Carrington v. Turner

61 A. 324, 101 Md. 437, 1905 Md. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 20, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 61 A. 324 (Carrington v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carrington v. Turner, 61 A. 324, 101 Md. 437, 1905 Md. LEXIS 99 (Md. 1905).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant sued the appellee in the Superior Court of Baltimore City to recover a balance claimed to be due upon a demand note drawn by the appellee to the order of The City Trust and Banking Company and by it endorsed. The ap-" pellee as defendant pleaded the general issue pleas and upon a trial of the issue joined thereon the verdict and judgment were in his favor and the plaintiff appealed.

The note in controversy appears in the record and is in the form-of what is commonly known in banking circles as a collateral note. It is dated October 12th, 1900, and is for $1,875, payable bn demand with interest from date, and states on its face that-there is deposited with it' as collateral security 150 shares of stock of the Security Fire Insurance Company. It contains the usual authority to the payee or its president or treasurer to sell the collateral on the non-payment of the note and to use, transfer or hypothecate it provided an equal amount of the same stock be returned on the payment of the note., There appears on the back of the note the endorsement of the payee and a credit as of May 12th, 1903, of $1,078.13 leaving a balance, alter a proper adjustment of in *439 terest, of $ i ,077.50 still due for the recovery of which this suit was instituted.

The substantial defense to the suit was that the trust company, the payee named in the note, had accepted a transfer of the 150 shares of stock in payment and satisfaction of the note.

There is evidence in the record tending to show the following facts. In November, 1899, the appellee, Turner, who was then in business for himself as an insurance broker, was sent for by Charles O’Donnell Lee, the president of the trust company and informed that that company was anxious to organize a local fire insurance company and was asked if he would accept the management of the insurance company about to be formed. After taking some time for reflection Turner agreed to accept the management of the insurance company if he were not called on to subscribe for too much of its stock, as he had not the money to take much of it. He finally agreed to take first 100 and afterwards 50 more shares, making 150 shares in all of the stock, upon the assurance of Mr. Lee that the trust company would carry the stock for him and would later on reduce his holdings of it down to 50 shares, and he was made manager of the company which was organized under the name of The Security Fire Insurance Company and began business about March 1st, 1900. Mr. Lee was president of both the trust company and the insurance company and the majority of the active directors of the latter company were also directors of the former one and the stock of the insurance company was issued at the office of the trust company.

On October 12th, 1900, Turner signed the note, on which the suit was brought, for the subscription price of the 150 shares of stock, but he never in fact received from the trust company or paid to the insurance company the $1,875, called for in the note or personally paid for the stock nor was the certificate for it ever delivered to or shown to him until the day he endorsed it over to the trust company as hereinafter mentioned. The note was drawn up by Mr. Kohler, the secretary and treasurer of the trust company, who retained it after it had been signed by Turner.

*440 In February, 1901, the majority of the stock of the insurance company, including the shares held by Lee and Kohler and by the five directors of the trust company, was sold to J. Ramsay Barry an active insurance man who at once assumed control of the company’s business. Turner strongly complained to Lee and Kohler that he had been unfairly dealt with in being induced to give up his private business to take charge of the insurance company and then by the sale of the company left high and dry with 150 shares of its stock on his hands. Lee and Kohler thereupon agreed that the Trust Company would take the 150 shares of insurance stock off Turner’s hands in payment of his note and hold it as an investment and return him the note. Kohler then produced the certificate for the 150 shares which was in the name of Turner and Lee requested Turner to endorse it, which he did by affixing. his name to the blank assignment printed on its back. He was then told that he was released and Kohler promised to return him his note in a few days as soon as it had been fixed upon the books, but he never did return it although he frequently promised to do so. No demand was ever made on Turner for payment of the note or interest on it until December, 1902, nearly two years after he had transferred the stock in payment as he supposed of the note. He replied to the demand for payment that he had already paid the note by the transfer of the stock, and he went to see Kohler about it who assured him that he was relieved of his obligation and again promised to return his note.

After the assignment of the stock by Turner to the Trust Company it caused the stock to be transferred into the name of its brokers, Stewart Lee & Co., and subsequently into the name of its treasurer and borrowed money on it as collateral and never had it retransferred into the name of Turner. The certificate for the stock when pledged to the appellant for the $10,000 loaned by him to the Trust Company still stood in the treasurer’s name.

There was also evidence tending to show that Lee and Kohler currently managed all of the business of the Trust *441 Company except that which was referred to the board of directors who met only once a month. Neither Lee nor Kohler were put upon the stand by the appellant to contradict the evidence already referred to or to give their version of the transactions with Turner in reference to the note and the stock.

On April 18th, 1903, Turner’s note, then more than two years old, with the 150 shares of the Fire Insurance Company’s stock attached was pledged, along with other securities, by the Trust Company which was then hard pressed for money to the appellant Carrington as collateral for a loan of $10,000 made to it by him on that date. At the trial of the case in the Court below the appellant who had thus acquired the note contended that he was entitled to be treated as a bona fide holder of it for value unaffected by any equities that might exist between the original parties to it, but on his brief and in his argument in this Court he voluntarily abandoned that contention and stated his willingness to assume that he took the note as a dishonored commercial instrument, subject to any equities, if such there were, between the original parties to it. His right to recover on the note must therefore be determined by the same tests which would be applicable to the trust company if it were the plaintiff in the case.

There are four exceptions in the record, three to rulings on the admissibility of testimony and one to the action of the Court below upon the prayers. The first three exceptions were taken to the admission of the testimony of the appellee as to the circumstances of the giving of the note and the subsequent alleged acceptance by the trust company through its president and secretary and treasurer of the insurance company’s stock in satisfaction of the note. The abandonment by the appellant of the contention that he was entitled to be treated as a

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Bluebook (online)
61 A. 324, 101 Md. 437, 1905 Md. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carrington-v-turner-md-1905.