Holmes v. Birtman Electric Co.

159 N.E.2d 272, 22 Ill. App. 2d 72
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 1, 1959
DocketGen. 47,639
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 159 N.E.2d 272 (Holmes v. Birtman Electric 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
Holmes v. Birtman Electric Co., 159 N.E.2d 272, 22 Ill. App. 2d 72 (Ill. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

JUSTICE BURKE

delivered the opinion of the court.

Helen M. Holmes brought an action against the Birtman Electric Company and its stock transfer agent, The First National Bank of Chicago, for damages resulting from their refusal to reissue Birtman Stock certificates in the name of plaintiff alone in place of certificates standing in the name of plaintiff and her deceased father, Charles Hansel, as joint tenants. Plaintiff and defendants moved for a summary judgment. The court sustained plaintiff’s motion for a summary judgment on the issue of liability. The judgment order provided that the damages, if any, were to be assessed at a hearing limited to that issue. A trial of the issue of damages resulted in a judgment against the defendants for $6,890.83. Defendants, appealing, ask that the judgment against them be reversed and that judgment be entered in their favor. In her cross appeal plaintiff asks that judgment be entered in her favor for $23,598.75, $21,576 or $20,-901.75, plus interest.

There is little if any dispute about the facts. On December 10, 1953, Birtman issued to the plaintiff and her father, Charles Hansel, as joint tenants with the right of survivorship, 2697 shares of its common stock. The father died on April 4, 1955, leaving him surviving two daughters, the plaintiff and her sister Marion Lenox. On September 15, 1955, the bank was served with summons as a defendant in a suit in the Superior Court of Cook County filed by Marion Lenox against plaintiff herein, her husband James Holmes and the bank. The verified complaint for a declaratory decree alleged that plaintiff herein (defendant in the Lenox case) had by fraud, threats and undue influence, caused her incompetent father, Charles Hansel, to transfer the stock from his own name to the names of himself and Helen Holmes, as joint tenants. The complaint prayed, among other things, that the court declare that Helen Holmes holds such shares in trust for the heirs of Charles Hansel, and further prayed that the bank and others be temporarily enjoined from transferring, assigning, selling, encumbering or dissipating the stock. At a hearing in the Lenox case on a request for a temporary injunction on September 19, 1955, the chancellor decided that the facts alleged justified a complete examination and referred the matter of the issuance of a temporary injunction to a master in chancery, requiring that his report be filed within thirty days thereafter.

On September 23, 1955, plaintiff delivered the certificates for the 2697 shares of stock to the bank, duly endorsed, together with a certified copy of the death certificate of her father and the Attorney General’s consent to a transfer or assignment of the stock to the plaintiff and demanded that the bank transfer the shares to plaintiff. On the same day plaintiff’s attorney directed a letter to the bank renewing the demand. The transfer demanded was, in effect, from plaintiff as the surviving joint tenant to her individually. It was a demand for the reissuance of new certificates for the stock to the same holder. No demand or request for a transfer to other than plaintiff was made. The bank’s written response dated October 6, 1955, stated that it would be “unable to comply with your request that we transfer the stock into the name of your client until the litigation [the Lenox case] is disposed of.” The bank refused to transfer or reissue the stock to the name of plaintiff alone. It was not requested to transfer to anyone else nor did it refuse to make such transfer. The position taken by the bank was that the demand for transfer from plaintiff as surviving joint tenant to her individually could not be complied with until the Lenox case was disposed of.

After plaintiff’s demand to have the stock reissued in her own name was refused, she made her demand for reissuance in writing without indicating any intention to sell or otherwise dispose of the stock. She stated that she would hold the hank accountable for loss suffered by reason of its failure to transfer the stock to her. She received and cashed two dividend checks paid on the stock, one dated November 23,1955, for $404.55 and the other dated December 31, 1955, for $1,078.80. Plaintiff made no attempt whatsoever and gave no indication of a desire to sell or dispose of or realize upon any of the shares of stock, or to place any of the shares with a broker for sale or otherwise to discover whether a sale thereof could be effected. Plaintiff did not make any attempt to cause an order to be entered in the Lenox case permitting, during the pendency thereof, the reissue or transfer of all or any part of the shares to the name of plaintiff or to the names of any purchasers or other persons. On the contrary, it was found as a fact in the Lenox case by the master in chancery that there was not a scintilla of evidence that Helen Holmes, her husband and the bank, threatened or were going to sell, transfer or dispose of any of the stock. The reissue or transfer of the stock was delayed pending the determination by the Superior Court of the questions which the bank with notice of the Lenox case would have had to decide before transferring the stock to plaintiff’s name, namely, whether the new certificates should be issued at all and if so if they should be issued to her as trustee, or to her absolutely, or to other persons, or in some other way. On January 16, 1956, the chancellor in the Lenox case denied her motion for a temporary injunction and entered a decree dismissing her complaint for want of equity. Shortly after the expiration of the thirty days’ period provided by Section 68.3 [Ill. Rev. Stats, ch. 110] of the Civil Practice Act, the bank proceeded to reissue the 2697 shares of Birtman stock in the name of plaintiff individually. The new certificates were dated February 20, 1956, but were not actually delivered to her until March 1, 1956. She retained these shares until May 9, 1957, when, pursuant to the merger of Birtman with the Whirlpool Corporation, she received stock in the latter corporation in exchange for her Birtman stock. At that time she elected to have the new certificates issued in the names of herself and her husband as joint tenants.

The first point presented by the defendants is that their temporary delay in transferring the stock in accordance with plaintiff’s demand was reasonable and justifiable in view of the pending litigation against the bank, as transfer agent, seeking to enjoin the transfer of this stock and to have a trust declared with respect to it, and that they were not obligated to act at their peril by prejudging the issues presented in the Lenox case. Plaintiff asserts that the defendants, refusing to transfer the stock of the shareholder, are guilty of a conversion thereof, liable in trover and must answer in damages to the holder of the stock to the extent of the market value thereof on the date of the demand or conversion. Plaintiff insists that there was no triable issue of fact and that her motion for summary judgment should have been sustained in its entirety. On similar reasoning she contends that her motion for judgment on the pleadings should have been allowed. Plaintiff asserts that the bank’s refusal to reissue the stock was absolute. The record sustains defendants’ position that the refusal was only temporary. The reissue was delayed pending the developments in the Lenox case.

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Related

Small v. Sussman
713 N.E.2d 1216 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1999)
Holmes v. Birtman Electric Co.
165 N.E.2d 261 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
159 N.E.2d 272, 22 Ill. App. 2d 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-birtman-electric-co-illappct-1959.