Conant, Ellis & Co. v. Reed

1 Ohio St. (N.S.) 298
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio St. (N.S.) 298 (Conant, Ellis & Co. v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conant, Ellis & Co. v. Reed, 1 Ohio St. (N.S.) 298 (Ohio 1853).

Opinion

Thurman, J.

This is a bill originally filed by Conant, Ellis & Co., to which Joshua Baldwin and Sarah Green, administratrix of Jacob Green, were subsequently added as parties complainant. The object of the bill, so far as Conant, Ellis & Co. are concerned, is to subject certain assets to the payment of a judgment recovered by’them against the defendant, Beed, while the relief sought by Baldwin and Green is a decree for the transfer to them of sixty shares of the capital stock of the Seneca County Bank, which they claim as assignees of Beed, and upon which the bank asserts a lien for the amount of Seed’s indebtedness to it. The bill is not filed under the statute controlling assignments made to prefer creditors, nor do the complainants now seek the same property. Conant, Ellis & Co. seem to have abandoned all claim to the bank stock; and, on the other hand, Baldwin and Green ask nothing in regard to the assets pursued by Conant, Ellis & Co.

As to the claim of Baldwin & Green, the facts, so far as it is necessary to state them in the view, we take of the case, are as follows i

[258]*258The defendant, Reed, being the owner of sixty shares of the capital stock of the Seneca Bank, on which sixty per cent., amounting to $3,600, had been paid by his written assignment of January 15, 1848, transferred the same to said Jacob Green and Joshua Baldwin, as collateral security for the payment of a note of $5,000, made by him, and them as his sureties to the Franklin Branch of the State Bank. The object of the assignment was to indemnify Green & Baldwin against loss ; and at the time of delivering it, Reed also delivered to them his certificate of stock. It is not pretended that the Seneca Bank had any notice of this *assignment until August 4, 1848. On that day, as Reed testifies, he informed the defendant Arnold, the cashier of the bank, that he had made the assignment; and he further swears that, with Arnold’s consent, he then transferred the stock to Baldwin & Green, on the transfer book of the bank. At the time of this transaction, Reed was a director of the bank, and largely indebted to it. The circumstances of the transfer are thus stated by him:

“ Sylvanus Arnold, cashier of the bank, stated to me that, in order to make up his report as cashier, it was necessary that some one or more of the directors or stockholders who were indebted to the bank should transfer their stock, in order that he might so state the liabilities of the directors and stockholders, that their liabilities should come within that section of the law requiring that they should not be liable as principals or indorsers to a certain, extent; and, in order to enable him to make up his report agreeably to law, he requested me to transfer my stock in a confidential manner. I then stated to him that I had then pledged and transferred my certificate of stock to Joshua Baldwin and Jacob Green, who had become liable for me as indorsers on a note previously discounted at the Franklin Branch Bank at Columbus, in the sum of |>5,000; that I would transfer the stock to these parties in accordance with an arrangement previously made with them, and declined transferring it to him, or any other person. This transfer was accepted by said Arnold, cashier of said bank. The said Arnold then produced the transfer-book, and the stock was transferred to these parties, he fully consenting to the assignment, and the transfer was made in the transfer-book and was left in the said bank.”

On cross-examination, the witness swears : Mr. Arnold requested me, as before stated, in order that he might be able to make up his report, to transfer the said stock to him; that it should be a confi[259]*259dential matter; that he would cut it out of the transfer-book. This suggestion I positively declined, and then stated the facts heretofore set forth of the transfer having been previously made to Green and Baldwin. I did not ^request him to place the same .among his private papers—this was a question coming directly from himself, when he made the suggestion of a transfer to himself— there was no understanding that any other disposition should be made of this transfer certificate, other than the transfer itself set forth.”

Tomb and Arnold, the president and cashier of the bank, have answered; and, by agreement, their answer is to be taken as the answer of the bank also. They deny that they, or the bank, had ■any notice of the assignment to Baldwin & Green before November 17, 1848. They also deny that said transfer of August 4 was ever consented to by the directors of the bank or a majoxfity of them, and assert it was not known to any of the directors, except Eeed who made it, until November 17,1848. They aver that it was a pretended tx-ansfer, made under the following circumstances : “ On the 15th of July, 1848, respondent Arnold had been chosen cashier of said bank, and had not become familiarly or fully acquainted with his duties as such cashier, nor of the true nature or extent of the liabilities of the directors thereof to said bank, either as the principal debtors or securities for others, or othex'wise; and being required by law to make report to the auditor of state early in August, 1848, and being anxious to obtain payment on notes and bills due to said bank, and especially those due from directors and stockholders, for the purpose of making as favorable a report as the facts would authorize, he called on said Eeed, who was then a director of said bank and lax’gely indebted thereto, and requested and urged him, said Eeed, to make payment of the whole or a part of his said liability; to which respondent Eeed replied to the re-' spondent Arnold, that he was about to make arrangements to pay all his debts, and particularly those due said bank, and agreed that if he failed to make such payments by the time said Arnold would be required to make out said report, that he, the said Eeed, in such event, would assign his stock in said bank to the said Arnold, to enable him to make such report, and that he, *said Arnold, should l'eassign the same upon receiving payment of the debts of said Eeed to said bank. That this arrangement was made prior to August, 1848, and shox’tly after the respondent Axmold assumed the duties [260]*260of cashier. That afterwards, on the 4th of August, 1848, the said. Reed having failed to make payment as aforesaid, for the pui’pose of enabling respondent Arnold, as such cashier, to make the report aforesaid, attempted to assign said sixty shares of stock to said Green & Baldwin, instead of making the same to said Arnold for-the use and benefit of said bank. That said Reed represented said Groen & Baldwin as his personal and confidential friends ; that he did not wish it to be made known to any one that such transfer had been made, and that he would shortly arrange his matters with said bank in a satisfactory manner. That, at the urgent request of said Reed, respondent Arnold, as such cashier, and not then being a director of said bank, consented thereto, and such pretended assignment was made on a blank taken from the transfer book of said bank, by filling up such blank; which blank, so filled up, at the instance and urgent and repeated request of said Reed, was, after being taken from such transfer book, placed by respondent Arnold among his own private papers in his pocket to be held by him, the. said respondent Arnold, in trust for said bank until the indebtedness of said Reed thereto should be paid; which payment said Reed then assured said Arnold should be made in a very short time.

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

Related

Union Bank of Georgetown v. Laird
15 U.S. 390 (Supreme Court, 1817)
Black v. J. W. Zacharie & Co.
44 U.S. 483 (Supreme Court, 1845)
Green v. Morse
4 Barb. 332 (New York Supreme Court, 1848)
President of the Bank of Utica v. Smalley
2 Cow. 770 (New York Supreme Court, 1824)
Commercial Bank v. Kortright
22 Wend. 348 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1839)
Quiner v. Marblehead Social Insurance
10 Mass. 476 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1813)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio St. (N.S.) 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conant-ellis-co-v-reed-ohio-1853.