Pitney v. Bolton

45 N.J. Eq. 639
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 N.J. Eq. 639 (Pitney v. Bolton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pitney v. Bolton, 45 N.J. Eq. 639 (N.J. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

This is a bill, by a party claiming to be a cestui que trust, asking for a transfer to him of the property entrusted, which con[640]*640sists of certain shares of the capital stock of the Camden and Atlantic Railroad Company.

The facts of the case, as I gather them from the pleadings, proofs and the statements and admissions of counsel at the hearing, are as follows: I)r. Jonathan Pitriey, of Absecom, Atlantie county, died in 1869 possessed of ninety-four shares of preferred stock and ten shares of common stock, in all one hundred and four shares, of the corporation defendant, standing in his name. He was also possessed of other personal property and of considerable real estate in that county. By his will he gave the use of all his property to his wife Caroline for life, and, at her death, to his two sons, Dr. Jonathan Kay Pitney, commonly called Kay,” and Martin Pitney, the complainant, and appointed the Honorable John Clement and testator’s wife executor and executrix thereof. These shares of stock remained standing in the testator’s name until the death of the widow, which occurred February 24th, 1882. At that time Kay Pitney was indebted to one Abbott, who held a judgment against him. Martin, the complainant, was free from debt. The defendant Bolton was an officer or employe of the defendant corporation in its oipce in Philadelphia, where he resided. Both he and his wife, as stated by his counsel, were very old, intimate and confidential friends of the Pitney family, and went down to the family residence at Absecom as guests the day after the widow died, and remained there, as friends, until the funeral, which took place on the 28th of February. Judge Clement, the executor, was also present. Between the time of the death and the funeral1; the condition of the property,'into the possession of which the two sons would now come, and the liability of Kay’s share of it to be reached by proceedings on the Abbott judgment, was the subject of conversation between Bolton and his wife and the Pitney brothers, and it seems to have been supposed by the brothers that it could be so reached. After the funeral, Kay Pitney proposed that the shares should be transferred in a block to Bolton to hold in trust for the brothers, the object being, so far as Kay’s own one-half was concerned, to make it more difficult for the judgment creditor to reach his interest in it, for the time being, and until .he could [641]*641settle with the creditor. Just why Martin’s one-half should be and was included in the transfer is not so clear, and will be considered further on. Martin assented to Kay’s request, and the transfer was made as follows : The original certificates of stock were produced, having on their back the usual blank powers of attorney for transfer; these blank powers were then signed by-Kay and Martin ; no filling in of the blanks was done either at that or any other time, and Bolton’s name does appear in them. Afterwards, on the 7th of March, 1882, Judge Clement, as surviving executor of Jonathan Pitney, executed several and separate deeds of transfer of the certificates to Bolton, stating on their face that they were made at the request of Kay and Martin, and under those deeds Bolton afterwards procured the shares to be transferred to himself. Half of them in number, viz., forty-seven preferred and five of the common, he has since sold, and accounted for the proceeds to Kay Pitney. The judgment against Kay has been paid and satisfied. Of the other one-half belonging to Martin, he (Bolton) in 1886 purchased from him the absolute title to fifteen shares, paying therefor by conveying to him (Martin) a tract of land in Atlantic county; and Martin swears that Bolton also paid to him (Martin) the dividends declared from time to time on the whole fifty-two shares up to within two or three years. This, however, Bolton denies. When asked by Martin to make further payments to him, he (Bolton) declined on the sole ground, as Martin swears, that Kay was considerably indebted to him (Bolton), and he would not transfer the shares until that indebtedness was paid. This Bolton does not deny.

In his answer, and at the argument, he denied any agreement on his part to hold the stock in trust for anybody, and sets up that the object of its transfer to him was to hinder and delay the judgment creditor of Kay Pitney; and that if there were any trust for retransfer it was an unlawful one, and such as this court will not enforce; and hence he is entitled to hold the shares as his own. His counsel said that there were certain family reasons which justified him in taking this stand.

[642]*642It was not alleged or pretended that Martin Pitney had any creditors whio were or could be delayed by the transfer in question.

The defence was set forth in the answer as follows:

“That the sole and only purpose and object of the said complainant, Martin Pitney, and the said J. K. Pitney, in causing the said transfer of said stock was to delay, hinder and defraud the said judgment creditor of the said J. K. Pitney in the collection of his said judgment; and the said complainant, Martin Pitney, counseled with the said J. K. Pitney and joined the said J. K. Pitney in the execution of said power of attorney and causing the said transfer of said stock for the sole and express purpose of assisting the said J. K. Pitney in defrauding said judgment creditor.”

And, in the argument, that the act of transfer to Bolton was the single joint act of both brothers, with a single object and purpose on the part of both, which was unlawful, and that Martin cannot now separate and divide the transaction into two independent parts, one only of which shall be unlawful, and the other lawful and innocent. • That the result is that the transfer, • so far as Martin is concerned, must be considered and treated in equity as having been made for the purpose of defrauding Kay’s judgment creditor.

No decided cases in favor of this proposition were cited by the evidently industrious counsel who represented the defendant, but reliance was had on that class of cases where parties had loaned money or other valuables to be used by the borrower in unlawful and forbidden enterprises, such as lotteries, gambling, the slave trade,' contraband trade and the like, in which enterprises, however, the lender takes no part, but, nevertheless, is not permitted to recover back the money or property so lent; and it was contended that the principle of those cases applies here.

As to the alleged solidarity, so to speak, and indivisibility of the so-called joint transfer, I am unable to follow the counsel, for reasons which will hereafter appear, and I therefore think that, in order to maintain his position, the defendant must satisfy the court that the joining by Martin in the so-called powers of attorney to transfer, and in the request to Judge Clement to transfer, the stock to Bolton, was intended to have the effect, and [643]*643would naturally tend to have the effect, of aiding Kay to hinder and thereby defraud his creditor. As this is, in effect, a charge of positive and actual fraud against Martin, it must be proven, and is not to be lightly inferred. If the transaction be equally ■capable of two constructions — one innocent and the other unlawful — the familiar rule is, that the innocent one will be adopted, ■especially as against a person who stands, on his own confession, without the least merit, and who seeks to make gain by a fraudulent transaction in which he knowingly participated.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hudson Trust Co. v. Holt
169 A. 516 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1933)
Furer v. Real Estate Corp.
154 A. 543 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 N.J. Eq. 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitney-v-bolton-njch-1889.