Morrison v. Gulf Oil Corp.

196 So. 247, 189 Miss. 212, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 108
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1940
DocketNo. 34139.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 196 So. 247 (Morrison v. Gulf Oil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrison v. Gulf Oil Corp., 196 So. 247, 189 Miss. 212, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 108 (Mich. 1940).

Opinion

*215 McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, who compose the liquidating committee of the Cahn Bank & Trust Company, of Meridian, Mississippi, and who are vested with authority under a decree of the chancery court to sue for and collect the indebtednesses due said bank, brought this suit by attachment and garnishment in the Chancery Court of Harrison County, under Section 173 of the Code of 1930, against the Gulf Oil Corporation, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, as a non-resident defendant, the Gulf Refining Company as a resident garnishee, and R. L. Bradshaw, a local resident debtor, to recover an indebtedness of $1,491.71 due and owing by the said Bradshaw to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation on his promissory note executed in favor of the said Cahn Bank & Trust Company to evidence a loan obtained by him from said bank, and which note and ten shares of the capital stock of the non-resident defendant corporation, which were issued and registered in the name of the said Bradshaw and pledged by him as collateral security, were assigned and transferred along with other collateral by proper endorsement to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation as security for a loan made by it to the bank; and in which suit a decree was also sought, but denied appellants, against the nonresident defendant for the sum of $567.68, with interest thereon at the legal rate from and after December 26, 1936, on the ground that the said defendant, on that date, paid over to the said Bradshaw, who was insolvent, a 100'% stock dividend in said amount, after notice of the rights of the assignees, respectively, and demand made by them for said dividend, and which was thereupon converted by the said Bradshaw to his own use and benefit.

The proof disclosed without dispute that upon learning that the stock dividend was to be declared on December 21,1936, the appellants advised the appellee, Gulf Oil Corporation, at its home office in Pittsburg, by letter *216 of November 13, 1936, and by repeated communications thereafter, of the rights of the assignees in and to the dividend in question, and urged the said corporation not to pay the same to the said Bradshaw. On November 16th, 1936, the treasurer of said corporation wrote the receiver of the Oahn Bank & Trust Company, acknowledging receipt of his letter of the 13th instant, and stated that “Any dividends payable on Gulf Oil Corporation stock will be paid to R. L. Bradshaw who is the registered holder on my records.” Again, on December 9, 1936, he wrote the receiver of said bank that, “I will be unable to comply with your request unless I receive written request from Mr. R. L. Bradshaw to forward this stock dividend to him in care of your bank. ’ ’ Of course, as shown by the evidence, the assignees could not get the co-operation of Bradshaw in the matter, otherwise the written request from him for the dividend to be paid over to one or the other of the assignees would have been forwarded.

The appellee, Gulf Oil Corporation, defended the suit on two grounds: (1), that the suit could not be maintained by the appellants, for the reason that Section 505, of the Code of 1930, requires that the last assignee, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, must bring the suit on any assigned chose in action, or that it must be begun, prosecuted and continued in the name of the original party, where there has been a transfer or an assignment of any interest in such chose in action before or after suit brought; and (2) that under the “Uniform Transfer Act,” approved May 5, 1911, Section 303 of Title 15 of Purdon’s Pennsylvania Statutes 1936, and Section 509 of Act N:o. 106, 15 P. S. Sec. 2852 — 509, approved May 5, 1933, known as the “Business Corporation Law of Pennsylvania,” the said corporation was protected in paying out the said stock dividend to the person in whose name the shares of stock were registered on the books of the corporation.

Responding to the first contention above stated, we are of the opinion that the lower court was correct in holding *217 that the suit was properly brought, for the reason that it was necessary for the debt due by Bradshaw on the note to be established in order to entitle the holder of the note to the income from the stock which was held as collateral thereto. The Cahn Bank & Trust Company, as the payee named therein, was the original party entitled to sue on the note, within the meaning of Section 505, Code of 1930, supra, since the suit on the note could not be maintained in Bradshaw’s name as maker, even though he was the original party insofar as the right to collect the dividend on the stock pledged as collateral was concerned. Moreover, the original party in each instance was before the court as complainant and defendant, respectively.

On the second ground of defense interposed by the appellee corporation, we find that Section 303 of Title 15 of Purdon’s Pennsylvania Statutes 1936, known as the “Uniform Transfer Act,” reads in part as follows: ‘ ‘ Corporation not forbidden to consider registered holder as owner Nothing in this act shall be construed as forbidding a corporation — (a.) To recognize the exclusive right of a person registered on its books as the owner of shares to receive dividends, and to vote as such owner, or (b.) To hold liable for calls and assessments a person registered on its books as the owner of shares. ’ ’

Also, that Section 509 of Act No. 106, approved May 5, 1933, known as the “Business Corporation Law of Pennsylvania,” supra, so far as its provisions here pertinent are concerned, provides for the fixing of a date, by the board of directors of a corporation in that state, not less than ten or more than forty days in the future, for the payment of any such dividend or distribution; that, “in such case, only such shareholders as shall be shareholders of record on the date so fixed shall be entitled to notice of, and to vote at, such meeting, or to receive payment of such dividend, . . . notwithstanding any transfer of any shares on the books of the corporation after any record date fixed, as aforesaid;” *218 and that “the hoard of directors may close the hooks of the corporation against transfers of shares during the whole or any part of such period, and in such case written or printed notice thereof shall be mailed at least ten days before the closing thereof to each shareholder of record at the address appearing on the records of the corporation or supplied by him to the corporation for the purpose of notice. While the stock transfer books of the corporation are closed, no transfer of shares shall be made thereon.”

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 247, 189 Miss. 212, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-gulf-oil-corp-miss-1940.