Merchants' National Bank v. Richards

6 Mo. App. 454, 1879 Mo. App. LEXIS 12
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 6 Mo. App. 454 (Merchants' National Bank v. Richards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants' National Bank v. Richards, 6 Mo. App. 454, 1879 Mo. App. LEXIS 12 (Mo. Ct. App. 1879).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On January 10, 1877, plaintiff commenced the present action to recover a dividend on three hundred and ten shares of the capital stock of defendant, which plaintiff claimed to own. Defendant answered that on December 26, 1875, three hundred and ten shares of its stock stood on its books as owned by one Bay, for which defendant had issued two [456]*456certificates of stock, covering together the above number of shares, which stock is transferable on the books of the company ; that at the date last named, plaintiff, late in the day, represented itself to defendant as the owner of this stock, and required defendant to permit a transfer on its books of the stock to plaintiff; that defendant requested until next day to consult its legal adviser as to its duty in the premises'; that next day the Missouri Zinc Company caused the stock in question to be seized by the sheriff and attached in defendant’s hands, as the property of Ray, for a claim of $33,000, by virtue of an attachment commenced by said Zinc Company against Ray, who is a non-resident; that after the levy of this-attachment plaintiff again applied for a transfer of the stock, which defendant refused on account of the attachment that afterwards, by virtue of proceedings in this attachment suit, the interest of Ray at the date of the attachment, in this stock, was sold, and purchased by Richards, who then demanded a transfer of the stock on the books of the company to him, which defendant refused; that before this application of Richards, plaintiff had sued defendant for damages for not permitting the transfer to plaintiff; and that the present suit is for dividends since the damage suit, which became due December 21, 1876. Defendant says it has no claim on the stock, or interest in it, and has declined to transfer it only because it cannot know to whom the transfer should be made; that it is willing to transfer the stock, and pay the sum of $3,100, due for dividends, to the real owner of the stock. Defendant prays that plaintiff and Richards be required to interplead, etc.

Richards was accordingly summoned to interplead. He denies all knowledge of plaintiff’s claim and of its demand for a transfer of the stock, and claims to own the stock by virtue of the proceedings set forth in defendant’s answer.

To the interplea of Richards plaintiff files a reply, in which it alleges that it acquired the stock long prior to [457]*457the attachment, by a pledge from Ray to secure $20,000 due by Ray to plaintiff; and says that its demand for a transfer was repeatedly made, long before the attachment.

Upon the final hearing, the court decreed that plaintiff is entitled to the dividends, to be credited on the indebtedness of Ray ; and also to have the stock transferred on the books of the company to plaintiff, and to hold the stock and dividends until the debt of Ray is paid ; and that the interpleader may redeem the stock at any time by paying the balance due on the loan.

The evidence shows that plaintiff was organized under the act of June 3, 1864. Defendant is a corporation carrying on the business of refining sugars. Its charter provides that the stock shall be personal property, transfei’able as the by-laws prescribe. These by-laws provide that no certificate of stock shall be issued to an assignee until that issued to his assignor is returned and cancelled. All transfers must be made in the record-book, and attested by a subscribing witness. The two certificates in question stated on their face that they were transferable on the books of the company only in conformity to the charter and by-laws. The loan to Ray & Co., who were New York merchants, was made by simply giving to them, as customers of plaintiff, a credit for $20,000 on their pass-book. The certificates were then handed to the cashier of plaintiff, and the printed foi’m of assignment on the back of the certificate was already signed by Ray. The assignment purports to transfer to--shares of the capital stock of defendant, represented by the certificate, and to appoint -the attorney irrevocable of the assignor to make. any necessary act of transfer on the books of the company and to substitute other attorneys for that purpose. The signature is attested by a subscribing witness. The witness died before the trial. His name and that of Ray were written on the back of the certificates long prior to the loan in question, for the purpose of effecting other loans. Ray [458]*458& Co. failed. Their average balance with plaintiff was $15,000 to $20,000. They were constantly depositing and drawing out funds, to the date of their failure. The original loan remained unpaid, except as to some payments of interest, at the date of Ra}' & Co.’s failure, in December, 1875, when the bank at once sent them to the German Bank, its correspondent in St. Louis, with instructions to have the transfer made on the books of the company. On the evening of December 26th the German Bank received the certificates, and next morning an employee of that bank called at the office of defendant and requested a transfer of the certificates. The secretary was not in, and the messenger was told that it could not be done in his absence, and was requested to call again ; which he did in the same afternoon, when he was told that the transfer could not be made in the absence of the president; that a meeting of directors would be at once called about the matter, and the employee was requested to come next day. He did so, and was informed that defendant would not permit the transfer. No reason was given for the refusal. The cashier of the German Bank then called about the matter, on the same afternoon, and was informed by the president and secretary that the transfer must be declined on account of rumors of Ray’s failure; but that they would take legal advice, and give a definite answer. Next day the permission was definitely refused. The cashier of the German Bank then put the matter in the hands of the attorney of the bank, who demanded a transfer on the 28th and 29th, with the same result. On the morning of the 29th, legal proceedings were threatened, and then the objection was made that the assignment was in blank. The attorney offered to fill the blank, but was told that a transfer would in no case be permitted, because the Missouri Zinc Company had attached.. On the same day, plaintiff commenced suit against defendant for damages for refusal to transfer the stock. This action was pending at the date of the trial of the present case.

[459]*459The attachment suit of the Zinc Company was instituted on December 28th, and on the same day was levied on Bay’s interest in five hundred and eight shares of the Belcher Befining Company, including the shares in question. In this suit judgment was obtained, under which all the interest of Bay in the shares was sold, and Eben Bichards, the interpleader, became the purchaser of them at a receiver’s sale. Bichards was president of the Zinc Company at the time. At the date of the purchase, Bichards knew of the claim.of plaintiff ; but at the date of the attachment the Zinc Company had no notice of the claim against the shares. Meanwhile the present action was brought to recover the dividends, which had been demanded by plaintiff’s attorneys in December, 1876, and refused on the ground that the title was in litigation.

It is claimed by appellant that the allegations of the answer of defendant make no case to warrant the court in compelling plaintiff and Bichards to interplead, because there is no affidavit and no statement in the answer that defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Mo. App. 454, 1879 Mo. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-national-bank-v-richards-moctapp-1879.