed by Mrs. Brown, and she then signed her name at the bottom of the written assignment upon the certificate. The blank spaces therein were left blank. The certificate of stock was continued as a pledge for various loans made by the plaintiff upon the notes made by himself and his wife, until March, 1898, when the then total indebtedness -was paid. The certificate, however, continued to remain in the possession of the bank until April 4, 1898, when the plaintiff procured it from the defendant Smallwood. At that time the assignment upon the back of the certificate, as we have seen, was signed by Mrs. Brown, the wife of the plaintiff, but no name was inserted in the blank as the assignee of the same. Then, or about that time, the plaintiff’s wife being absent from home, he, without the knowledge or authority of his wife, filled in all the blank spaces in the assignment, so.that upon its face it-appeared that it had been trans[78]*78ferred to him by his wife. On the 8th day of May, 1898, the plaintiff took the certificate to the bank and pledged it to secure a loan of $150' upon a promissory note made by himself and his wife. At that time the name of the plaintiff was erased in the assignment and the name of the defendant was inserted in its place by the plaintiff. The certificate of stock was again pledged by the plaintiff to secure the payment of various loans during the following months, of Juné, July and August, upon promissory notes made by the plaintiff and his wife, with her knowledge and consent. So that,, on the 3d day of September, 1898, the certificate of stock was held by the bank as collateral security for the payment of these loans on promissory notes amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $230.15. On that day the plaintiff, being in need of more money, applied to-the defendant Smallwood, the president of the. bank, for an additional sum of money on such certificate of stock. Some question was raised by the defendant as to the plaintiff’s ownership, or his authority to pledge or sell or transfer the stock, and the plaintiff thereupon made and delivered to the defendant the following statement, which was duly signed and sworn to by the plaintiff:. “ M. Fillmore Brown, being duly sworn, says- that he is the agent of Elizabeth T. Brown, his wife, and is authorized by her to dispose (of and) sell, in any manner he may choose, the ten shares of stock of the Citizens’ Bank of Le Roy,”

The defendant claims that at the time such añidavit was made he believed the same to be true, and believed that it correctly stated and represented the plaintiff’s rights and authority in respect to the certificate of stock in question, and that he relied upon tlie same. Opon the delivery of such affidavit and as a conclusion of the negotiation, the defendant Smallwood paid to the plaintiff in money $269.85, and delivered to him the notes of Mrs. Brown held by the bank at that time, amounting to $230.15, which, added to the $269.85, makes the amount of $500.

The defendant claims that at the time he purchased the stock of the plaintiff for the said sum of $500, it was upon the condition that the plaintiff was to have the right to repurchase the same at any time within sixty days thereafter, upon repaying to the defendant the said sum of $500 with interest and some items of commission. The plaintiff claims that that was not the bargain or effect of the [79]*79transaction, but that he simply pledged the stock.to the defendant as security for the payment of the $500.

The plaintiff, or his wife, did not repurchase or offer to repurchase the stock within the sixty days, and thereupon the defendant procured the stock to be transferred to his name upon the stock book of the bank. Thereafter the plaintiff’s wife demanded the stock from the defendant and from the bank, offering to pay to him or it, one or both, the amount of her indebtedness, namely, $230.15. The defendant refused to accede to the demand, not on the ground that the amount which she offered to pay was not the full amount due and owing by herself and husband, but upon the ground that the defendant was then the absolute owner of the stock because of' the transaction which he had with her husband, and because the time in which the plaintiff had the right to repurchase the ‘stock had expired. Thereupon Mrs. Brown commenced an action in the Supreme Court to recover from the defendant and the bank the ten shares of stock, and upon the trial she, through her attorney, offered in open court that the stock should be charged with the total sum obtained thereon, to wit, the sum of $500 and interest. After hearing all the proofs and allegations of the parties in that action the learned justice determined that the stock was pledged and not sold by the transaction of September third, and judgment was rendered, in effect, that, the stock belonged to Mrs. Brown, subject to a charge of $500 and interest, and it directed that upon payment of such sum to the defendant the stock should be transferred and delivered to plaintiff’s wife; or that, upon her failure to pay such $500, the stock be sold and any balance remaining after paying such sum to the defendant should be paid over to the plaintiff’s wife. No appeal was. taken from such judgment, and the plaintiff in that action paid the sum of $500, with interest, to the defendant, pursuant to the direction of such judgment, and the stock was transferred to the plaintiff’s wife.

It will thus be seen that by such judgment it was determined that the plaintiff’s contention in respect to the transaction of September third with the defendant Smallwood and the effect thereof was correct, to wit, that the stock was pledged as security for the payment of $500, and was not sold to the defendant Smallwood or the bank, as claimed by the defendant, either absolutely or conditionally.

[80]*80That being the transaction, it is apparent that neither tlie defendant nor the bank were in any manner injured by the concededly false statement contained in the affidavit made by the plaintiff above referred to, in which he stated that he had authority to pledge the stock for his wife’s indebtedness and the amount of money which he received in addition thereto, aqd such right or authority has never been questioned either by the plaintiff or his wife; but he had no authority to sell the stock, and he so testified in the equity action. In other words, as found by the judgment, the transaction was a pledge of the stock, and concededly the plaintiff had a riglit to make such pledge. Therefore, no damage resulted to the defendant or the bank by reason of the false statement contained in plaintiff’s affidavit, because they received exactly what they bargained for, to wit, the stock as a pledge to secure the payment of the money loaned to the plaintiff and his wife.

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Bluebook (online)
86 A.D. 76, 83 N.Y.S. 415, 1903 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-smallwood-nyappdiv-1903.