Corbe v. Burkert

43 Pa. Super. 186, 1910 Pa. Super. LEXIS 30
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 20, 1910
DocketAppeal, No. 98
StatusPublished

This text of 43 Pa. Super. 186 (Corbe v. Burkert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corbe v. Burkert, 43 Pa. Super. 186, 1910 Pa. Super. LEXIS 30 (Pa. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Opinion by

Head, J.,

The county of Schuylkill issued a series of bonds of the denomination of |100 each. These bonds were not made payable to bearer in the usual form of municipal bonds, but each was made payable to a particular individual named therein “or his assigns,” pursuant doubtless to subscriptions made before the bonds were actually issued. Five of these bonds, after having been held by some intervening owners, came into the possession of Joseph Corbe, the plaintiff. Neither the names nor the number of the intervening owners appear in the record. The bonds were not accompanied with any former assignments showing the change of ownership as they passed from hand to hand. Although they were not strictly speaking negotiable, they appear to have been so regarded by those who dealt with them, to the extent at least that each purchaser seemed to have been content with his title when he paid for the bonds to the preceding owner and took them into his own possession. At all events it is conceded that Corbe, the plaintiff, although he had no assignment from the original payee, or any intervening owner, was in truth and in fact the legal owner of these five bonds at the time of the transaction which gave rise to this litigation.

For reasons satisfactory to himself, but not appearing in the record, Corbe became desirous of exchanging these five bonds, aggregating $500, for a single bond of the [189]*189borough of Pottsvillemf the same face value. The county bonds bore interest at the rate of three per cent per annum, whilst the borough bond was a four per cent one. Whether this was the nause that moved the plaintiff to desire the exchange, the record does not disclose and it is not material to our inquiry.

One C. 0. Burkert, a member of the Schuylkill county bar, had for a number of years been the legal adviser of the plaintiff. To accomplish the object he had in view, already stated, the plaintiff turned over to his attorney Burkert his five county bonds with instructions to exchange them for one borough bond of the denomination and character above indicated. Of this fact there can be no doubt. It is testified to by the plaintiff himself and clearly evidenced by the following receipt given to the plaintiff and produced by him on the trial: “May 1, ’05, Received of Joseph Corbe, five one hundred dollar county of Schuylkill bonds, to be exchanged for one borough of Pottsville four per cent. bond. C. O. Burkert, Atty.” Here was a simple bailment. The bailor, the plaintiff, was the legal owner of the property bailed, and had the full right to do with it as he chose. He selected the bailee himself. The nature and purpose of the bailment are not matters of contention in the cause. They are established, as we have said, by the oral statement of the bailor and the written receipt of the bailee, given to and accepted by the bailor as a correct and satisfactory statement of the disposition to be made by the bailee of the property intrusted to him.

There is no statute in Pennsylvania which prescribes that such a contract of bailment should be evidenced by a writing or that any particular form of words should be used to validate the transaction. It is sufficient if the intention of the bailor and the use of the bailed property to be made by the bailee appear. More especially is this true when the transaction comes to be considered by a chancellor sitting in a court of equity. Such a court looks more to the substance of things than to- their form. Even [190]*190in the days when courts were more inclined to rigidly cling to ancient forms than they have been in modern times, it was held, in an action concerning a railroad bond, that it might have been assigned in equity by a parol delivery: Bunting’s Administrators v. Railroad Co., 81 Pa. 254. In Bond v. Bunting, 78 Pa. 210, Sharswood, J., said, “It is certainly the tendency of all the modern authorities to maintain the general doctrine which may indeed be stated as a formula, that wherever a party has the power to do a thing — statute provisions being out of the way — and means to do it, the instrument he employs shall be so construed as to give effect to his intention.”. See also Fetts’ Estate, 39 Pa. Superior Ct. 246.

Corbe then, the owner of the bonds when he turned them over to Burkert, had full power to authorize the latter to exchange them for any other form of securities he preferred to have. He certainly intended that the exchange we have already indicated should be effected by his bailee, for so he himself declares. Armed with this authority Burkert went to the Citizens’ National Bank of Ashland, which bank held a bond of the borough of Pottsville as collateral security for a loan it had made to Burkert, the bailee. The latter arranged with the bank to surrender to him the desired borough bond and to accept as a substitute therefor the five county bonds, the possession of which he then and there turned over to the bank. If any authority be needed for the proposition that the bank took the same title to the new securities that it had to what it surrendered and that it was a holder of each in turn for value, to the extent of the consideration it had originally given, such authority will be found in the recent case of King v. Mellon National Bank of Pittsburg, 227 Pa. 22. With the actual delivery of the county bonds to the bank and the receipt of the borough bond by Burkert, the bailee, the latter had completed the precise obligation which, by his contract of bailment, he had expressly undertaken to perform. He had turned over to another, who was the lawful holder of a borough [191]*191bond, the five county bonds formerly owned by his principal. In doing this he divested the title of his principal to those bonds because without doing this he could not acquire for his principal the ownership of the borough bond which was the purpose of the entire transaction.

When therefore Burkert, the bailee, received into his possession the borough bond, which he was authorized to acquire for his principal, in whom did the title to that bond then and there vest? Had Burkert, the bailee, for any reason undertaken to assert title to himself in that bond as against his principal, under the facts stated, no court at law or in equity would have listened to such a claim. Again let us suppose, for illustration, that the five county bonds which Corbe formerly owned, and which he had by his bailee exchanged in the manner indicated, had been the obligations of a private corporation. If such corporation had suddenly become insolvent after its five obligations had been delivered to the bank, and after Burkert, the bailee, had in his possession the borough bond, thus closing the exchange, would it have been possible for the bank to shift the loss back to the shoulders of Corbe on the theory that the exchange had not . been completed and it might therefore withdraw its consent to such a transaction?

Almost immediately after the receipt by him of the borough bond Burkett advised his principal of the fact that he had made the exchange and was ready to turn the bond over. There is no room in the record for any doubt as to the all important fact that at that time Burkert actually had received the bond into his possession. He made some excuse for his inability to then deliver the bond, but promised to do it on his next meeting with his principal. Unfortunately for the latter, his trusted man of business abused his trust and shortly thereafter absconded, having, so far as this record shows, taken with him or otherwise converted to his own use the bond of the plaintiff.

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Related

Bond v. Bunting
78 Pa. 210 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1875)
Bunting's Administrators v. Camden & Atlantic Railroad
81 Pa. 254 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1876)
King v. Mellon National Bank
75 A. 832 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1909)
Fett's Estate
39 Pa. Super. 246 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 Pa. Super. 186, 1910 Pa. Super. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corbe-v-burkert-pasuperct-1910.