Henderson v. First National Bank of Dewitt

494 S.W.2d 452, 254 Ark. 427, 1973 Ark. LEXIS 1530
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 14, 1973
Docket73-2
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 494 S.W.2d 452 (Henderson v. First National Bank of Dewitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. First National Bank of Dewitt, 494 S.W.2d 452, 254 Ark. 427, 1973 Ark. LEXIS 1530 (Ark. 1973).

Opinion

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

This case involves the obtaining of title to personal property by adverse possession, and apparently is the first reported case relating to such a situation for over one hundred years. The contentions of the parties are as follows:

On January 24th, 1928, First National Bank of DeWitt, Arkansas, issued to J. M Henderson, Jr. its Common Stock Certificate No. 186 for 20 shares.

J. M. Henderson, Jr. brought this action in the Circuit Court for the Southern District of Arkansas County, Arkansas, seeking recovery of possession of Certificates 186 and 198 from Miss Hattie Boone Black, and recovery of 160 shares of dividend stock and $8,250.00 in accumulated money dividends from First National Bank of DeWitt. Hattie Boone Black answered with a general denial, and pleaded the statute of limitations, and later laches and estoppel as a defense, also moving to transfer to equity. Henderson replied, inter alia, pleading counter-estoppel, and joined appellee Black in her motion to transfer. First National Bank of DeWitt has taken a neutral position. This cause was transferred to equity.

During the course of the litigation, J. M. Henderson, Jr. died and the cause was revived in the name of his Administrator, John M. Henderson, III, the appellant.

The dispute centers around Henderson’s original acquisition of Certificates 186 and 198, whether Henderson and L. A. Black (father of appellant Hattie Boone Black) had a property settlement in the fall of 1945 out of which Henderson was to take the. certificates free of debt after having pledged them to L. A. Black, whether certain correspondence and transactions which occurred in 1950 and 1951 would start the running of the three year statute of limitations against Henderson, and whether certain acts and omissions on the part of the appellant, Hattie Boone Black,^and her mother, Mary B. Black, would be sufficient to bar Miss Black from pleading the statute of limitations, laches and estoppel as a defense. Appellant, without conceding that he was barred by limitations from recovering possession of Certificates 186 and 198, also contended that as to the dividend stock and money dividends issued to John M. Henderson, Jr. and held by First National Bank, Miss Black could not in any event claim the bar of limitations, laches and estoppel, having never been in possession of these certificates and monies.

A number of witnesses testified and the record is rather large; at the conclusion of the testimony, and after the submission of briefs, the court rendered a comprehensive written opinion 1 discussing the contentions of the parties and we will quote freely from that opinion in setting out the facts and law relied upon by the court in rendering its decision. The opinion commenced as follows:

“There are certain relevant facts that are not in dispute. It is undisputed that in January, 1928, Henderson was issued twenty shares of stock in Bank represented by certificate number 186 and in January, 1954, he was issued twenty more shares in Bank represented by certificate number 198. This was done at the instigation of Black, the then president and principal stockholder.
“The certificates were endorsed by Henderson in blank [2] and, even though Henderson testified that they were placed in the stock book, they apparently did not remain there for very long because Lawrence Dearing, president of Bank, testified that he had been associated with Bank for many years and he could not recall ever seeing the certificates in the stock book. The evidence would sustain a finding that Black and then his widow and then his daughter, the Defendant herein, have had the physical possession of the two stock certificates for most of the time subsequent to the date when Henderson endorsed them in blank.
“It is also undisputed thát additional shares have been issued as stock dividends on the stock certificates in dispute in addition to cash dividends of $8,250.00. These stock and cash dividends have been held by the Bank since 1951, and the Bank, in this case, simply seeks instructions as to which party is the owner and entitled thereto.
“For the sake of clarity, the Court will discuss the principal issue under three topic headings in question form, i.e., (I) Did Henderson originally contract to purchase the forty shares represented by certificate numbers 186 and 198? (II) Did Henderson receive these shares in a settlement with Black or otherwise pay the agreed price for them? (Ill) Is Henderson’s personal representative now barred from recovering these certificates and dividends by the statute of limitations, laches or estoppel?
“These topic headings will be discussed in the order listed.”

Proof on the part of appellee was directed to the fact that L. A. Black simply made the transfers of stock as a book transfer to enable Henderson to continue serving on the board of directors of the bank, but the court rejected this contention, stating that a finding to that effect would mean that the court was placing “the stamp of charlatan upon two men who lived most of their lives in Arkansas County and commanded the very highest respect from their fellow citizens”; that if this were only a “book transfer”, the two men would have been violating the National Banking Act which requires that a director of a bank be “the owner in good faith, and in his own right, of the number of shares of stock required by this chapter. . .”. The court stated:

“In the absence of more proof than is now in the record, this Court must reject any suggestion or implication that Black and Henderson descended to the status of a knave and engaged in chicanery solely for the purpose of retaining Henderson on the Board of the Bank. To the contrary, the evidence is rather clear that Black arranged for Henderson to acquire additional stock in 1928 and again in 1934 in order that Henderson would ‘own in his own right’ the minimum required by law. ***
“The Court finds that Henderson, in good faith, became the beneficial as well as the legal owner of the forty shares purchased in 1928 and 1934. The evidence further reflects that Henderson did not pay Black in cash at the time of acquisition, but the parties agreed that Black could receive the dividends, if any, from the stock until Henderson paid for them.”

The court held that parol evidence was admissible to explain the circumstances surrounding Henderson’s blank endorsement of Certificates 186 and 198, and then stated:

“(II) Did Henderson receive these shares in a settlement with Black or otherwise pay the agreed price for them? According to Henderson’s testimony taken by deposition, he and Black had done business together for many years and in October, 1945, just two months before Black died, they had a complete settlement of their affairs. In this settlement, according to Henderson, he (Henderson) was to receive free and clear of any claim or encumbrance of Black stock certificate numhers 186 and 198.” ***

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Bluebook (online)
494 S.W.2d 452, 254 Ark. 427, 1973 Ark. LEXIS 1530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-first-national-bank-of-dewitt-ark-1973.