Moore v. Central Nat. Bank

21 Ohio C.C. Dec. 614
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedFebruary 7, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ohio C.C. Dec. 614 (Moore v. Central Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Central Nat. Bank, 21 Ohio C.C. Dec. 614 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

The plaintiff brings his action against the defendant, which is a banking institution, organized under the laws of the United States, and doing business in the city of Cleveland, state of Ohio, praying that certain certificates of stock of the Detroit United Railways Company, which he once owned, and which were afterwards in the hands of the [615]*615•defendant may be delivered to tbe plaintiff upon his paying to the defendant such sum of money as the court shall find is owing by the plaintiff to the defendant that an accounting may be had of the dividends received by the defendant on said stock while in its hands, and that if it shall be found that the defendant has disposed of said stock, then that an accounting may be taken to include whatever may have been received by the defendant for said stock, and that the plaintiff may recover whatever the amount received in dividends and upon the sale of said stock shall exceed the. indebtedness of the plaintiff to the defendant.

The following facts we find established:

Prior to December 20, 1901, the plaintiff was indebted to the defendant in the sum of $78,000, and also prior to said December 20, 1901, the plaintiff was indebted to the Industrial Trust Company, a banking institution of Philadelphia, Pa., in the sum of $25,000, for which the last named company held the plaintiff’s note, and as collateral security for the payment thereof held the certificates of stock which are the foundation of the present action, and which certificates were the property of this plaintiff. The par value of said stock was $50,000. On said December 20, 1901, the trust company sent to the defendant the said note, in the city of Cleveland, Ohio, where the plaintiff then resided, for collection, and at the same time sent with the note the said collateral. The $25,000 note became due on said date and the defendant immediately notified the plaintiff that said note was in its hands for collection, and that it also had in its hands said collateral. The plaintiff answered that he was unable to pay the note that day or the next, but would arrange it very shortly. Before December 31, 1901, the plaintiff received notice more than once, after the notice first mentioned, that the note was in the hands of the defendant for collection and must be paid. No payment, however, was made by the plaintiff on the note, and on December 31, 1901, the defendant notified the plaintiff that the note must be paid at once, or that the collateral would be sold. The note referred to contained the following provisions:

“I, -, upon default of payment at maturity - do hereby authorize and empower the holders hereof, for the purpose of liquidation of said note, and of all interest and costs thereon, to sell, transfer and deliver the whole or any part of such security (being the five, hundred shares of Detroit United Railways Company stock) without any previous demand, advertisement or notice, either at [616]*616[Broker’s board or at private sale, at any time or times thereafter, with the right on the part of such holders to become purchasers and absolute owner thereof, free of all trusts and claims.”

On the afternoon of said December 31, at the close of banking hours, the defendant, without any notice to anybody, in front of its place of business on Superior avenue in the city of Cleveland, announced that the said five hundred shares of stock were now offered, for sale to the highest bidder. Nobody paid any attention to said announcement except the officers or employes of the defendant. The attorney of the defendant made the announcement and the offer of sale, and the defendant bid for said stock the sum of $25,050, being the exact amount that day owing upon the note already mentioned. No other bid was made and the attorney who had offered the stock for sale, announced that it was sold to the defendant. The next day being the first of January, and a holiday, no entry of the transaction was made on the books of the defendant, but, on the second of January an entry was made that the stock was sold to the defendant at private sale, and thereupon the defendant remitted to the trust company in Philadelphia the amount then due upon its note, being the amount for which said stock was so purported to be sold. Prior to December 31, aforesaid, the plaintiff had stated to the defendant, what was true, that he was laboring under great financial embarrassment; that payment on notes held against him by various parties was being demanded ; that his assets were largely in excess of his liabilities, but that he was unable to convert such assets at once into money, and therefore unable to pay his obligations as they became due; that another bank in the city had promised him that so far as notes came due it for collection it would arrange for the payment of same, and hold the collateral to protect itself, and he urged that the defendant do the same thing in regard to this note. This, the defendant told him it would not do; that it must insist that he pay the note. The plaintiff had no knowledge of this purported sale on December 31, other than the notice given to him on the morning of that day, that unless the note was paid That day the collateral would be sold. And the plaintiff prior to December 31, said to the defendant that he hoped if the stock was sold there would be no publicity about it, as he feared the effect on the market value of the stock, and upon his credit if it should be publicly known that this collateral was being sold. The plaintiff says in his testimony, that the first knowledge he had of this sale was communicated to him by the president of the defendant on January 14, 1902; [617]*617that he was then told by this president that they had sold the stock to themselves, and had paid the note to the trust company, and would hold this collateral as security to themselves for the payment they had made and for the other indebtedness of $78,000 which plaintiff then owed to the defendant. This conversation the president of the defendant denies, and we are not prepared to say that the plaintiff sustains by preponderance of the evidence that this conversation took place, as he relates it. But in this opinion we treat the matter as though the plaintiff had not so testified. We think he is as likely to be mistaken about his remembrance of this as the president of the defendant. But. however, we do find that on February 5, 1902, the defendant transmitted by mail to the plaintiff the note which it had paid to the trust company in Philadelphia, which was cancelled as “paid” on December 31, 1901, and that such cancellation was stamped upon the note upon the date last named. The plaintiff acknowledged by letter the receipt of this note so cancelled. Beyond that there was no communication between the plaintiff and the defendant in reference to said note until June 4, 1902, while the defendant still held the said collateral, when the plaintiff sent to the defendant, by mail, a draft drawn upon him on Mr. Charles Ashbrook, for $37,500 and by letter accompanying said draft, advised the defendant that he had sold the five hundred shares of Detroit United railways’ stock which it was carrying for him, and that this draft was in payment therefor. In this letter he requested the defendant to apply the proceeds of this draft on his indebtedness to the bank. The defendant immediately notified the plaintiff that it claimed to own said stock; that it had purchased the same on December 31, 1901, and denied all right on his part to any interest in the stock.

Thereafter, partly in the month of June and partly in the month of July, 1902, the defendant sold said stock for $40,000.

This suit was brought on April 9, 1906.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ohio C.C. Dec. 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-central-nat-bank-ohiocirct-1910.