Glover v. National Bank of Commerce

156 A.D. 247, 141 N.Y.S. 409, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5812
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 156 A.D. 247 (Glover v. National Bank of Commerce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glover v. National Bank of Commerce, 156 A.D. 247, 141 N.Y.S. 409, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5812 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Scott, J.:

In the form in which this case reaches us on the present appeal there is involved only the questions as to the availability of the Statute of Limitations as a defense to the plaintiff’s claim. .

The action is. brought in equity to compel defendant to deliver to plaintiff fifty shares of its capital stock, or, if that be impossible,' to; pay to plaintiff the value of fifty shares thereof, and to account for the dividends earned upon fifty shares of said stock since the 4th day of March, 1868.

The plaintiff is the administratrix of Harriet G. Glover, who, as it is alleged, was the owner, of fifty shares of the capital stock of the defendant from August 31, 1865, down to and until March ¡4, 1868, upon which date, as the complaint charges: The defendant, by or through the negligence or carer [249]*249lessness of some of its officers, servants or agents, and without fault on the part of the said Harriet G. Glover, and upon a forged power, of attorney, on or about the said 4th day of March, 1868, accepted the surrender of said certificate of stock, belonging to the said Harriet G. Glover as aforesaid, and canceled the same, and in lieu thereof issued two new certificates therefor, one to Eliza Pritchard for six shares of said stock and one to Baldwin and Weeks (or ‘Neal’) for forty-four (44) shares, thereby divesting the said Harriet G. Glover of the title to said fifty shares of the capital stock of said defendant bank and depriving her and her heirs or representatives of the value of the same and the dividends arising therefrom.”

Then follow appropriate allegations respecting the value of the stock; the declaration of dividends; the refusal of defendant to pay said dividends to plaintiff or her intestate, or to acknowledge the right of said plaintiff or her intestate to receive the stock. It is reiterated that the power of attorney under which the transfer was made was forged and did not bear the valid signature of plaintiff’s intestate, and that the defendant’s act in transferring the stock was an act of gross carelessness on the part of defendant, and its acts in that regard are characterized as extremely unjust and inequitable. No demand upon defendant to return the fifty shares of stock and to pay the dividends thereon is alleged except on July 1, 1910.

The answer puts in issue the material allegations of the complaint and alleges three separate defenses: First, that the alleged cause of action stated in the complaint did not accrue within ten years before the beginning of this action; second, the alleged cause of action stated in the complaint did not accrue within twenty years before the beginning of this action; third, the alleged cause of action stated in the complaint did not accrue within six years before the beginning of this action. The amended reply denies that the ten, twenty or six-year periods have elapsed between the date when the cause of action set forth in the complaint accrued and the commencement of this action. It also alleges' three separate avoidances, which are as follows: First. That plaintiff’s intestate, during her life, and plaintiff, individually or as administratrix as aforesaid, prior to six years before the commence[250]*250ment of this action, did not know (a) of the existence of the cause of action alleged; (b) the facts set forth in the complaint; (c) the fact that said shares, were wrongfully and illegally transferred by said defendant. Second. That defendant wrongfully and illegally (a) concealed from the said plaintiff’s intestate during her lifetime her ownership in the said shares; (b) omitted and neglected to pay dividends or notify said plaintiff’s intestate and this plaintiff of the declaration of dividends upon said shares, nr give her notice of meetings of stockholders, or of any act, notice of which is required tó be given by law to shareholders of the defendant; and (c) wrongfully omitted to give plaintiff notice of said facts, “ but fraudulently concealed the said facts from said plaintiff’s intestate and this plaintiff until within six years prior to the commencement of this action.” Third. That defendant acted with respect to the said shares “as trustee for and in a fiduciary capacity towards said' plaintiff’s intestate” and this plaintiff, and “that the facts set forth in plaintiff’s complaint establish a trust obligation imposed upon defendant towards the said plaintiff’s intestate as owner ,of said shares, against which the said several Statutes of Limitation pleaded by the defendant as separate defenses do not run and are no defenses to the right of the plaintiff to recover in this action.” The defendant demurs to the separate and distinct alleged replies set forth in the plaintiff’s amended reply to the defendant’s special defenses of the ten, twenty and six years’ Statutes of Limitation, respectively, upon the ground that said separate and distinct alleged replies are insufficient in law upon the face thereof. The present appeal raises- only the question of the sufficiency of the alleged avoidances pleaded in the amended reply.

It is quite clear, and the defendant so concedes, that the complaint states a good cause of action. (Pollock v. National Bank, 7 N. Y. 274; Telegraph Company v. Davenport, 97 U. S. 369.) Hence, if the allegations of the complaint are sustained by the proofs as, on this appeal we must assume that they will be, the plaintiff will be entitled to a judgment unless the Statute of Limitations proves to be an effective bar to a recovery. That statute is essentially a statute of peace not affecting the plaintiff’s abstract right, but applying only to the remedy. It is [251]*251the policy of the State, as defined in the Code of Civil Procedure, that there shall he a fixed limitation for every' cause of action, whether legal or equitable. After attaching suitable limitations to numerous classes of actions the Code of Civil Procedure adds (§ 388): “An action, the limitation of which is not specially prescribed in this or the last title, must be commenced within ten years after the cause of action accrues.” This provision of the Code of Civil Procedure, adopted in 1848 as section 77 of the Code of Procedure, renumbered in 1849 as section 97 of said Code, and continued since as section 388 of the Code of Remedial Justice and section 388 of the Code of Civil Procedure, has done away with the old rules as to' the cases cognizable only in courts of equity and subjected all alike to some statutory limitation. (Gilmore v. Ham, 142 N. Y. 1; Treadwell v. Clark, 190 id. 51.) Under the allegations of the complaint a cause of action accrued to plaintiff’s intestate on March 4, 1868, more than forty-two years before the present action was commenced, and it would seem, therefore, that the right to recover upon it was long since barred by the Statute of Limitations unless some reason appears why the running of the statute has been postponed or suspended.

The plaintiff relies upon two sections of the Code of Civil Procedure to avoid the plea of the statute.

The first section thus relied upon is section 410, which reads as follows:

“ § 410. Provision when the action cannot be maintained without a demand.

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Bluebook (online)
156 A.D. 247, 141 N.Y.S. 409, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glover-v-national-bank-of-commerce-nyappdiv-1913.