Fulton National Bank v. Moody

179 S.E. 831, 51 Ga. App. 179, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 621
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 26, 1935
Docket24175
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 179 S.E. 831 (Fulton National Bank v. Moody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fulton National Bank v. Moody, 179 S.E. 831, 51 Ga. App. 179, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 621 (Ga. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

Guebry, J.

Moody brought his action against the Fulton National Bank to recover 53 shares of stock in the Coca-Cola International Corporation, represented by one certificate issued to him in his name. The bank admitted possession of the stock, which had been issued to Moody, and that Moody had a good title thereto [180]*180except for the fact that the stock had been pledged to it as security for a loan. The case was tried on an agreed statement of facts and certain undisputed testimony. It was agreed that: The stock certificate sued for stood in the name of Moody and is owned by him, unless his title is affected by facts herein detailed. Moody has not lived in Atlanta since 1926, but has kept this particular stock, together with other stocks and securities, in an envelope sealed and marked with his name and placed in the safety deposit box of his mother, Mrs. Moody, which box was kept by the Trust Company of Georgia, and was of the kind in general use and handled by said Trust Company in the customary manner. It could only be opened by the key kept and owned by Mrs. Moody. Mr. Wesley Shropshire prior to his death was Assistant Secretary and Treasurer of the Trust Company of Georgia, and enjoyed an excellent reputation for sterling honesty and character. The only access Shropshire had to said certificate of stock in litigation was that when Mrs. Moody desired to go into her safety deposit box she would give her key to Shropshire and tell him to go down stairs where the box was kept and get it and bring it to her, she being slightly crippled and not desiring to walk up and down the stairs. The box itself when taken out of its locked receptacle was open. When Mrs. Moody would take out or put in any papers she desired, she would return the box to Shropshire for him to lock up for her. Moody owned two small blocks of stock in the Atlanta & Lowry National Bank, and this bank was merged with the Fourth National Bank in the' fall of 1929 under the name of the First National Bank of Atlanta. The stockholders of the two first-named banks surrendered their stock for cancellation and received in lieu thereof stock in the First National Bank of Atlanta. The Trust Company of Georgia was transfer agent at the time for Atlanta and Lowry National Bank and the First National Bank of Atlanta, and, as such agent, it requested all stockholders of the Atlanta and Lowry National Bank to send in their old certificates and secure new certificates in the First National Bank, the entire process being under the supervision and control of the Trust Company of Georgia. Some of these certificates were slow in coming in, and in individual cases had to be followed up later on. The consolidation was on November 25, 1929. Wesley Shropshire was authorized, directed, and requested by the Trust Company of Geor[181]*181gia to secure such certificate from Moody, who was living at that time in Massachusetts, because he was in touch with Mrs. Moody and Mr. Moody by correspondence. “ Charles Glenn Moody received notice from the bank of the fact of the merger, and the terms thereof, and was requested to deliver up his stock in the Atlanta & Lowry National Bank for cancellation and exchange for stock in the First National Bank of Atlanta. At that time he was teaching school in Massachusetts. He also received from Mr. Wesley Shropshire two blank powers of attorney, which he was requested to execute, and did execute, to facilitate the exchange and transfer of the stock of the Atlanta & Lowry National Bank for the new stock of the First National Bank of Atlanta. . . Said powers of attorney were signed and the blanks not filled in and mailed to Wesley Shropshire.” The power of attorney which was attached to the Coca-Cola stock when it was pledged by Shropshire to the Fulton National Bank is one of the powers above set out.

In June, 1931, Wesley Shropshire secured a loan of $10,000 from the Fulton National Bank and pledged to it, as security therefor, certain other stock and the Coca-Cola stock sued for in this case, to which stock was attached the blank power of attorney sent him by Moody. The power of attorney came into the possession of Wesley Shropshire by reason of the fact that it was sent him by Moody for the purpose of being used in the cancellation of the bank stock above referred to and the issuance of new stock. Mrs. Moody was authorized to act for her son in any manner affecting the exchange of the stock-certificates placed in her safety-deposit box. When she desired to enter such box she would go to the Trust Company of Georgia and turn over the key of the deposit box to Shropshire, who would unlock the vault and take therefrom the metal box containing her securities and also containing the sealed envelope in which Charles Glenn Moody’s securities were placed. Shropshire would bring the metal box to Mrs. Moody from the basement to the main floor, and when Mrs. Moody had finished with the box he would take it back to the basement floor and return the key to her. This was done on many occasions. Mrs. Moody testified: that she remembered when the First National Bank was formed and the stock of the Atlanta & Lowry Bank and the Trust Company of Georgia was exchanged for stock of the First National Bank; that she delivered the sealed [182]*182envelope in question to Wesley Shropshire so that he might secure the Atlanta & Lowry stock for some purpose; that the envelope was sealed when she delivered it to Wesley Shropshire, and was sealed when he returned it to her, and she does not know what, if any, stock was taken from the envelope. The sealed envelope was opened only by Shropshire. It contained the bank stock and the Coca-Cola stock as well as other securities. It was opened by Shropshire at the direction of Mrs. Moody, for the purpose of getting out the Atlanta & Lowry Bank stock, and was opened and the bank stock gotten out and the envelope resealed by Shropshire. There is no evidence that the envelope was opened at any other time. Shropshire died on May 9, 1932, under circumstances which indicated he had committed suicide. Moody did not learn until after Shropshire’s death that his Coca-Cola stock was not in the sealed envelope or that it had been pledged by Shropshire to the Fulton National Bank, nor did Moody or his mother have any information up to that time that would in any way reflect upon the character or conduct of Shropshire. No permission had ever been asked by or granted to Shropshire with reference to the pledging of said Coca-Cola stock or the using of said power of attorney other than in the transfer of the bank stock above referred to. A verdict was directed by the court in favor of Moody, and the Fulton National Bank excepted.

Mr. Justice Day in the ease of National Safe Deposit Co. v. Hibbs, 229 U. S. 391, 395 (33 Sup. Ct. 818, 57 L. ed. 1241), used the following language, which exactly expresses the contentions of the parties iii the present case. “In this case conflicting legal principles are invoked and relied upon. For the defendant in error [plaintiff in error here] the familiar principle that ‘where one of two innocent persons must suffer by the acts of a third, he who has enabled such third person to occasion the loss, must sustain it’ is advanced.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.E. 831, 51 Ga. App. 179, 1935 Ga. App. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-national-bank-v-moody-gactapp-1935.