Patterson v. Fitzpatrick McElroy Co.

247 Ill. App. 81, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 42
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 27, 1927
DocketGen. No. 31,871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 247 Ill. App. 81 (Patterson v. Fitzpatrick McElroy 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
Patterson v. Fitzpatrick McElroy Co., 247 Ill. App. 81, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 42 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Barnes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee filed his bill of complaint against Fitzpatrick McElroy Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, and the West Englewood Trust & Savings Bank, the transfer agent and registrar of said company, to compel the transfer to appellee on said company’s books of a certificate for 32 shares of said company’s preferred stock standing in the name of appellant Boderick Morange, and to decree that appellee be the owner of said certificate, and for an accounting for the dividends that had accrued and were payable on said shares from the time he acquired said certificate.

Said defendant company and said bank filed their joint answer averring that the controversy is entirely between complainant and defendant Morange, and that they are ready and willing to abide by the decree of court and to comply therewith.

Appellant Morange became a party to the cause on his own motion and filed an answer denying appellee was a bona fide purchaser of the certificate for a valuable consideration, or that the certificate was transferred by him to Ruhny Borsh & Company (hereinafter referred to) for a valuable consideration, and averred that the latter company had no authority to sell or assign the same, and no title thereto or interest therein. Appellant also filed a cross-bill malting sub stantially the same averments and claiming that he is, and since its issuance has been, the owner of said certificate and the stock" represented thereby, and asking that complainant be required to surrender said certificate to cross complainant.

From a decree granting the relief prayed for in the bill this appeal is taken.

The controlling facts are not in dispute. The certificate of stock in question was issued and stood on the books of Fitzpatrick McElroy Company in the name of appellant. In February, 1925, he bought 150 shares of Sinclair stock from the brokerage firm of Euhny Borsk & Company on margins, paying only a part of the purchase price. The stock having declined lie later in the month concluded to pay in full for 50 of said shares and sent the certificate in question to see if the brokerage firm could use it to that end. The firm reported that it could borrow from its bank $2,100 thereon. Thereupon on February 27 he indorsed the certificate underneath a blank assignment and blank power of attorney to transfer the stock on the books, and delivered it to the firm.

Appellee Patterson also had a stock account with said brokerage firm which he directed closed and on which he had a profit of over $5,000. On February 27 he called on the firm to get a check for such balance and was told that the signature of an absent member of the firm who would return the following Monday was necessary. At the same time he was offered and induced to purchase the certificate of stock in question at its par value of $3,200 and to have it charged against his credit. On delivery of the certificate to him he wrote his name in the blank space for the name of the assignee and in the blank space for the name of the attorney to make the transfer. The next day appellant ordered his account closed. About- March 7 appellee presented his certificate for transfer on the books of the Fitzpatrick McElroy Company. The company refused to make the transfer because in the meantime appellant had objected thereto. Shortly afterwards both appellant and appellee learned that the brokerage firm had failed and closed its offices. Neither of them received any further statement of his account from said firm, and the record does not disclose the status of either at the time the firm discontinued business.

The findings in the decree accord with this statement of facts and present the question whether title to the certificate passed to appellee.

That there was a consideration both for the transfer from appellant to the brokerage firm and for the transfer from the latter to appellee is hardly open to question. It is urged, however, that there was not sufficient proof to support a transfer of appellant’s title under the Uniform Stock Transfer Act. (Cahill’s St. 1927, ch. 32, ¶¶ 229-253 inc.) The argument hinges on the statutory definitions of terms employed in section 1 of said act. (Par. 229 id.) So far as applicable, section 1 reads:

“Title to a certificate and to the shares represented thereby can be transferred only:
“(a) By delivery of the certificate indorsed either in blank or to a specified person by the person appearing by the certificate to be the owner of the shares represented thereby. ’ ’

The definitions referred to are found in sections 20, 21 and 22, which read:

“ § 20. A certificate is indorsed when an assignment or a power of attorney to sell, assign, or transfer the certificate or the shares represented thereby is -written on the certificate and signed by the person appearing by the certificate to .be the owner of the., shares rpresented [represented] thereby, or when the signature of such person is written, without more upon the back of the certificate. In any of such cases a certificate is indorsed, though it has not been delivered.
“§ 21. The person to whom a certificate was originally issued is the person appearing by the certificate to be the owner thereof, and of the shares represented thereby, until and unless he indorses the certificate to another specified person, and thereupon such other specified person is the person appearing by the certificate to be the owner thereof until and unless he also indorses the certificate to another specified person. Subsequent special indorsements may be made with like effect.
“§22. * * * ‘Certificate’ means a certificate of stock in a. corporation organized under the laws of this State or of another state whose laws are consistent with this Act.
“ ‘Delivery’ means voluntary transfer of possession from one person to another. * *

That there was a “delivery” according to the definition thereof both from appellant to the broker and from the broker to appellee, and that appellant is the person to whom the certificate was originally issued and appeared thereby to be the owner thereof at the time of his alleged indorsement, are not questioned. But it is urged that because the name of Patterson as so filled in was no part of the assignment of the certificate by appellant to the brokerage firm it was not assigned to appellee by his. authorization and therefore he is still the owner of said certificate, and that the assignment under which appellee claims was not in compliance with the requirements of said transfer act, and that appellee is not a bona fide holder of the certificate within the meaning of said act, but occupies the position of an assignee of an ordinary instrument or chose in action, which is subject to all defenses that may have been made against said brokerage firm.

Most., if not all of these contentions, are fully answered, we think, in McCarthy v. Crawford, 238 Ill. 38, where like points were raised upon similar facts except that the instrument there in question was a receiver’s receipt of an indebtedness much in the form of a certificate of stock.

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247 Ill. App. 81, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-fitzpatrick-mcelroy-co-illappct-1927.