Colton v. Oakland Bank of Savings

70 P. 225, 137 Cal. 376, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 567
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1902
DocketS.F. No. 2157.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 70 P. 225 (Colton v. Oakland Bank of Savings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colton v. Oakland Bank of Savings, 70 P. 225, 137 Cal. 376, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 567 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

BEATTY, C. J.

This is an action by the assignee of A. W. Bowman, an insolvent debtor, to recover $20,000, the alleged value of one hundred and twenty shares'of the capital stock of The Bank of California. The nature of the controversy will be sufficiently disclosed by a brief statement of some of the leading facts:—

On the 15th of November, 1881, N. J. Brittan was the owner of the stock in question, which stood in his name on the books of the corporation,, and was evidenced by certificate No. 17. On that day he indorsed the certificate in blank and delivered it to Bowman as a pledge to secure advances which Bowman at the same time agreed to make to the. extent of $15,000. On the 1st of December, 1881, Bowman delivered this certificate of stock to the defendant the Oakland Bank of Savings as a pledge to secure his overdraft account with that bank. Between December, 1881, and the fifteenth day of October, 1884, Bowman made certain advances to Brittan which were fully repaid prior to the last-named date, and during the same time Bowman’s overdraft account with the defendant bank exceeded the value of said stock. On October 15, 1884, the defendant bank surrendered said certificate of stock No. 17 to The Bank of California and procured the issuance to itself of a new certificate for the same one hundred and twenty shares of stock. Two days later Brittan notified the Oakland bank of the facts above stated,, regarding his ownership of the stock, of its pledge to Bowman, and of the full payment of the advances secured by the pledge. The Oakland hank, however, refused his demand for a return of the stock, upon the ground that they had taken it in good faith from the apparent owner and held it as a pledge to secure a debt exceeding its value. Shortly afterwards, on the petition of his creditors, Bowman was adjudged an insolvent, and upon the appointment of his assignee the claim of Brit-tan for the value of said one hundred and twenty shares of stock was presented as a demand against the insolvent estate. As such it was duly allowed for the full sum of $20,000, and subsequently the same dividends were paid thereon as upon the claims of other creditors. On or about the 25th of August, 1885, and after Bowman’s assignment in insolvency, the Oakland bank, without any order of court, and without demand *378 or notice, sold at auction said one hundred and twenty shares of stock for $18,941—their full value—and credited that amount to Bowman’s overdraft account, leaving a balance of more than two thousand dollars unpaid.

In May, 1887, the Oakland bank assigned to Chickering all its then existing demands and claims against Bowman and his estate, and in July, 1888, Bowman’s assignee in insolvency, predecessor of the plaintiff! herein, made a tender to the defendant bank of the sum of ten dollars, in payment of any balance then due from Bowman, and demanded a return of said one hundred and twenty shares of pledged stock. This tender was declined and the demand refused, and thereupon this action was commenced on August 16, 1888.

The cause was tried by the court, judgment given for the defendant, and a motion for new trial overruled. Prom the judgment and order the plaintiff appeals. ■

In order to a proper consideration of the real merits of the case, it will be convenient in the first place to dispose of some irrelevant matters that have been brought into it. Besides the facts above stated, the complaint contains a number of allegations to the effect that the defendant bank was not acting in good faith when it took the stock as a pledge to secure Bowman’s debt—the substance of the charge being that it had notice of facts at least sufficient to put it upon inquiry, which, if made, would have disclosed the fact that the stock was the property of Brittan, and that Bowman had no right to pledge it for more than the small amount of Brittan’s indebtedness to him. In support of these allegations evidence was offered at the trial, and in various ways there seems to have been an effort to re-enforce the claim of plaintiff by calling to its aid the supposed claims of Brittan against the bank arising out of its transactions with Bowman in relation to this stock.

It is not entirely clear from the argument of counsel for appellant to what extent he relies in support of his appeal upon this feature of the case and the rulings of the superior court relating to it; for while he concedes in two passages of his closing brief that “ Brittan’s rights and interests are not involved in the case,” he yet in other parts of his argument insists upon assignments of error which upon this concession appear to be wholly unsupported. In view of this uncertainty as to appellant’s position, we deem it proper to say that in our *379 opinion the rights of Brittan against the bank, whatever they may have been, have no place in this controversy. The plaintiff is not Brittan’s assignee, and his only claim of title to the stock is wholly dependent on the assumption that Bowman converted it by pledging Brittan’s title to the bank. Upon this ground alone could Brittan claim the value of the stock from Bowman’s assignee, and the allowance of that claim and payment of dividends to Brittan estop him to deny that his title passed by the conversion. Any claim that Brittan’s title was not effectively pledged by Bowman to the bank is therefore entirely inconsistent with the only possible right of this plaintiff to recover in the present action. The right of Bowman’s assignee to recover the value of the stock is precisely the same right that Bowman himself would have had if, after pledging the stock to secure his own indebtedness, he had, on Brittan’s demand, paid him its full value, and Brit-tan’s rights are the same as they would have been after demanding and accepting such value.

When personal property has been converted, the owner by accepting its value, on suing and recovering its value from the trespasser, passes the title to him, and so in this case the same act that invested plaintiff with the only title he has put an end to any claim of title in Brittan. The supposed right of Brittan as against the Oakland bank being thus eliminated from the case, we have only to consider the rights of Bowman’s assignee arising out of a valid pledge by Bowman to the bank of the whole property in the stock; and those rights cannot possibly be greater than Bowman’s own rights would have been if the stock which he pledged had been rightfully as well as apparently his own property, and he were suing in his own name for its value.

We assume that the bank was guilty of a conversion of the stock by selling its pledge without notice, and that plaintiff is entitled to recover for the benefit of Bowman’s creditors whatever damages resulted from such conversion. The superior court found, and found correctly, that in fact no damages resulted from the sale. Bowman’s debt to the bank on his overdraft account amounted at the date of the sale to more than $21,000. It is not claimed that the stock was ever worth more than $20,000, and the proof is, that $18,941—the price for which it was sold—was all that it was worth. This full *380 value of the stock was immediately credited on Bowman’s overdraft account, so that he lost nothing and the bank gained nothing in consequence of the technical conversion upon which this action is founded.

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Bluebook (online)
70 P. 225, 137 Cal. 376, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colton-v-oakland-bank-of-savings-cal-1902.