Richardson v. . Emmett

63 N.E. 440, 170 N.Y. 412, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1073
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 8, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 440 (Richardson v. . Emmett) 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
Richardson v. . Emmett, 63 N.E. 440, 170 N.Y. 412, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1073 (N.Y. 1902).

Opinion

Parker, Ch. J.

This controversy directly involves about the sum of $10,000, being the surplus resulting from a sale by the Atlantic Trust Co. of 200 shares of the capital stock of the Rew York, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Co. held by it as security for a loan made to Joseph Richardson, now deceased, whose personal representatives these plaintiffs are. The defendant Emmett, claiming to be the owner of these shares, demanded such surplus of the Atlantic Trust Co., which company being sued by the plaintiffs for the money, successfully moved the court to substitute the present defendant in its place, as a person claiming the fund.

Upon the trial it appeared that in October, 1882, the N. Y., L. & W. R. R. Co. issued certificates of its stock for 350 *415 sliares to Joseph Richardson, which he paid for and owned. ETearly three years later, and on August 21, 1885, Richardson executed a power of attorney, in the usual blank form, indorsed on the back of the original certificates issued to him, which in form sold and assigned to Emily Emmett, this defendant, the shares of stock represented by the respective certificates, and appointed John J. Owen, an attorney in fact, to transfer the stock to her on the company’s books. Owen, acting under these powers, caused the old certificates to be canceled and four new certificates for 350 shares, dated August 21, 1885, to be made out in the name of Emily Emmett. On the day following these certificates were handed to Brayton Ives and Co., who were Richardson’s stock brokers, and two or three days later they came into Richardson’s custody.

El ow, Emily Emmett was a niece of Richardson’s, and on the death of her parents, when she was about five years old, she went to reside with Richardson and his wife and continued to be a member of his household ever after, although he, having married him another wife toward the close of his life, personally went out of his own house and, with his wife, lived in another house, leaving his daughter and this defendant and another niece to live on in the old home, as they had before.

After the transfer of the stock upon the books of the company to Miss Emmett, a dividend was declared payable on October first and for that dividend, as well as for each succeeding dividend, a check was made out to her by the company, which she indorsed, and then, accompanied by Richardson’s daughter, went regularly every quarter to Brayton Ives and Co., Richardson’s stock brokers, and delivered to them such checks, who thereupon, in every instance, credited the checks to Joseph Richardson’s account.

ETovember 11, 1890, Richardson filled up the power of attorney on the back of each certificate, signing at the end thereof the name, “ E. Emmett,” which he caused to be witnessed by two witnesses, and on the same day these certifi *416 cates of stock were surrendered to the railroad company, which issued new certificates of stock íoy 350 shares in the name of Mauriac and Bishop, who were then Richardson’s stock brokers, which shares were delivered to and held by them as security for bis current indebtedness to them.

When the next dividend fell due, Miss Emmett was informed, when she appeared at the office of the company, that there was no dividend for her. Thereupon she told Miss Richardson, who informed her father about it. He said it was all right and that he would give Miss Emmett a note to go and get her dividend, and she says he did write her a. letter, which was taken to the Lackawanna Railroad Company’s office, requesting the company to pay the dividend due January 1, 1891, to her, which it did, and the testimony was to the effect that this course of business was followed on each subsequent quarterly period down to and including the dividend of April, 1892.

May 6, 1892, Mauriac and Bishop indorsed the certificates standing in their name and surrendered them to the railroad company, which thereupon issued new certificates in the name of Emily Emmett. These new. certificates, on or about the date of their issue, were again indorsed by Joseph Richardson, but in the name of “ E. Emmett,” which he signed to the power of attorney on the back, and these certificates thus indorsed, in blank were handed over to Mauriac and Bishop as security for Richardson’s account.

In May, 1894, two of these certificates for 100 shares each were lodged by Richardson with the Atlantic Trust Co., as collateral security for a loan, and after his death the stock was sold to settle the balance remaining unpaid on the loan, resulting in the surplus now the subject of controversy.

The learned referee found, in a short form of decision, that the defendant was entitled to recover, and judgment was entered accordingly, which was subsequently unanimously affirmed at the Appellate Division, and the only questions presented on this review are appellants’ exceptions taken to the admission and rejection of testimony.

*417 The defendant, while on the witness stand, was shown four stock certificates representing the 350 shares which were issued in the name of Emily Emmett by the direction of Richardson, and attention being particularly called to the date of their issue, August 21, 1885, and the date of the cancellation marks running from November 12 to November 22,1890, the witness was asked: “ Were those certificates at any time between those two dates (August, 1885, and November, 1890) in your possession?” Plaintiffs objected to the question as incompetent under section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the objection being stated in full. But the objection was overruled and an exception taken, whereupon the defendant answered: “ Yes, sir.” The witness was again asked: “About what date were they in your possession ? ” This was followed by the same objection, ruling and exception, and the answer was: “ About the autumn of 1885. Q. Where ? ” The same objection, ruling and exception followed, and the witness answered : “ 110 East Houston street,” which was Richardson’s home and where the defendant’ also resided.

This ruling of the learned referee is said to have been based upon the -decision of this court in Simmons v. Havens (101 N. Y. 427), and is claimed to be fully justified by it, although it is quite apparent that very different use was made of the evidence in the case under consideration than the court thought possible in the Simmons case. In the latter case the theory of plaintiff’s action was that her mother had conveyed to her the real estate upon which both of them resided, and that subsequently her mother, becoming angry, had taken the deed from the bureau drawer where it was kept and destroyed it, and conveyed the real estate to her brother. During the trial, plaintiff, being on the witness stand, testified without objection that Havens “ brought the deed to the house and threw it in my mother’s lap, and, says he, * There’s Helen’s [the witness’s] deed, and Hr. Lamport will be down * * * and take the acknowledgment.’ She asked him if he had read the deed, and he said he had, that he felt interested who should have the premises back of him, and he had read the deed and it *418 was all right.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 440, 170 N.Y. 412, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-emmett-ny-1902.