Nolan v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co.

61 N.E.2d 876, 326 Ill. App. 328, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 351
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 15, 1945
DocketGen. No. 42,229
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 61 N.E.2d 876 (Nolan v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nolan v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co., 61 N.E.2d 876, 326 Ill. App. 328, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 351 (Ill. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal by defendant, American Telephone and Telegraph Company, seeks to reverse a decree which directed it to issue to plaintiff, Charlotte Nolan, a certificate for 100 shares of its capital stock and to pay her $4,275 in dividends and $633.22 interest on such dividends.

Plaintiff’s complaint alleged substantially that on June 12, 1936 certificate 0102232 for 100 shares of American Telephone and Telegraph Company stock was issued to her in her name and that she had been the legal and equitable owner of such 100 shares of stock since said date; that some time between June 12,1936 and September 2, 1936 “some unknown person obtained possession of the said certificate” without her consent or permission and forged her name to an irrevocable stock power without her authority; that said forgery did not come to her knowledge until on or about July 1, 1937; and that some unknown person or persons presented said certificate of stock along with the forged irrevocable stock power to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company and demanded the issuance of a new certificate in exchange and that defendant accepted plaintiff’s forged signature on the irrevocable stock power as genuine and wrongfully and unlawfully issued and delivered to some person other than plaintiff a new certificate for 100 shares of its stock in lieu of certificate .G102232.

The complaint concluded with a prayer that defendant be ordered to issue and deliver to plaintiff a certificate for 100 shares of its capital stock and to pay her all dividends declared payable to stockholders of record since July 15, 1936 and interest on such dividends.

Defendant filed an amended answer which specifically denied all the material allegations of the complaint, including the averment that “the irrevocable stock power was forged,” and alleged that the signature appearing on said stock power was signed by plaintiff. The amended answer also contained the following allegations:

“Defendant denies that the plaintiff was at any of the times mentioned in plaintiff’s complaint, or that the plaintiff now is the equitable owner of one hundred (100) shares of the capital stock of the American Telephone & Telegraph Company, a corporation, represented by stock certificate numbered G102232. Defendant admits that certificate numbered G-102232 for one hundred (100) shares of the par value of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) per share was issued by American Telephone & Telegraph Company to Miss Charlotte Nolan, the plaintiff, on June 12, 1936, but alleges the fact to be that the said certificate and the shares of stock represented thereby were at said time and during all the times thereafter, until September 2, 1936, owned by and the property of John J. Nolan, the father of plaintiff, and alleges that plaintiff, during all of said period, held the said stock as the nominee of and for the exclusive benefit of said John J. Nolan.”

In her reply to the amended answer plaintiff denied all of the matters affirmatively alleged therein by way of defense and averred that she “acquired the stock in her own right and for her own benefit as a gift from her father on June 12, 1936.”

Defendant’s theory as stated in its brief is that “plaintiff’s father furnished the consideration for which certificate G102232 was issued in plaintiff’s name on Jime 12, 1936; that he did not give or intend to give the stock to plaintiff, but that on the contrary, he merely caused the certificate to be issued in. her name that she might hold it as his nominee for his exclusive benefit; and that in September 1936 plaintiff’s father caused the stock to be sold and received the proceeds of sale. The defendant also contends that the signature on the irrevocable stock power is the genuine signature of plaintiff.”

Plaintiff’s theory is that her father made a gift to her of 100 shares of American Telephone and Telegraph Company stock on June 12, 1936 by causing certificate G102232 to be issued in her name and that she did not sign the irrevocable stock power pursuant to which defendant cancelled said certificate on September 2, 1936.

The cause was referred to a master in chancery to hear the evidence and to report his conclusions of law and fact to the court.

It appears from the evidence that Charlotte Nolan was a daughter and one of four children of John J. Nolan and Josephine Nolan; that her father and mother were divorced in 1927 and in 1931 her mother married Joseph E. Taglia; that from 1928 to May 1936 John Nolan and Josephine Nolan Taglia were engaged in litigation involving 200 shares of American Telephone and Telegraph Company stock; that Nolan was represented in that litigation by Attorney John F. Higgins and his former wife was represented by Attorney Branko M. Steiner and that as the result of the settlement of that controversy Nolan received a certificate, numbered G-101868, for 100 shares of American Telephone and Telegraph Company stock, issued in the name of Josephine Nolan Taglia and indorsed by her in blank; that this certificate was delivered by Attorney Steiner to John F. Higgins, Nolan’s attorney, on May 26,1936; that Nolan caused this certificate to be cancelled and another certificate, numbered 0102232, to be issued by defendant on June 12, 1936 in the name of plaintiff; that her father caused the 100 shares' of stock represented by certificate 0102232 to be sold and he received the proceeds of the sale; and that certificate 0102232 was cancelled by defendant on September 2, 1936.

The evidence presented on defendant’s behalf before the master also disclosed the following further facts and circumstances. Nolan had been at one time a comparatively wealthy man. When he received the certificate for 100 shares of American Telephone and Telegraph Company stock in the latter part of May 1936 as the result of the settlement of the litigation with his former wife, his financial affairs were in a precarious condition and he was worried about his creditors. At the time Attorney Higgins delivered this certificate to Nolan, the latter told Higgins that he was going to have it “transferred into the name of his daughter, Charlotte,” who had agreed “to let me use her name and when the certificate is made out she will endorse that certificate over to any one and in any 'way and at cmy time I ash her to do it.”

In the first part of June 1936 Nolan showed certificate G-101868 to S. P. Tomaso, vice president of the Prairie State Bank, and stated to him that he wanted it transferred out of the name of Josephine Nolan Taglia as quickly as-’ possible in order to prevent Mrs. Taglia from receiving a dividend due about that time. Nolan also told Tomaso at that time that “he was going to transfer the certificate into the name of Charlotte,” who was living with his sister, Mrs. Agnes McCue, and that “he would not have any trouble with her.” Thereafter, on June 8, 1936, Nolan brought the certificate to Tomaso at the Prairie State Bank and stated to him that he had decided to put it in Charlotte’s name “for the time being” and that he wanted it transferred to her. Nolan delivered the certificate to Tomaso for transfer and in lieu of certificate G-101868 the American Telephone and Telegraph Company on June 12,1936 issued certificate G-102232 in the name of “Miss Charlotte Nolan. ’’ This new certificate was .delivered by the defendant to the bank and by the bank in turn to Nolan.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.E.2d 876, 326 Ill. App. 328, 1945 Ill. App. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nolan-v-american-telephone-telegraph-co-illappct-1945.