Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Turner

44 N.W. 174, 79 Mich. 133, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 910
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 44 N.W. 174 (Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Turner, 44 N.W. 174, 79 Mich. 133, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 910 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Morse, J.

February 28, 1885, the defendant Sophie S. Turner, wife of the defendant James M. Turner, commenced suit against complainant in the circuit- court for the county of Ingham to recover the amount of 290 [134]*134coupons, with interest, belonging to, but detached from, bonds of the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company. This suit is instituted to enjoin said suit of Sophie S. Turner, and for the surrender of said coupons to the complainant for cancellation, and the discharge of the mortgage securing the same, on the ground that the coupons have been paid. The claim of complainant, as set forth in its bill of complaint, is substantially as follows:

1. That it is incorporated under the laws of Michigan, Indiana, and Illinois, by consolidation of different railroads, including the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company.

2. That before the consolidation the last-named company issued its bonds to the amount of §1,250,000, under date of March 1, 1875, with interest coupons attached for half-yearly interest, at 7 per cent, per annum, secured by first mortgage on the road.

3. That Elijah W. Meddaugh is the trustee in the mortgage, succeeding John E. Miller, the original trustee. These first three propositions are admitted by the answer.

4. That complainant, since its organization, has acquired and canceled all the bonds and coupons, except those involved in this suit.

5. That on August 16, 1879, Joseph Hickson purchased of W. H. Vanderbilt bonds, including their unpaid coupons, of the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company, to the amount of §1,100,000, the face value of the bonds; that these bonds, and ¿11 their unpaid coupons, had been previously sold to Vanderbilt by James M. Turner, the defendant; that, when delivery of the bonds and coupons by Vanderbilt to Hickson was made, Turner was present, and that the bonds and coupons were only partly examined at the time; that there were some loose coupons, and other coupons of similar date were attached to the bonds, and that, an explanation of this being asked, Turner said that all coupons not attached to the bonds or with the loose coupons would be found in the books of paid and canceled coupons of the company; that, in consequence of this assurance, the coupons were not counted or further examined, but the consideration money was paid by Hickson to Vanderbilt, to wit, §540,-[135]*135000, and delivery of the bonds and coupons accepted as in accordance with their agreement.

6. That, within a few days after the delivery of the bonds and coupons to Hickson, they were examined and counted, when it was found that 290 of the past-due coupons of the bonds delivered, amounting to $10,150, were missing, of which notice was immediately given to Vanderbilt.

7. That in September, 1880, these coupons were presented by Eussell Sage to the complainant, and payment demanded; that Sage finally became satisfied that the coupons belonged to the bonds bought of Vanderbilt by Hickson, and abandoned the claim; that Vanderbilt was at onc,e informed by the complainant of the holding of the coupons by Sage, and he assux-ed complainant that he (Vanderbilt) would procure and deliver them to it.

8. That complainant relied on this assurance, and heard nothing of the coupons until January, 1885, when it learned that Turner contemplated bringing suit; that xxeither Turner nor his wife ever demanded payment of said coupons of complainant, nor was it aware that they, or either of them, had them, or claimed to own them, until as above stated.

9. Sets up the commencement of suit by Sopbie S.. Turner.

10. That in purchasing the bonds and coupons of' Vanderbilt, Hickson was acting fox- the pi’omotex’s of the-complainant coi’poration, and that after complainant’s oi’ganization, in consideration of the payment to him of the sum paid to Vanderbilt for the bonds and coupons, Hickson assigned and transferred to the complainant all the bonds and coupons thus acquired by him, including-his legal and equitable right to the coupons involved in this suit.

11. That complainant requested the trustee in the mortgage to dischai’ge it of i'ecord, which he declined to-do because of the pending claim on these coupons.

It is also charged by the complainant in its bill that Turner formerly held and owned the bonds to which said coupons belonged; that, while so owning them, he pledged or deposited them, with .other bonds and coupons of said issue, with Eussell Sage, as security; that, while they were in the possession of Sage, Turner sold them to Vander-[136]*136bilt, with the other bonds and coupons subsequently sold and delivered by Vanderbilt to Hickson, but the interest coupons in this suit were by mistake not withdrawn by Turner from Sage, and not delivered to Vanderbilt, although' paid for' by him; that it was supposed and intended by both Vanderbilt and Turner that they were delivered; that Turner afterwards received the coupons from Sage, but instead of delivering them to Vanderbilt, as he should have done, he conceived the idea of presenting them as a claim against complainant, and in pursuance of this dishonest purpose. passed them over to his wife, that she might collect them in her name, and appear as a good-faith purchaser of said coupons.

The defendants James M. and' Sophie S. Turner answered, neither admitting nor denying the fourth allegation of complainant's bill. They deny that Hickson purchased any of the coupons involved in this suit, or that James M. Turner had previously sold or agreed to sell any of them to Vanderbilt, or that he ever acquired them in any way. And Sophie S. Turner says she knows nothing of James M. Turner being present when the bonds and coupons were purchased by Hickson of Vanderbilt.

Turner answers, denying that he was present when such bonds and coupons were turned over to Hickson, or wit-messed the same, though he was present when such delivery was agreed upon. But, answering more fully in this ibehalf, he says the purchase of said bonds from said Vanderbilt by said Hickson embraced also, for the same consideration or price, the purchase by said Hickson of said Vanderbilt of a large amount of the capital stock of ’said (Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company, to wit, 7,000 ■shares of such stock, of $100 each, being seven-tenths of ¡all the stock of said company, which' he, said Vanderbilt, had for sometime held and owned, and which had [137]*137given him a controlling interest in .said company and said railroad, and which he, said Hickson, desired to purchase or acquire for the express purpose of controlling the affairs of said company and said railroad.

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Related

Anderson v. Groesbeck
26 Colo. 3 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1899)
Wellman v. Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway Co.
47 N.W. 489 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.W. 174, 79 Mich. 133, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-grand-trunk-railway-co-v-turner-mich-1889.