Hatton v. Howard Braiding Co.

1 R.I. Dec. 95
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 21, 1925
DocketEq. No. 6639
StatusPublished

This text of 1 R.I. Dec. 95 (Hatton v. Howard Braiding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatton v. Howard Braiding Co., 1 R.I. Dec. 95 (R.I. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

BARROWS, J.

Heard on bill, answer, including cross-bill, replication and oral testimony on issues of fact. The cross-bill of respondent prays for a transfer of certain stock from complainant to respondent and for an accounting for dividends on this and other stock.

At the conclusion of the complainant’s case the bill was dismissed as to three respondents against whom no relief was asked or could be granted.

The bill as originally framed charged conspiracy between respondents whereby they, with knowledge of his ownership, deprived complainant of certain stock. At the hearing and prior to the offering of any testimony, complainant disclaimed any charge of actual fraud against respondents and amended the bill to avoid the pos-sibilty of dismissal for failure to prove actual fraud.

Grant vs. Wilcox, 44 R. I. 94.

The bill now stands as one for the reclaiming of a certificate for five shares of stock of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, alleged to have been mistakenly transferred to respondent without the owner’s consent and for the rescission of _ the transfer.

At the close of the testimony respondent raised the question whether a court of equity had jurisdiction to determine the cause. On the strength of General Laws-1923, Chap. 250, Sec. 7, Uniform Stock Transfer Act, we find that a court of equity has jurisdiction and is the only court of “appropriate jurisdiction” to specifically enforce complainant’s alleged right to reclaim possession of the stock certificate in question.

The facts in the case are unusual but appear to us clearly established by documentary evidence. We are fortunate in having an unusually well kept set of books over the period in question. Complainant and respondent do not, however, draw like inferences from the book entries and the oral testimony. We can not accept the inferences drawn by complainant that respondents knew the true facts and slept upon their rights or ac-quisced in the conduct of complainant with knowledge of the facts.

Certain transmutations have taken place in the form of the stock certifi[96]*96cate by reason, oí the splitting up .under United States Court dissolution orders of the original stock of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. Several of these will have to he noticed in connection with the cross-bill but the principles controlling the case are not affected thereby. For the sake of simplicity in discussing the present case, therefore, we shall speak of the stock as if there had been no change in the form of the original certificate for five shares of stock of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey.

The bill is brought by complainant individually and as executor of the estate of Charles N. Howard. Individually she has no standing. As executor her claim is that five shares •of Standard Oil Company stock which stood in the name of Charles N. Howard at the time of his decease on September 27, 1910, have by mistake been transferred to respondent corporation. The prayer is that they be re-transferred to complainant to hold as part of Howard’s estate. As complainant stated the case in opening, the law question involved is simply: who owns the stock?

The five shares of Standard Oil Company stock in question were issued on June 20, 1901, to Charles H. Remington and so stood on the books of the Standard Oil Company until September 17, 1906. At the latter date "the Howard Braiding Company • was organized with Charles N. Howard owning a controlling interest in its stock and Charles H. Remington and his sister Charlotte ,R. Hatton, the complainant, owning only minor holdings. Respondent and complainant were nephew and niece of Charles N. Howard. The books of the . Howard Braiding Company, which were kept with unusual care, show. in the handwriting of both Charles N. Howard and Charles H. Remington that Remington sold these five shares to the corporation on September 17, 1906, for their then market value of $604 per share, a total of $3020. The certificate, however, when transferred by the Standard Oil Company on September 18, 1906, was re-issued to Charles N. Howard without other designations. Payment for these shares was made to Remington from $2400 borrowed by the Howard Braiding Company from the United National Bank, said five shares being turned over to the bank as collateral. This $2400, with $620 taken from the funds of the company, paid for the stock (Cash Book, page 19). The note given the bank was a corporate obligation and executed by Charles N. Howard as treasurer. At no time is there the slightest evidence that any other than corporation money paid for any portion of the stock. The dividends on the stock came in by check to Charles N. Howard, in whose name it stood, and by him were, as long as he lived, turned over to the corporation regularly as shown by its books. There is no evidence that Howard ever made any claim of personal ownership of this stock. On the other hand, several statements of the financial condition of the company made by Howard to secure subsequent bank credits between 1906 and 1910 show that he listed these five shares among the assets of the corporation. Continually from the time of the first pledge of the five shares until July, 1923, the stock was held by the bank as collateral for the original note and succeeding loans to the corporation. All of these are shown on the company’s books and until Howard’s death the corporate notes always were executed by Charles N. Howard as treasurer, the last one within a week of his death. He was the dominating factor in the corporation and owner of substantially all of the corporation stock.

As before stated, Charles N. Howard died September 27, 1910. He had been the sole manager of the [97]*97corporation. Remington had been merely an employee in the business with a nominal holding oí stock. Complainant likwise had been only a nominal stockholder. By Howard’s will he made complainant, and respondent his executors, and gave to each one-half of his estate. When Howard died, Remington by reason of some mental malady did not qualify as executor and the complainant alone did so. Remington continued, however, as an officer of the Howard Braiding Company till 1915, though the records show no attendance at meetings after April 20, 1912, and his active business career had practically ceased before 1910. Remington’s wife, however, on Howard’s death, stepped into active management of the business as treasurer and director, and she has since conducted it. Prior to her active management she knew nothing of the facts above related concerning the five shares of stock, except that her husband had sold them and got paid for them. She says that she supposed he sold them to the corporation, but she had no definite information nor did she pay any attention to it at the time. At the outset of the administration of Howard’s estate, Mrs. Remington and Mrs. Hat-ton discovered that the stock stood in Howard’s name and in conference with Mr. Henshaw, acting for the executrix, all assumed that it was Howard’s own property. No one gave a thought to it as part of the corporate assets. It is important to observe that at this time neither Mrs. Rem-' ington nor Mrs. Hatton knew anything about the details of the corporate business. As the dividends came in after Howard’s death, they were assumed to be the property of Howard's estate and checks were collected by complainant as his executrix. She divided the proceeds equally between herself and her brother, who received them through-his wife.

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