Reynolds v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co.

148 N.E. 514, 240 N.Y. 257, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 727
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 148 N.E. 514 (Reynolds v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co., 148 N.E. 514, 240 N.Y. 257, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 727 (N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

The defendant is the trustee named in a mortgage or deed of trust executed in 1904 by a corporation “ Dreamland ” to secure an issue of $750,000 “ mortgage and income bonds ” to become due on January 1, 1914. The bonds were registered bonds and under their terms were transferable by the holder thereof only in person, or by attorney duly authorized, upon the books of the trustee.” Each bond contained a term that This bond shall not be valid or obligatory until it has been duly authenticated by the certificate of the Title Guarantee and Trust Company as such Trustee endorsed hereon.” The trustee’s certificate which was indorsed on each bond provided: “ The undersigned *261 hereby certifies that the within is one of the Bonds described in the mortgage therein mentioned.”

In March, 1915, six S500 bonds were registered upon the defendant’s books in the name of Llewellyn L. Powell. At that time the plaintiff who was the president of Dreamland ” telephoned to the defendant’s trust officer that he wanted to buy Powell’s bonds; " that Powell had lost them and what could be done.” The defendant’s trust officer informed the plaintiff that if Powell would make an affidavit showing the bonds had not been negotiated, would give a bond of indemnity running to the Dreamland Company and the Title Company as trustee; and Dreamland would duplicate the bonds, the trustee would certify them.” The plaintiff procured an affidavit from Powell and an indemnity bond as suggested. Dreamland issued duplicate bonds which were signed by the plaintiff as president. The defendant certified the bonds and the plaintiff purchased them from Powell and secured their transfer upon the trustee’s books to himself. The bonds themselves were marked duplicate ” and bore on the back of the cover the words: “ This Bond is issued in place and stead of the original bond of the same number said to have been lost or destroyed. Dated New York City, March 31st, 1915. Title Guarantee & Trust Company as Trustee.”

After the “ duplicate ” bonds were transferred to the plaintiff on the books of the trustee, the original bonds were presented to the defendant for transfer. It appears that Powell had not lost them but had assigned them to a broker as collateral security. His affidavit upon the faith of which the duplicate ” bonds were issued was false and fraudulent. The defendant then entered the transfer of the original bonds on its books and registered them in the name of the broker. It was stipulated at the trial that thereafter the broker “ became the absolute owner of said six original bonds by the purchase thereof upon an auction sale ” held after Powell had failed to *262 pay the loan to the broker for which they were security. In 1920 the defendant as trustee received moneys derived from sale of the property of Dreamland covered by its corporate mortgage. The bondholders consented that this money should be distributed to them pro rata. The holder of the original bonds demanded his pro rata share and brought suit against this defendant to enforce this demand. The plaintiff successfully opposed a motion made by the defendant to interplead the plaintiff in that suit. The defendant thereupon paid the holder of the original bonds the pro rata share payable thereon and the plaintiff has brought this action as holder of the duplicate bonds.

The bonds constitute no original contractual obligation on the part of the defendant to pay any moneys to the bondholder. They are the obligations of Dreamland and any liability on the part of the defendant must be predicated upon a finding of dereliction while acting as trustee or upon a finding that by placing its certificate upon the duplicate bonds it asserted their validity and by such assertion induced the plaintiff to purchase the bonds. Upon neither theory does the evidence sustain a judgment against it.

Though a corporate bond payable to the “ registered holder ” and by its terms transferable by the holder only upon the books of the trustee may not be a negotiable instrument in a strict sense (Daniel on Negotiable Instruments [6th ed.], section 1501b; Scollans v. Rollins, 173 Mass. 275), yet as this court said of certificates of stock in N. Y. & N. H. R. R. Co. v. Schuyler (34 N. Y. 30, 82): “ It was never intended to lock up those instruments in the hands of the stockholders named in them — but to give to them every practicable facility as the basis of commercial transactions.” Undoubtedly they were intended to pass easily from purchaser to purchaser and by proper indorsement, ownership as between seller and purchaser could be transferred. When the lawful registered holder delivered *263 these bonds properly indorsed to the broker and executed an irrevocable power of attorney for their transfer on the books of the trustee, the broker acquired a right to the bonds which he could protect by compelling a transfer on the books of the trustee.

This right was not, in our opinion, lost by the subsequent issue of the duplicate bonds and the transfer of such duplicate bonds on the corporate books to another registered holder. After the original registered holder had pledged the bonds with the broker he certainly had no right to transfer them to another and a subsequent attempted transfer would not give the assignee the right to demand from the broker possession of the bonds. The bond itself embodied the corporate obligation and, aside from any general rule that ordinarily delivery of a bond must accompany transfer of title (Lewis v. Mason’s Administrator, 84 Va. 731), it is clear from its form that the corporation issuing it intended that, at least, the equitable title and the right to compel registry should be transferable through delivery of the bond when the blanks upon it were properly filled out. It can hardly be questioned that any person who accepts an attempted transfer of title without delivery of a bond takes only such title as the original registered holder may still have and subject to the risk that the bond may eventually turn up in the hands of a third party who at least as between himself and the original holder has acquired full ownership. The mortgagor and the trustee have in effect contracted that transfer of the bonds- may be completed by registry when the bond is presented, accompanied by a properly executed power of attorney. Through that agreement the bonds become more easily salable and there is good consideration for the contract. (N. Y. & N. H. R. R. Co. v. Schuyler, supra.) If the mortgagor or trustee may destroy the right of the owner of the original bonds to compel registry of the transfer by a previous transfer on its books even though made in good *264 faith but without production of the bonds, the bonds lose that valuable element of facility of circulation created by their form; for a purchaser could not in that event accept delivery of bonds with safety unless he first inquired whether the bonds, even though outstanding, had not been transferred on the corporate books.

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Bluebook (online)
148 N.E. 514, 240 N.Y. 257, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-title-guarantee-trust-co-ny-1925.