Chandler v. Blanke Tea & Coffee Co.

165 S.W. 819, 183 Mo. App. 91, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 458
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 165 S.W. 819 (Chandler v. Blanke Tea & Coffee Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandler v. Blanke Tea & Coffee Co., 165 S.W. 819, 183 Mo. App. 91, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 458 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

This is an action by plaintiff, respondent here, to recover from defendant the value [94]*94of certain shares of stock and dividends alleged to have accrued thereon, it being charged that defendant, refusing to transfer the stock to plaintiff, was liable in damages for conversion.

Alleging ownership of the stock in June, 1911, and demand for the transfer and refusal of the company to make the transfer, and that since the purchase of the stock by him dividends had accrued to the amount of $600, which defendant had refused to pay over to him on demand, plaintiff asked judgment for $5000 with interest and costs.

The answer avers that this certificate for forty shares was issued to Parchman in October, 1910, and cotemporaneous with and as part of a certain contract for sale of defendant’s products by Parchman, and-that by the terms of the contract it was, among other things, provided that Parchman would purchase and pay for and own and hold these forty shares during the life of the contract, which was to run for three years; that prior to entering upon this contract with Parchman and the issue of the stock to him, defendant had called upon Parchman to furnish references as to his financial and commercial capability of carrying out the contract; that Parchman had referred defendant to Chandler, the plaintiff, and to one Stovall, and that defendant thereupon entered into the contract with Parchman and issued the stock certificate to him at par, that is, $100 per share; that he had paid for all of it, with the exception of $450, which he still owes, and that Parchman had contracted a further indebtedness to defendant for merchandise consigned to him in the amount of $980.40, a total indebtedness to defendant of $1430.44; that a dividend was declared on the stock in February, 1911, amounting to $54.65, which' was passed to the credit of Parchman, and that Parch-man now owes a balance of $1375.79, defendant'claiming a lien against this stock for this under its by-laws. It is further charged that Stovall, conspiring with [95]*95Parchman to defraud defendant out of the indebtedness above mentioned, and Stovall having full knowledge thereof, Parchman had transferred the stock to Stovall, who made a written demand on defendant to transfer, the stock to him; that defendant had notified Stovall of the indebtedness above mentioned and that the stock would only be transferred on the books of the company when that indebtedness was discharged; that Parchman and Stovall, further conspiring to defraud defendant of this money, transferred the stock to Chandler, who it is charged, had' full knowledge of the indebtedness and of all the facts and circumstances above mentioned, and that he, with Stovall and Parch-man, had conspired and are now conspiring by means of this suit to defraud defendant out of the indebtedness. It is further alleged that Parchman is insolvent and that the only way defendant can receive the indebtedness above mentioned is by the enforcement of its lien upon the stock which it now asserts. It is further averred that neither Chandler nor Stovall are innocent purchasers of the stock for value and that they have no financial interest in it whatever, except as the agents of Parchman in the carrying out of the conspiracy above mentioned. Finally defendant avers that it stands ready and willing at all times and has so notified Parchman, Stovall and Chandler that it would transfer the certificate of stock to whomsoever either might direct upon the payment to it of the indebtedness of $1375.79 above mentioned; and it tenders in its answer, upon the payment of that indebtedness, to transfer the stock upon its books in accordance with the law.

The reply was a general denial.

The trial was before the court, a jury being waived.

It appears that defendant had issued to one Edgar L. Parchman a certificate for forty shares of its common stock, the certificate reciting that Parchman [96]*96“is entitled to forty shares of the common capital stock of the C. P. Blanke Tea & Coffee Company, transferable only upon the books of the company in person or by attorney, in accordance with the by-laws of the company, upon surrender of this certificate properly indorsed.” It also appeared that Parchman had indorsed the certificate in blank, selling the stock and delivering the certificate to one Stovall, an attorney; that Mr. Stovall, desiring to sell, had placed the certificate in the hands of Messrs. Williams, attorneys in St. Louis, to sell, and had caused the certificate to be presented by these gentlemen to defendant, asking that it issue a new one in the name of Stovall. This the defendant declined to do unless the lien it claimed was paid off. Afterwards Mr. Stovall, the certificate still being in the hands of Messrs. Williams, sold the stock to Chandler, advised Messrs. Williams to that effect and directed that they hold the certificate for plaintiff, Chandler. This it appears they agreed to do, and they, presenting it to defendant for transfer in favor of Chandler, transfer was refused unless the defendant company was paid the moneys which it claimed the original owner Parchman owed it, both on account of purchase of this stock and on the indebtedness growing out of his other transaction with defendant.

The by-laws themselves were not in evidence but it was admitted “that the by-laws of the company provide that the stock of the company is only transferable upon the surrender of the certificate for cancellation on the books and all debts of the holder have been paid. ’ ’

There was testimony on the part of plaintiff to the effect that after considerable negotiation between him and Mr. Stovall, which had run along for some thirty days, looking to the purchase of this certificate by plaintiff from Stovall, they had finally agreed upon $3250 as the price, of which plaintiff paid $750 in cash and gave a note running twelve months for the bal[97]*97anee, $2500, the latter not paid at the time of the trial and not then due.

Without going into the evidence in detail, it is sufficient to state that there was evidence for plaintiff tending to show that he was an innocent purchaser for value of this certificate of stock without notice oi knowledge either of the by-laws of defendant, or of any indebtedness from Parchman to defendant, and without knowledge of the fact that a transfer had been refused to Stovall or his attorney before plaintiff purchased the stock from Stovall. So that the point made by learned counsel for appellant, that its demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained because of a total failure of evidence, is not well taken. During the course of the introduction of the evidence on the part of plaintiff, the learned trial court said that it seemed to him that the issue in the case is whether or not plaintiff had notice of the claim of defendant against Parchman and of the by-law giving defendant a lien on the stock; that this is the only issue in the case. That was assented to by counsel. Even without their assent, it is very clear that that is the issue and the only one. Whether the purchase by plaintiff was in good faith and for value, and without notice of the by-law or claim of defendant to a lien, was a question of fact, its determination resting with the trial court and its finding, if supported by substantial evidence, as we find it was, concludes us as an appellate court. This covers the first assignment of error by the learned counsel for appellant, that assignment based on the refusal of the court to give an instruction in the nature of a demurrer.

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W. 819, 183 Mo. App. 91, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-blanke-tea-coffee-co-moctapp-1914.