Commercial Bank of Spanish Fork v. Spanish Fork South Irr. Co.

152 P.2d 547, 107 Utah 279, 1944 Utah LEXIS 105
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1944
DocketNo. 6718.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 152 P.2d 547 (Commercial Bank of Spanish Fork v. Spanish Fork South Irr. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Bank of Spanish Fork v. Spanish Fork South Irr. Co., 152 P.2d 547, 107 Utah 279, 1944 Utah LEXIS 105 (Utah 1944).

Opinion

*282 HENDERSON, District Judge.

The Spanish Fork South Irrigation Company, defendant and appellant, perfected this appeal from a judgment in the amount of $525 rendered against defendant and in favor of the Commercial Bank of Spanish Fork, plaintiff and respondent, by the District Court of Utah County, sitting without a jury.

The material facts established by the pleadings and the evidence introduced at the trial may be summarized as follows:

The defendant is a mutual irrigation company, incorporated under the laws of this state. Its shares of stock, which had all been issued and were outstanding prior to any of the times herein mentioned, entitled the holders thereof to designated amounts of water furnished through its irrigation system. The defendant regularly levied annual assessments against the outstanding stock.

At some time prior to June 16,1923, one Perry A. Thomas, who was then the owner of ten and one-half shares of stock in the defendant company, evidenced by certificate No. 534, pledged the same to one Charles Wesley Nilson as security for money loaned to him by said Charles Wesley Nilson.

On or about June 16, 1923, and while said shares of stock were still pledged to Charles Wesley Nilson, Perry A. Thomas, who was then the president of the defendant company, falsely represented to its secretary that certificate No. 534 was lost, and upon such representation and his furnishing an indemnity bond the defendant issued to Perry A. Thomas certificate No. 1176 for ten and one-half shares of stock in lieu of certificate No. 534. The new certificate, which was signed by Perry A. Thomas as president and by the defendant’s secretary, was in the usual form of certificates issued by defendant, and nothing was shown thereon to indicate that it was a duplicate which has been issued in lieu of another certificate.

On or about December 15, 1925, notwithstanding Charles Wesley Nilson, as pledgee, still held certificate No. 534, *283 Perry A. Thomas purported to pledge ten and one-half shares of stock in defendant’s company to the First National Bank of Spanish Fork as security for a loan made to him by said bank, and assigned and delivered to said bank, as pledgee, certificate No. 1176. Thereafter, in the latter part of June or the first part of July, 1930’, the First National Bank of Spanish Fork transferred to plaintiff the note evidencing said loan together with certificate No. 1176 pledged to secure the same. The record sustains plaintiff’s contention that at the time it acquired! certificate No. 1176 from the First National Bank it became a bona fide holder thereof, as pledgee for value and without notice as to any irregularity in its issuance.

In July, 1927, the loan to Charles Wesley Nilson was paid from proceeds of a loan made to Perry A. Thomas by the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley. As part of the security for this loan the Federal Lank Bank of Berkeley obtained from Perry A. Thomas a pledge of the shares of stock represented by certificate No. 534 together with a pledge of ten additional shares of stock of defendant company also owned by Perry A. Thomas and represented by certificate No. 471. The Federal Land Bank of Berkeley thereupon surrendered certificates No. 534 and No. 471 to the defendant in exchange for the issuance to it of certificate No. 1277 for twenty and one-half shares of stock.

As a result of subsequent transactions in which plaintiff participated, but which need not be herein detailed, DeMar Beck and Reed C. Beck became the owners of the twenty and one-half shares of stock pledged to the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley and of the land upon which the water-right, represented by said stock, had been used subject to a pledge thereof in favor of the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley. Perry A. Thomas had been in possession of this land until January 31, 1934, and had used thereon the water to which he was entitled under the shares of stock originally evidenced by certificate No. 534 and had paid the annual assessments levied against said stock. DeMar Beck and Reed C. Beck continued to do likewise after they had pur *284 chased and taken possession of the land on January 1, 1984. No water had been used nor any assessments paid by virtue of shares of stock purported to be represented by the duplicate certificate No. 1176.

Although the plaintiff had participated in the transactions involving the transfer of the shares of stock represented by certificate No. 584, the trial court found that plaintiff had no knowledge of information as to the irregular issuance of certificate No. 1176 in lieu of certificate No. 534, until some time during the month of June, 1936. The president of the plaintiff bank testified that it was in the spring of 1936 when he learned, for the first time, that certificate No. 1176 was a duplicate issued in lieu of certificate No. 534. The president of the defendant company testified that he had informed the president of the plaintiff, some time in 1930, that certificate No. 1176 had been improperly issued. The trial court resolved this conflict in the evidence in favor of the plaintiff, and its determination in this respect will not be disturbed.

Upon learning of the irregularity in the issuance of certificate No. 1176 plaintiff proceeded to obtain from Perry A. Thomas the execution of a written instrument dated August 15, 1936, and designated as “Assignment and Bill of Sale,” under the terms of which Perry A. Thomas, in consideration of the partial payment of sums due to plaintiff, assigned to plaintiff all of his “right, title, interest, and equity in or claim upon said certificate No. 1176 for lO^ shares of water stock in the Spanish Fork South Irrigation Company, with full rights and power to transfer and demand the transfer of the same on the books of the corporation, and to require the delivery of and take and use any and all water represented by said water stock.”

Thereafter, on October 13, 1936, plaintiff commenced mandamus proceedings in the District Court of Utah County to compel defendant to issue to plaintiff a new certificate in lieu of certificate No. 1176. The Federal Land Bank of Berkeley and DeMar Beck and Reed C. Beck were inter- *285 pleaded as parties defendant. The file in this case was introduced and received in evidence in the present case. The District Court found, in the mandamus suit, that DeMar Beck and Reed C. Beck, as owners, and the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley, as pledgee, were bona fide holders for value of the ten and one-half shares of stock originally evidenced by Certificate No. 584, and, on May 3, 1939, rendered judgment dismissing the mandamus proceedings and adjudging that the rights of DeMar Beck and Reed C. Beck and the Federal Land Bank of Berkeley, under the certificates held by them, were superior to the rights of plaintiff.

On April 1, 1939, before the mandamus proceedings were finally determined, plaintiff brought the present action. The trial court entered judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendant for the sum of $525, which is the amount found to be the value of ten and one-half shares of defendant’s stock, both at the time plaintiff received certificate No. 1176 from the First National Bank of Spanish Fork and at the time plaintiff made a demand upon defendant for the issuance of a new certificate in lieu thereof.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 P.2d 547, 107 Utah 279, 1944 Utah LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-bank-of-spanish-fork-v-spanish-fork-south-irr-co-utah-1944.