Holladay v. General Motors Corp.

43 A.2d 844, 28 Del. Ch. 378, 1945 Del. Ch. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 18, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 43 A.2d 844 (Holladay v. General Motors Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holladay v. General Motors Corp., 43 A.2d 844, 28 Del. Ch. 378, 1945 Del. Ch. LEXIS 55 (Del. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Pearson, Vice-Chancellor:

Early in 1919, complainant caused to be registered in the name of his brother, William, 200 shares of common stock of General Motors Corporation. A few months later, at complainant’s suggestion, 100 shares of the stock were transferred from William’s name to the name of his wife, Fannie. With an exception which need not now be considered, the shares here in controversy are derived from the original 200 shares by virtue of stock dividends and exchanges of shares authorized by General Motors Corporation from time to time. Some of the shares have been sold. Of those remaining, 1875 are registered in Fannie’s name, and 875 in William’s name. Complainant asserts that he is the owner of all of them. The individual defendant, Fannie, claims that she is the owner of those registered in her name, and that as executrix of William, [380]*380she is entitled to those registered in his name. The corporate defendant does not take sides.

Complainant had the 200 shares registered in William’s name, without William’s knowledge. William had been ill and complainant had assisted him financially. In February 1919, William received a letter from complainant with reference to the shares. That letter is not before me, but William’s reply reads thus:

“I received your letter today, and to try to thank you or express my gratitude for what you have done for me would be impossible. I have been holding the subscription warrant, and dividend check, as I did not feel that I had any right to them until I heard from you. I don’t know how to tell you haw thankful X am, and I could not realize that you intended for me to get the benefit of the stock, as you had already done so much for me and had been so generous.”

Although disputed, it may be assumed for the present that when stock certificates were first issued in William’s name, they were received by complainant directly from the transfer agent. These as well as certificates issued pursuant to exchanges were held by complainant, or subject to his control. On several occasions, both William and Fannie furnished complainant with stock powers executed in blank containing no reservations, but purporting to be absolute assignments. Cash and stock dividends and stock warrants were distributed to William and Fannie. With one exception, certificates received representing stock dividends were turned over to complainant. In 1930, complainant opened a brokerage account in William’s name, but without his knowledge, and pledged shares of the General Motors stock as collateral for a loan for the purchase of other stock. William was given credit in this account for dividends received by the broker on shares thus pledged. The market value of the stock which had been purchased declined, and near the end of 1938, after that stock and 1000 shares of the General Motors stock had been sold to pay the loan, the account was closed.

William died in 1940. By his will, he gave his stock [381]*381to Fannie. On learning of this, complainant asserted that he had reserved the right to dispose of the shares, and suggested a division of them between Fannie and others. Fannie thereupon notified him and the General Motors transfer agent that she revoked all powers of attorney previously given complainant. Some four years later, complainant attempted to transfer a block of the shares to his own name. The transfer agent declined to do this and complainant instituted the present suit to determine the ownership of all of the shares. Complainant’s position is stated in a brief as follows:

“It is claimed by the complainant that the only interest in said, General Motors stock transferred to William W. Holladay or Fannie P. Hollaway was the right to receive dividends paid on said stock during the pleasure of the said Charles B. Holladay and all other interests in said stock were reserved and retained by the said Charles B. Holladay.”

He also contends in the alternative, as I understand it, that if what he did amounted to an absolute gift of the shares, then William and Fannie must be deemed to have given them back to him. He concedes that the question presented is primarily one of fact, “what was intended and understood by the parties.”

Complainant’s own statements in his letters to William and Fannie over a period of years leave no doubt as to the legal character of the original transfer or of the subsequent acts of William and Fannie with respect to the shares. Beginning with a letter dated October 8, 1926, we -find complainant stating specifically the capacity in which he held the stock certificates and powers:

“I am now holding for your account a total of 725 shares of the Common stock of the General Motors Corp. The certificates for these shares stand in the name of yourself and Fannie P. Holladay. * * *
“I had this stock transferred as above indicated to keep you from want as you appeared in need of support and I think you must have understood quite plainly that I undertook the custodianship merely for its preservation and to take away any temptation you may have to squander. * * *
[382]*382“You provided no power of attorney for either of the 100 share certificates. I shall not hesitate to sell any or all of the stock if it appears advisable to do so or if you request it, but I will not speculate with the proceeds.”

These statements were consistent with previous correspondence. In many letters to William, complainant referred to the stock as “your stock.” Writing to William in October- 1921, complainant discussed the advisability of a sale of the stock, and said it had “shown you [William] a handsome profit.” On October 4, 1926, complainant wrote William as follows:

“On September 13th, you received a stock dividend of 250 shares stock of the General Motors Corp. I am amazed at your not sending this stock to me for safekeeping and am extremely disappointed that I have to suggest tti you that this stock be sent to me at once. You need not act on my suggestion, but you will take the consequences if you don’t.”

For the- purpose of income taxes, the dividends were treated as income of William and Fannie, not of complainant. Complainant’s letters show that he was aware that William and Fannie reported the dividends in their income tax returns. In January 1939, complainant wrote William discussing a profit on the sale of the General Motors stock (when the brokerage account was closed) and its inclusion in William’s tax returns. William had suggested that he should use the market value at the time he received the shares as the basis for determining profit. Complainant commented on this in his letter as follows:

“* * * I rather think this dangerous as well as unnecessary. If you put in the profit on G. M. as 100% and say the stock was given to you, I do not see that it is encumbent on you to go into details as to luhen. You have an excess loss and you better let it go at that.”

Complainant’s references to inheritance taxes likewise contain implicit acknowledgements that William and Fannie, not complainant, had the beneficial interests in the stock. In a letter to Fannie written in 1925, complainant referred to the original transfer of 100 shares to her as made “in order to save a possible excess inheritance tax in [383]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 A.2d 844, 28 Del. Ch. 378, 1945 Del. Ch. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holladay-v-general-motors-corp-delch-1945.