Gorham v. Massillon Iron & Steel Co.

209 Ill. App. 606, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 725
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 12, 1918
DocketGen. No. 23,165
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 209 Ill. App. 606 (Gorham v. Massillon Iron & Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gorham v. Massillon Iron & Steel Co., 209 Ill. App. 606, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 725 (Ill. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinions

Mr. Justice McDonald

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $35,700 recovered by Sidney S. Gorham and Henry W. Wales against the Massillon Iron & Steel Company (defendant below), in an action of trover for the wrongful conversion of 700 shares of its capital stock.

In one of the counts of the declaration it was alleged that the conversion took place on April 30, 1912, while in another the conversion was alleged to have occurred on February 28, 1913.

The defendant is an Ohio corporation, with its principal offices and plant located at Massillon, Stark county, Ohio. Prior to March 15, 1912, Frank F. Fisher, who was vice president and Chicago sales agent of the defendant company, and who was the owner of record of 1,575 shares of its capital stock, executed for the accommodation of the defendant company four promissory notes, aggregating upwards of $11,000. These notes, which were renewals of previous ones executed by said Fisher for a similar purpose, were discounted for the defendant company by certain banks in Massillon, and to secure their payment 210 shares of the said Fisher’s stock were pledged. At the time these latter notes were given, the defendant company was in financial straits, and, to relieve the situation, several plans of reorganization were proposed, to all of which the said Fisher objected. His antagonistic attitude in this regard hampered the reorganization for a time and gave rise to strained relations between tom and the other officers of the defendant company and culminated in Fisher’s discharge as sales agent.

On March 19,1912, two of the Massillon banks, each holding one of the aforesaid notes, instituted suit thereon and attachments in aid thereof against the said Fisher in the Common Pleas Court of Stark county, Ohio, and served the defendant company as garnishee. It appears that these suits were brought at the instance of the defendant company.

On. March 30,1912, defendant company wrote Fisher a letter in which it stated that it had been informed by Fisher’s attorney that he no longer owned the stock.

On April 18, 1912, defendant company filed answer as garnishee, setting forth that there stood on its books 1,575 shares of its capital stock in the name of the said Fisher.

On April 20, 1912, similar proceedings were commenced by two other Massillon banks, each holding one of the remaining notes executed by Fisher, and the defendant company was again served as garnishee.

On April 30, 1912, plaintiffs presented to defendant company at Massillon certificates for 700 shares of its capital stock duly assigned to them in writing by Fisher, 600 shares of which were assigned under date of March 15, 1912, and 100 under date of March 19, 1912, and demanded a transfer thereof on the books of defendant company and that a new certificate be' issued in their name therefor. Defendant company refused to comply with this demand, assigning as its reason therefor the pendency of the attachment suits hereinabove referred to in which it had been served as garnishee. A similar demand had been made by plaintiffs on defendant company on April 26th, which was refused because the books of the defendant company were then in Cleveland.

On June 1, 1912, the defendant company filed its answers in the two last-mentioned proceedings, which said answers were similar to those filed on April 18th in the first two suits.

On August 6, 1912, before final judgment was rendered in the aforesaid attachment suits, Fisher filed a petition in equity in Stark county, Ohio, against the defendant company and the Massillon banks aforementioned, alleging that he made and delivered to the defendant company the four said promissory notes, which were then past due, for the accommodation of the defendant company, and without any consideration to him whatsoever, and prayed that the defendant company be compelled to pay same.

On October 9, 1912, defendant company filed its amended and supplemental answers in the foregoing attachment suits, in which it alleged that since the •filing’ of its original answers, 210 shares of stock which then stood in the name of the said Fisher had been sold by the pledgees thereof and transferred on its books out of the name of Fisher, and that there then stood on the books of the company in his name 1,365 shares of its capital stock.

On February 28, 1913, judgment was entered against defendant company as garnishee, on =its answers in the aforementioned attachment and garnishment proceedings, and in the judgment order the defendant company was directed to issue a certificate for 1,365 shares of its capital stock, then standing in the name of the said Fisher, to the sheriff of Stark county, and recited further that defendant company, having already complied therewith, was discharged as garnishee.

On April 15, 1914, the court entered a decree in the proceeding commenced by Fisher on August 6, 1912, in which it found that the defendant company was primarily liable on the notes in question, and ordered and decreed that it pay the amounts due thereon, and that the banks cancel and surrender them to the company. This decree was later affirmed on appeal by the defendant company. The order of affirmance denied Fisher’s motion for statutory damages, reciting that there was reasonable ground for the appeal, although it did not set forth the nature thereof. Subsequently the attachment suits were released, the certificate of stock theretofore issued to _the sheriff of Stark county was canceled and returned to the defendant company, who then for the first time notified plaintiff of its willingness to transfer upon its books the 700 shares of stock assigned to them by Fisher.

It is contended by defendant company that under the circumstances it was not guilty of a conversion of the said stock; that the said Massillon banks were creditors of Fisher on the notes in question and were pursuing their legal rights in prosecuting the said suits; that by the service of the garnishee summons on it, Fisher’s stock then appearing of record on its books was custodia legis, and that hence it was warranted in denying a transfer thereof to plaintiffs as assignees, pending the outcome of the said suits. In support thereof, we are referred to the rule laid down in Spangenberg v. Nesbitt, 22 Cal. App. 274, 134 Pac. 343, and in Mundt v. Commercial Nat. Bank of Ogden, 35 Utah 90, 99 Pac. 454, that the officers of a corporation may rightfully refuse, for the time being, a requested registry of stock by the assignee thereof, when notified to do so by a third person who claims some interest therein which might be lost or injuriously affected by the transfer; that with notice of such conflicting claims, it is the privilege and the duty of the corporation or its officers, if there be a reasonable doubt as to the respective rights of the contending claimants, to refuse or delay registry to either party until the lapse of a reasonable time within which the merits of the controversy may be determined. In our opinion, these authorities enunciate a correct principle of law. The garnishee summons having been served on the defendant company prior to the date of the demand by plaintiffs as the assignees of the stock, the defendant company was justified in refusing a transfer thereof, the stock then being custodia legis, and hence there was no conversion on April 30, 19.12. National Bank of New London v.

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Bluebook (online)
209 Ill. App. 606, 1918 Ill. App. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorham-v-massillon-iron-steel-co-illappct-1918.