Raymond L. Jones, Jr. v. Boyd Transfer & Storage Co.

323 F.2d 998, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 3869
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 30, 1963
Docket17320_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 323 F.2d 998 (Raymond L. Jones, Jr. v. Boyd Transfer & Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond L. Jones, Jr. v. Boyd Transfer & Storage Co., 323 F.2d 998, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 3869 (8th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

VOGEL, Circuit Judge.

Raymond L. Jones, Jr., commenced this action in November 1961 against the Boyd Transfer and Storage Company for damages in the amount of $20,000 by reason of Boyd’s refusal to transfer 130 shares of its stock to Jones. Diversity of citizenship and amount involved comply with federal court jurisdictional requirements. The parties will be referred to herein as they were in the court below.

The case was submitted to a jury on a special verdict pursuant to Rule 49, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S. C. A. The question presented to the jury for its answer was whether or not Dudley D. Allerton made a gift of the 130 shares of Boyd stock to the plaintiff in October of 1947. The jury answered the special interrogatory in the affirmative, thus holding for the plaintiff. Following the return of the verdict, the District Court, pursuant to the defendant’s motion, granted judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Whereupon plaintiff brought this appeal.

A fairly detailed statement of the evidence would seem to be indicated. In 1920 the Boyd Transfer and Storage Company issued 130 shares of its Second Preferred Stock, represented by four stock certificates, to “Dudley D. Allerton or Alice C. Allerton” as owners thereof. Each stock certificate carried on its face the statement, “transferable only on the Books of the Corporation in person or by Attorney on surrender of this Certificate”. On the reverse side of the certificates appeared the following reservation:

“6. The Company reserves the right to retire the stock, at a price of One-hundred and five Dollars ($105.-00) per share, on the first business *1000 day of January, April, July or October of any year after five years from date of issue, as shown on the face hereof, upon the giving of sixty (60) days notice to the stockholder.”

Dudley D. Allerton and Alice C. Aller-ton, his wife, lived in Bath, New York. Alice C. Allerton became deceased. Any interest she may have had in the stock certificates may be disregarded insofar as this controversy is concerned.

On July 14, 1941, Allerton entered into an irrevocable trust agreement whereby he transferred and assigned to his nephew, John Parker, as trustee, all of his property, both real and personal, the trustee to hold the estate for the purpose of paying to Allerton $75 per month therefrom as long as he should live and therafter the property remaining to be distributed to certain named heirs. The schedule of property owned by Allerton and assigned in the trust agreement specifically included the four stock certificates representing 130 shares of stock in Boyd Transfer- and Storage Company. There is in the record a receipt, also dated July 14, 1941, signed by John L. Brownley, who was Mr. Allerton’s attorney, acknowledging receipt of the stock certificates herein involved. The certificates, together with other assets which were to constitute the corpus of the trust, were received by Brownley “for delivery to John Parker”.

In December 1943 Allerton wrote to his trustee, John Parker, asking him to send the Boyd stock certificates to him for examination, apparently to determine whether or not his wife, then deceased, had had some interest therein. The stock was never returned to the trustee and became the subject of an unsuccessful search thereafter.

Beginning in January 1947 John L. Brownley, as attorney for Mr. Allerton, wrote Boyd Transfer with reference to the 130 shares of stock, particularly as to an offer by Boyd to purchase the stock. In his letter he referred to the fact that Mr. Allerton had “apparently mislaid the certificates”.

In June 1947 Mr. Allerton, who was then 90 years of age, was assisted by a niece in moving from the house in which he had resided alone for some time to a rest home in Bath. At that time a search was made of the premises by Allerton’s niece to try to locate the lost stock certificates, but to no avail. The Allerton house was sold to a Judge Smith who, in August 1947, sold it to the plaintiff, Raymond L. Jones, Jr., Jones taking possession around August 23, 1947. Jones was informed by Judge Smith that the former owner, Allerton, who resided in a nearby rest home, had planted a garden at his former premises and desired to continue taking care of the garden, to which Jones agreed. Jones and his wife first met Allerton about August 28, 1947. Prior thereto they had been strangers. Allerton came to attend his garden three or four times a week, got to know the plaintiff and his wife and occasionally stayed with them for lunch and at times gave them vegetables from the garden he tended. Some four to six weeks after Mr. and Mrs. Jones had moved into the house and had met Mr. Allerton, in other words the early part of October 1947, Mr. Allerton, according to the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Jones, gave the stock certificates in question here to Mr. Jones. The certificates were endorsed in blank “Dudley D. Allerton”, neither the name of the assignee nor the date being filled in. The signature was not witnessed. Jones assumed that the certificates were worthless. He placed them with his insurance policies and discharge papers and had no further conversations with Mr. Allerton with reference to them, although Mr. Allerton came there frequently thereafter.

On October 21, 1947, the same month Mr. Allerton was supposed to have given the stock to the plaintiff, John Parker, Allerton’s trustee, wrote to Boyd Transfer, advising that the stock had been lost and apparently destroyed with other papers and asked for information necessary to the making of an application for a lost ■securities bond. On November 6, 1947, •about a month after the certificates were *1001 allegedly given to the plaintiff, Mr. Aller-ton wrote to the Boyd Transfer and Storage Company, advising that the stock had been lost or destroyed and stating in his letter, “I did not sell or give away this stock.” Ultimately in December 1947, pursuant to the representations by Al-lerton, the record owner of the stock, that the certificates had been lost and the filing of an indemnity bond, replacement certificates were issued which were shortly thereafter redeemed by the Boyd Transfer. The turning in of the replacement certificates to Boyd by John Parker, the trustee, was ratified and confirmed by Mr. Allerton on November 28,1947. Payment was made to Allerton and John Parker, trustee. Allerton died on August 30, 1949, being then past 92 years of age.

Sometime in the early 1950’s, the plaintiff took the four stock certificates in question to the Bath National Bank, Bath, New York, of which bank Mr. Al-lerton had been a customer, and asked the president of the bank to guarantee Allerton’s signature. The certificates were thereupon endorsed, “Signature guaranteed by Bath National Bank, Bath, New York”, underneath which was the signature of A. J. Hamilton, President.

No attempt was made to notify Boyd Transfer or to have the stock transferred from Mr. Allerton’s name to that of the plaintiff.

In February 1958 the plaintiff took the four stock certificates to his attorney, Grover C. Bradstreet of Bath, New York, who, upon inquiry, discovered that the certificates did have value. In February 1958 plaintiff’s attorney contacted the defendant corporation by letter, demanding that it recognize the plaintiff’s rights in the stock.

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323 F.2d 998, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 3869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-l-jones-jr-v-boyd-transfer-storage-co-ca8-1963.