Dreyfus v. Old Colony Trust Co.

106 N.E. 154, 218 Mass. 546, 1914 Mass. LEXIS 1445
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 106 N.E. 154 (Dreyfus v. Old Colony Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dreyfus v. Old Colony Trust Co., 106 N.E. 154, 218 Mass. 546, 1914 Mass. LEXIS 1445 (Mass. 1914).

Opinion

Loring, J.

This suit grows out of a plan for the purchase and consolidation of the old United States Worsted Company, the Lawrence Dye Works Company, and the Silesia Worsted Mills, Incorporated, which was issued by the individual defendants as a committee in October, 1912.

The plan begins by stating the condition of the three companies and the reasons which had led to the conclusion that it was desirable that they should be consolidated by passing into one ownership. The suit now before us has to do with the rights of an owner of preferred shares in the old United States Worsted Company, and the terms of the plan in that connection only will have to be stated at length.

The capital stock of the old United States Worsted Company was divided into preferred and common shares. In the proposed consolidation and purchase holders of preferred shares of the old company were entitled to an equal number of shares in the second preferred capital stock of the new company, and holders of common shares of the old company were entitled to subscribe for an equal number of common shares in the new company at $15 a share, and such subscribers were entitled to one sixteenth of a share in the second preferred capital stock of the new company for each common share in the new company subscribed for. .

The defendant the Old Colony Trust Company was named in the plan as depositary with whom the old shares were to be deposited and by whom the new shares were to be issued. On November 16, 1912, the plan was declared operative by the committee under a power given to them in the plan.

At the time that the proposed plan was issued one Charles M. Kahn was the holder of three hundred and twenty-three preferred shares and of one thousand eight hundred and fourteen [548]*548common shares in the capital stock of the old United States Worsted Company. On October 7 he deposited all of his shares with the Old Colony Trust Company and received a certificate for three hundred and twenty-three preferred shares and another certificate for one thousand eight hundred and fourteen common shares; and at the same time he signed a subscription agreement by which he agreed to pay to the new company $27,210. On the plan becoming operative on November 16, 1912, notice of that fact was sent by the committee to the common shareholders who had subscribed under the plan, and among others to Kahn. In this notice depositors of common shares were notified to make payment of their subscriptions. Kahn never paid any part of his common stock subscription. On December 9, 1912, Kahn indorsed the certificate of deposit for his preferred shares to the plaintiff, who seemingly made no payment to Kahn and was a volunteer merely. The plaintiff thereupon requested of the Old Colony Trust Company, at the counter, a transfer to himself of the certificate of deposit representing Kahn’s preferred shares. Upon this request being made to the Old Colony Trust Company it referred the question to the committee. Later the trust company received a letter from the committee, in which the committee instructed the trust company to retain in its hands all of the second preferred shares and all the common shares in the new company to which depositors of preferred shares of the old company might be entitled under the plan, where such depositors had also subscribed to common shares but had failed to pay or thereafter should fail to pay the instalments of their common share subscriptions called by the committee; and in case such depositor of preferred shares had assigned his certificate for the same and the assignee presented the certificate with a request to transfer the same, the trust company was authorized and instructed to refuse to transfer the same on the ground that such depositor was in default in respect of his common share subscription, and to advise such depositor and his assignee that such depositor might in the absolute discretion of the committee, its successor or assigns, forfeit all right and interest under the plan, and that in the exercise of such discretion the committee might forfeit such depositor’s rights to any second preferred shares and common shares as well as to certain amounts in cash which need [549]*549not be particularly stated, unless such depositor paid his subscription without further delay.

This letter was written under the advice of counsel whose standing and good faith in the matter are not questioned. Thereupon this suit was brought to compel the delivery of the certificate of deposit and to recover damages suffered by the plaintiff caused by the refusal to allow a transfer of the certificate of deposit.

The committee set up in their answer, as justifying their refusal to transfer the certificate of deposit to Mr. Kahn’s nominee, this clause in the plan under which the shares were deposited by Mr. Kahn: “Any depositor failing to pay any instalment of such subscription, as and when the same shall become due and payable, shall, in the absolute discretion of the Committee, its successors or assigns, forfeit all right and interest under this Plan and Agreement and any instalment or instalments theretofore paid.” The whole article of the plan, of which the paragraph set up in the answer of the individual defendants was a part, is set forth in full in the note below.

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Related

New England Trust Co. v. Paine
59 N.E.2d 263 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1945)
Hannigan v. Old Colony Trust Co.
116 N.E. 561 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1917)
Digney v. Blanchard
226 Mass. 335 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1917)
Minot v. Burroughs
223 Mass. 595 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1916)
Bradley v. Borden
112 N.E. 416 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.E. 154, 218 Mass. 546, 1914 Mass. LEXIS 1445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dreyfus-v-old-colony-trust-co-mass-1914.