Mastellone v. Argo Oil Corp.

82 A.2d 379, 46 Del. 102, 1951 Del. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1951
Docket2
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 82 A.2d 379 (Mastellone v. Argo Oil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mastellone v. Argo Oil Corp., 82 A.2d 379, 46 Del. 102, 1951 Del. LEXIS 30 (Del. 1951).

Opinion

*104 Tunnell, J.,

delivering the opinion of the Court:

On the 11th day of August, 1925, Argo Oil Company, a corporation of the State of Delaware, issued to A. A. Hall & Company certificate No. T02759 for ninety shares of its capital stock. On the 3rd day of January, 1927, A. A. Hall & Company assigned the said certificate in blank, the signature being duly guaranteed. What happened to the certificate after January 3rd, 1927, and prior to May 3rd, 1929, is not completely reported in the record. On the 3rdday óf May, 1929, the said certificate was sold by a New York broker, whose identity is not here material, to the plaintiff-below, appellant, hereinafter referred to as the “plaintiff”. From May 3rd, 1929, until April 22nd, 1948, the plaintiff made no application to have the shares transferred to his own name, leaving them registered on the books of the company all the while, so far as he knew, in the name of A. A. Hall & Company. Although dividends were paid on these shares at least once each year from 1934 to 1948, inclusive, the plaintiff never received any such dividend. The defendant, in fact, never knew the plaintiff as a stockholder or a person claiming ownership of stock until it received a letter from plaintiff, dated April 22nd, 1948, asking for transfer of the shares to plaintiff’s name.

On the 9th day of November, 1936, Argo Oil Company, together with another corporation in which we have no interest, merged, the surviving corporation being Argo Oil Corporation, the defendant-below, appellee, hereinafter referred to as “defendant”. A. A. Hall & Company, being a stockholder of record, received notice of the merger proceedings, but could not locate its certificate No. T02759. On the 30th day of December, 1936, A. A. Hall & Company, upon affidavit that the certificate could not be surrendered because it was lost or destroyed, and upon execution of a bond with surety, made payable to Argo Oil “Company”, obtained a substitute certificate for ninety shares, being certificate No. 571.

*105 The above-mentioned bond was executed December 30, 1936 but, nevertheless, contained a recital indicating that Argo Oil “Company” had “agreed to issue” a new certificate. This bond was executed by A. A. Hall & Company and by a surety. There is in the record affirmative evidence indicating that certificate No. 571 was issued directly from the defendant corporation to A. A. Hall & Company, and indicating that no Argo Oil “Company” certificate was in fact issued to replace certificate No. T02759.

Certificate No. T02759 may have been lost or stolen, but it had not been destroyed, because from May 3rd, 1929, it had been, and still is, so far as this record indicates, in the possession of the plaintiff. Certificate No. 571 was in due course traded by A. A. Hall & Company until the shares it represented came into the ownership of one Anne B. Hall. The date of issuance of certificate No. 571 is not in the record, but it had to be by or before the 21st day of January, 1937, for on that date, upon a transfer of the shares, certificate No. 571 was surrendered and a new certificate issued.

When the plaintiff, in 1948, tried to obtain a certificate in his own name, the defendant refused to make the transfer and by letter to plaintiff recounted the facts substantially as above outlined. There being no possibility of obtaining the ninety shares from Anne B. Hall, who had acquired her stock in a legal manner, and the corporation refusing either to pay damages for the conversion or to furnish equivalent stock, this action of trover was brought for conversion of the plaintiff’s shares.

The merger agreement contained the following language pertaining to exchange of stock certificates: “On and after November 5, 1936, certificates representing said shares of stock in Argo Oil Corporation shall be delivered to each shareholder in Argo Oil Company by the Secretary of Argo Oil Corporation upon the surrender to said Secretary at the office of the company, 1104 First National Bank Building, Denver, Colorado, of certificates representing an equal number of shares in Argo Oil Company.”

*106 Further, stock certificate No. T02759 contained on it, among other language, the following descriptive clause relating to the entire issue of capital stock of the said company: “ * * * transferable on the books of the Company in person or by attorney upon surrender of this certificate properly endorsed.”

In the court below three defenses were pleaded, but we are concerned only with the one interposing the Statute of Limitations, Rev. Code 1935, § 5129, as amended, 46 Del. Laws, c. 115. On that defense defendant moved for summary judgment on the pleadings, admissions, and a deposition, and in due course the trial court granted the motion. In respect to the summary judgment so granted, plaintiff has sued out this writ of error.

The plaintiff’s first argument is that the issuance of stock certificate No. 571 was not a conversion of the ninety shares represented by stock certificate T02759. The reasoning by which this conclusion is reached depends upon acceptance of several successive propositions. To begin with, plaintiff asserts that Argo Oil Company first issued to Hall what plaintiff calls a “replacement” certificate, which Hall, in turn, presented to the corporation, in exchange for which the corporation issued stock certificate No. 571. Further, plaintiff asserts that a defunct corporation such as Argo Oil Company had no power to do anything at all, and, therefore, the replacement certificate which he says was issued was without legal effect. Next, plaintiff says that the defendant corporation could not issue a stock certificate in exchange for any other certificate unless a valid certificate for the shares in question was first physically surrendered. This last point in the series is, in turn, based upon a double foundation: the above-quoted language of the merger agreement as to surrender of stock and the similar language appearing on stock certificate No. T02759. In summary, plaintiff says that since no valid certificate was surrendered because the valid one was elsewhere, that is, in the plaintiff’s possession, and no other valid one could have been issued by Argo Oil Company after its existence had been terminated, therefore, the transaction that took place was no conversion at all, but only a *107 voluntary gift of ninety shares of stock to A. A. Hall & Company.

The trial court overruled this argument. It found as facts that Argo Oil Company issued a replacement certificate and that defendant corporation issued stock certificate No. 571 in exchange therefor. The trial court, however, considered that no legal defect underlay such a transaction. It held that while a defunct corporation could not carry on the business purposes for which is was created, nevertheless, termination of corporate existence did not deprive the general public of the power to trade in the property represented by the remains of the corporate structure, and that the statutory provisions contained in Section “60”, Rev. Code

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Bluebook (online)
82 A.2d 379, 46 Del. 102, 1951 Del. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mastellone-v-argo-oil-corp-del-1951.