Commercial National Bank v. National Surety Co.

181 N.E. 92, 259 N.Y. 181, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 924
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 10, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 181 N.E. 92 (Commercial National Bank v. National Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial National Bank v. National Surety Co., 181 N.E. 92, 259 N.Y. 181, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 924 (N.Y. 1932).

Opinions

Hubbs, J.

The sole question involved in this case is whether the plaintiff, a national bank acting as trustee, is entitled to recover the value of a stock dividend issued *184 upon fifty shares of the common stock of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company.

The solution of that question requires an examination of the facts involved in the transactions between the parties.

In November, 1919, plaintiff loaned $50,000 to N. S. Bowles, and received as collateral security certificates of stock in a number of different corporations. The certificates had been indorsed in blank by the various owners' from whom they had been stolen. Some of the owners were insured by the National Surety Company; others by London Lloyd. The insurance companies paid the loss to the various owners of the stock and became subrogated to their rights. They notified the different companies which had issued the stock of the loss of the certificates and also notified the transfer agents. Bowles, who had obtained the loan from the plaintiff by means of the fraudulent use of the stock certificates, did not pay the loan.

Among the stock certificates secured by the plaintiff from Bowles was one for fifty shares of class B, common stock, of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. The plaintiff on February 19th, 1920, notified the Reynolds Company and its transfer agent, the Equitable Trust Company, that it held the same and-was entitled to the dividends thereon. The certificate had been issued to Bamberger Brothers who owned it at the time it was lost or stolen. Bamberger Brothers was insured by the National Surety Company, defendant. It and the other insurance companies interested commenced replevin actions against plaintiff to recover possession of the shares of stock which it had received as collateral from Bowles. During the pendency of those actions, the plaintiff was unable to have the stock transferred to its name.

The plaintiff, in making the loan to Bowles, acted in good faith and without notice of any claim of third parties to any of the stock taken by it as collateral. It was, *185 therefore, an innocent pledgee holder for value and entitled to dividends issued on the stock which it held.

Negotiations were carried on by the attorneys for the various parties to the replevin actions for the purpose of reaching some kind of an adjustment. During those negotiations, a valuation was made of the different shares of stock. They were valued at $68,000 at the market price. The fifty shares of Reynolds stock was valued at $23,000. On October 28th, 1920, an arrangement was entered into between the plaintiff and attorneys for the insurance companies by which it was agreed that • the stock should be sold at auction; that if it was sold for less than $50,000 it should be bid in by the plaintiff and resold by it on the market. From the sum received, less expenses, the plaintiff should retain $44,000 and pay over the balance to the other parties to the agreement.

The record owners of the stocks withdrew the notices to the transfer agents and the stocks were transferred to an officer of the plaintiff bank after the auction sale. The stocks were sold at public auction to the plaintiff for $43,250, which was appropriated by it. The principal reason why the stocks sold for less than expected under the original valuation was that the Reynolds Tobacco Company had reduced the par value of its class B, common stock, from $100 to $25 and declared a stock dividend of 200 per cent. Two hundred shares of the $25 common stock were issued to plaintiff in place of the 50 shares of old $100 par common, and the stock dividend of 400 shares of new $25 par common was issued to Bamberger Brothers, the record owner of the original 50 shares.

The market value of the new stock was about $39 per share, while the market value of the old stock was, when valued during the negotiations, $460 per share. The effect was that the value of the 200 shares of $25 par value stock received by plaintiff in exchange for the 50 shares of old $100 par value stock was about $15,000 less than the 50 shares had been figured at.

*186 On October 28, 1920, when the agreement was entered into between the attorneys for the various parties, none of them knew that the Reynolds Company had declared a stock dividend. Nothing is said in the agreement about dividends on the stock. The plaintiff did not know about the stock dividend until after it had bid in the stock at the public auction.

It is clear that when the agreement of October 28th was entered into, the attorneys who entered into it for their clients had in mind the stocks actually pledged to plaintiff which included the 50 shares of class B, common stock of $100 par value issued by the Reynolds Tobacco Company, which had been valued during the negotiations at $460 a share, or $23,000 for the 50 shares. They had no knowledge that the value-of the stock had been reduced by a 200 per cent stock dividend. Because of the fall in the market of stocks and the issue of the stock dividend by the Reynolds Company, the stock sold for $43,250 instead of $63,000, the value at which they had been appraised during the negotiations. Instead of the insurance companies realizing $19,000 from the sale, the plaintiff failed to receive the full sum of $44,000 which it was entitled to under the agreement.

When the plaintiff was informed after the auction sale of the stock dividend which had been declared by the Reynolds Company and that such dividend of 400 shares had been issued to Bamberger Brothers, the holder of record, it demanded such stock dividend by letter dated November 16, 1920, and the demand was refused.

The position of the plaintiff is that under the terms of the agreement, it became a trustee and that as trustee it is entitled to receive the stock dividend. We believe it is right in such contention. At the date of the agreement it held the stocks as a bona fide pledgee for value. The equity therein over and above its claim, if any, belonged to the insurance companies as assignees of the record owners. By the agreement it waived all of its *187 claim over $44,000 and agreed to bid in the stock if it sold for less than $50,000, to resell it and divide the proceeds over and above the $44,000 due it. Such agreement placed upon plaintiff the duty to exercise the care and obligations of a trustee and made it responsible to the other parties to the agreement for the faithful performance of "such duties. It could not give away a part of the securities or permit the former record holder of the Reynolds stock to appropriate the stock dividend without taking action to protect its rights as- trustee for the benefit of the other parties to the agreement.

The contention of the defendants is that plaintiff’s rights as pledgee have been abrogated by the agreement of October 28th. Concededly, the plaintiff was pledgee of the stock for a valuable consideration without notice under a bona fide transaction. The defendants attempted to deprive the plaintiff of the stock by the replevin actions. While the litigation was pending, the parties reached an agreement by which the plaintiff waived its interest to all sums above $44,000. It did not, however, give up its rights as a bona fide pledgee.

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Bluebook (online)
181 N.E. 92, 259 N.Y. 181, 1932 N.Y. LEXIS 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-national-bank-v-national-surety-co-ny-1932.