Marietta & Cincinnati Railroad v. Mowry

35 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 79
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 35 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 79 (Marietta & Cincinnati Railroad v. Mowry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marietta & Cincinnati Railroad v. Mowry, 35 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 79 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1882).

Opinion

Brady, P. J.:

The following are the findings of fact by the referee:

The plaintiffs, at the time of the transactions hereinafter mentioned and of the commencement of this action, were a railroad corporation under the laws of the State of Ohio.

In January, 1866, they executed 2,500 bonds of $1,000 each, secured by second mortgage upon their line of railroad, said bonds being payable to bearer and numbered consecutively.

On the 10th of March, 1866, sixty of said bonds numbered eighty to 110 inclusive, were sent from the office of said company at OBillicothe, Ohio, by an officer thereof, to the defendant Samuel B. Keys, at Cincinnati, Ohio. On the 21th day of July, 1866, 140 of said bonds, numbered 638 to TT7, were in like manner sent to said Keys.

[81]*81These bonds had not yet been issued for value, and no money was paid by said Keys for- them when they were so sent to him.

On or about tüe 28th of June, 1866, Samuel JB. Keys, on behalf of his firm of Keys «& Brother, of Cincinnati, made an arrangement for the. purchase of 200 of said 2,500 bonds at fifty-five cents on the dollar, payable in one year; said arrangement was made in the city .of New York, between said Keys and Noah L. Wilson, Blakely Wilson, Le Grand Lockwood, William Hoag and S. W. Hazeltine, all- said persons being directors of said company, and assembled together at the time the bargain was concluded. The 200 bonds so arranged for were delivered to said Keys by his taking into account- the sixty bonds sent him on the 10th of March, 1866, which had not then been used by him, and by sending to him the 140 bonds above mentioned as sent on the 24th of July,-1866.

At this time said Samuel B. Keys was a director of the plaintiffs’ company, and had been since 1861, and he continued to be a director until 1869; he was also a member of the firm of Keys <fe Brother, bf Cincinnati, which was composed of himself, Richard W. Keys and Edward S. Lea.

From the 1st of April, 1866, said Samuel B. Keys and Richard W. Keys were also members of the firm of Mowry, Keys & Bend, in the city of New York, composed of the defendants herein. This firm was dissolved about the 23d day of February, 1867.

The business of said firms of Keys «fe Brother, and of Mowry, Keys & Bend, was that of dealers in gold, stocks, bonds and other securities.

During 1866 the firm of Keys & Brother, of Cincinnati, transacted business with the firm of Mowry, Keys <fe Bend, in New York, the business consisting in the latter firm of buying and selling gold, stocks, bonds and other securities for the firm of Keys «fe Brother; the account was an active one.; the firm of Keys <& Brother was constantly debtor to the firm of Mowry, Keys «fe Bend, and from time to time sent to said firm bonds, stocks and other securities on pledge or as collateral security for the account.

On the 25th of-July, 1876, Keys «fe Brother, so sent to Mowry, Keys «fe Bend, 140 second mortgage bonds of the plaintiffs ; on the 19th of September, 1866, ten other of said bonds, and in January, 1867, sixty other of said bonds; of said 210 bonds the firm of [82]*82Mowry, Keys & Bend sold for account of Keyes & Brother fifty-five, leaving on hand at the time of the dissolution of Mowry, Keys & Bend, and in their possession as pledgees, and by way of security as aforesaid, 155 of said bonds, being those described in the ■complaint.

The plaintiff's never received from Samuel B. Keys, nor from his firm of Keys & Brother, nor from the defendants’ firm, any money >on account of said bonds.

The following statute of the State of Ohio was in force during the years 1866, 1867:

Section 1. Be it enacted, etc., that the directors of any railroad company, authorized to borrow money and to execute bonds or promissory notes therefor,- shall be, and they are hereby-authorized to sell, negotiate, mortgage or pledge such bonds or notes, as well as any notes, bonds, scrip or certificates for the payment of money or property which such company may have heretofore received, or shall hereafter receive, as donations or in payment of subscriptions to the capital stock, or for other dues of such company, at such times and in such places either within or without the State, and at such rates and for such prices as in the opinion ,of said directors will best advance the interests of such company; and if such notes or bonds are thus sold at a discount, such sale shall be as valid in every respect, and such securities as binding for the respective amounts thereof, as if they were sold at their par value.

Section 2. No director of any railroad company shall, either directly or indirectly, purchase any shares of the capital stock or any of the bonds,, notes or other securities of any railroad company of which he may b.e a director for less than the par value thereof; and all such stocks, bonds or notes or other securities that may be purchased by any such director, for less than the par value thereof shall be null and void.

On or about the 11th of March, 1867, agreements in writing were executed between the firm of Keys & Brother, in liquidation, and each member thereof, and the firm of Mowry, Keys & Bend, in liquidation, and each member thereof, both of said' firms being then dissolved, by which agreements the said late firm of Keys & Brother transferred to the said late firm of Mowry, Keys & Bend certain stocks and securities which said Mowry, Keys & Bend then held as [83]*83security, including, specifically, the said 155 bonds, in satisfaction of a large indebtedness from said late firm of Keys & Brother to Mowry, Keys & Bend, and Samuel B. Keys, Richard W. Keys and George H. Bend, as members of said late firm of Mowry, Keys & Bend, transferred to the defendant Albert L. Mowry all their right and title to said securities, he assuming the liabilities of said Mowry, Keys & Bend and indemnifying them individually against the same.

During the year 1867 said Mowry from time to time sold and disposed of the said 155 bonds to purchasers in New York and Baltimore.

Neither the said Mowry nor the said Bend ever had any knowledge of the manner in which Samuel B. Keys had come in possession of said bonds, nor ofi any claim of the plaintiff in respect to the same against him, until after the execution of the said agreements, and after the sale by defendant Mowry of the said bonds, nor until about the time of the commencement of this action.

“I find as matters of law that Samuel B. Keys and the firm of Keys & Brother never acquired any title to the said bonds as against the plaintiffs.

That the firm of Mowry, Keys & Bend did not acquire any title to said bonds by virtue of the delivery of them to said firm as security for the dealings with said firm of the firm of Keys & Brother, being at the time of such delivery chargeable with constructive notice of the want of title of said Keys & Brother.

That, by the settlement of March, 1867, the defendants Albert L. Mowry and George H. Bend became bona fide purchasers for value of said bonds,- and, as between them, the said Mowry became a liona fide purchaser for value of the bonds, and was such when he subsequently sold and disposed of the same.

That the defendants Albert L. Mowry and George H.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marietta-cincinnati-railroad-v-mowry-nysupct-1882.