Dalsimer v. Pennsylvania Co.

41 Pa. D. & C. 420, 1941 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 325
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedMay 19, 1941
Docketno. 3364
StatusPublished

This text of 41 Pa. D. & C. 420 (Dalsimer v. Pennsylvania Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dalsimer v. Pennsylvania Co., 41 Pa. D. & C. 420, 1941 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 325 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1941).

Opinion

Carroll, J.,

Plaintiff, Beatrice L. Dal-simer, filed a bill in equity against The Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Lives and Granting Annuities, a banking corporation, to restrain the transfer or other disposition of a certificate of stock No. D42441, for 32 shares of the capital stock of Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association, and to compel defendant to deliver the certificate to plaintiff.

After the bill in equity was filed, Irvin L. Stone, the trustee in bankruptcy of McMillan, Rapp & Company, a corporation, filed a petition to intervene in these proceedings as a party defendant, which petition was granted. Thereafter, the intervening defendant filed an answer to plaintiff’s bill of complaint. Defendant bank filed its answer, stating that it had no interest in the said certificate and that it was holding the certificate as a stakeholder.

[422]*422Plaintiff and the intervening defendant have agreed to all essential facts. They follow:

On March 20, 1939, plaintiff, Beatrice L. Dalsimer, purchased from McMillan, Rapp & Company, a brokerage concern, maintaining an office in the City of Philadelphia, 32 shares of the capital stock of Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association, and in payment therefor plaintiff directed McMillan, Rapp & Company to apply the proceeds of the sale of 32 shares of Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company. The proceeds, $1,059.70, plus $20.30 in cash, paid in full the purchase price for the 32 shares of Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association stock, namely, $1,080.

On or about May 15, 1939, a certificate of stock, No. D42441, for 32 shares of the capital stock of Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association was received by McMillan, Rapp & Company, the certificate having been previously registered in the name of plaintiff, Beatrice L. Dalsimer. This stock certificate contained the typewritten words “Beatrice L. Dalsimer” and stated that Beatrice L. Dalsimer is the owner of 32 shares of the capital stock of Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association.

Shortly after June 9, 1939, McMillan, Rapp & Company delivered possession of the said certificate to defendant, The Pennsylvania Company, together with other securities as collateral for a loan from the bank. The stock certificate was accompanied by a stock power purporting to be signed in blank by plaintiff, Beatrice L. Dalsimer, which signature in fact was a forgery. The answer of the intervening defendant, the trustee in bankruptcy, Irvin L. Stone, denied that the signature was a forgery. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court granted an extension of time to permit the intervening defendant to have the alleged signature analyzed by a handwriting expert. Following this, the intervening defendant reported to the court that the signature was a forgery.

[423]*423At no time had plaintiff authorized McMillan, Rapp & Company to transfer the certificate or use the certificate for 32 shares in any manner whatever, and plaintiff had no knowledge of the delivery to or possession of the said certificate by The Pennsylvania Company, and plaintiff had never ratified its delivery.

McMillan, Rapp & Company filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania on February 20, 1940, and was adjudicated a bankrupt on the same day. On April 5,1940, Irvin L. Stone, intervening defendant, was appointed trustee in bankruptcy of McMillan, Rapp & Company.

Subsequent to the bankruptcy, The Pennsylvania Company liquidated the loan previously made to McMillan, Rapp & Company, and returned the surplus collateral to the intervening defendant, with the exception of certain securities, including plaintiff’s stock certificate which The Pennsylvania Company continues to hold.

Defendant, The Pennsylvania Company, takes the position of a stakeholder and makes no claim for the certificate. . , .

There is but one question raised by the intervening defendant for determination: Is Beatrice L. Dalsimer, plaintiff, entitled to receive from defendant, The Pennsylvania Company, possession of certificate No. D42441 for 32 shares of stock of the Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association, free from all claims of the intervening defendant, the trustee in bankruptcy, in view of the provisions of section 60 (e) of the Bankruptcy Act of July 1, 1898, c. 541 (30 Stat. at L. 544), as amended by the Chandler Act of June 22,1938, c. 575 (52 Stat. at L. 840). Section 60 (e) 4 provides as follows:

“No cash received by a stockbroker from or for the account of a customer for the purchase or sale of securities, and no securities or similar property received by a stockbroker from or for the account of a cash customer for sale [424]*424and remittance or pursuant to purchase or as collateral security, or for safekeeping, or any substitutes therefor or the proceeds thereof, shall for the purposes of this subdivision (e) be deemed to be specifically identified, unless such property remained in its identical form in the stockbroker’s possession until the date of bankruptcy, or unless such property or any substitutes therefor or the proceeds thereof were, more than four months before bankruptcy or at a time while the stockbroker was solvent, allocated to or physically set aside for such customer, and remained so allocated or set aside at the date of bankruptcy”. (Italics supplied.)

Section 60 {e) is an innovation in the bankruptcy law. It provides for a separation into three classes of creditors of a bankrupt stockbroker: (1) Cash customers; (2) all other customers; and (3) general creditors.

The intervening defendant contends that plaintiff comes under class (2), and that she must forego all rights in and to the stock certificate and that she should present a claim against the “single and separate fund” to be created by the sale of securities bought on margin and other property relegated to this fund by section 60(e).

On the other hand, plaintiff’s position is that she is a cash customer, and in class (1), having paid for the stock in full and further, that she can easily identify her stock and, therefore, under section 60(e) is entitled to the particular stock certificate claimed.

The court rejects the contention of the intervening defendant, and concludes that there is nothing in section 60(e) of the Chandler Act, nor in the statutory or decision law of Pennsylvania that deprives plaintiff of the right to immediate possession and ownership of the said stock certificate.

Plaintiff is in the category of a cash customer, able to identify specifically her property within the meaning of section 60(c) 4. The last provision of section 60(e) 4 provides that securities shall be specifically identified [425]*425when the “property or any substitutes therefor or the proceeds thereof were, more than four months before bankruptcy or at a time while the stockbroker was solvent, allocated to or physically set aside for such customer, and remained so allocated or set aside at the date of bankruptcy”. (Italics supplied.) Certainly, plaintiff comes within that classification of cash customer. Plaintiff bought the stock in question on March 20, 1939, and paid the small balance of $20.30 in cash on June 9, 1939, to complete payment of the purchase price.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Pa. D. & C. 420, 1941 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalsimer-v-pennsylvania-co-pactcomplphilad-1941.