Richardson v. Emmett

61 A.D. 205, 70 N.Y.S. 546
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 61 A.D. 205 (Richardson v. Emmett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Emmett, 61 A.D. 205, 70 N.Y.S. 546 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The action was originally brought by the personal representatives of Joseph Richardson, deceased, against the Atlantic Trust Company, to recover the surplus arising upon the sale by the defendant of 200 shares of the capital stock of the New York, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company, held by it as security for a loan made to Joseph Richardson in his lifetime, the said trust company having sold the stock, and after, payments of the amount due upon the loan, retained the surplus of $9,900.50. On motion of the Atlantic Trust Company the present defendant was substituted in [207]*207its place as a person claiming the fund. The defendant appeared in the action and interposed an answer, alleging that the stock so deposited with the trust company by Joseph Richardson was not owned by him at the time of his decease, nor when the same was deposited with the said trust company, and that she being the owner of the stock was the owner of the fund, and she demanded judgment that she 'be decreed to be the owner thereof. The action was referred to a referee, who held that the defendant was entitled to judgment against the plaintiff, dismissing the complaint, and for the amount of the deposit with the trust company, upon the ground that the stock of the New York, Lackawanna and Western Railway Company was owned by the defendant. When the case came on for trial the defendant was granted the affirmative. She introduced in evidence the certificates of stock which were deposited with the said trust company as collateral security for the loan made to Joseph Richardson. They are in the usual form and certify that “ E. Emmett is entitled to One hundred shares of the capital stock of the New York, Lackawanna & Western Railway Company, transferable only on the books of the company in the City of New York, personally or by attorney, upon the surrender of this certificate.” Upon the back of each of these certificates was the following indorsement:

“ For value received do hereby sell and assign unto Atlantic Trust Co. shares of the stock represented by the within certificate and do hereby constitute and appoint H. Hollingshead attorney, irrevocably for and in name and stead to transfer the said shares upon the books of the within named company, with power, one or more attorneys under to appoint for that purpose.
“ Witness hand and seal this May 6th, 1892, day of 18
“E. EMMETT.
In the presence of “ George F. Fish,
Mauriao & Bishop.”

The defendant swore that the signature to this transfer was not in her handwriting, and that she never authorized the placing of • her name upon the back of either of these certificates. Upon this the defendant rested.

[208]*208The plaintiffs then proved that the plaintiffs’ testator purchased and paid for 350 shares of the stock of the New York, Lackawanna and Western Railway Company, the certificates of which stock were issued to him and were introduced in evidence. These four certificates, representing 350 shares of stock, were issued October 10, 1882, and March 7,1883, to Joseph Richardson, and it was admitted that at that date Richardson was the owner of the stock and had paid the consideration therefor. These four certificates were then on August 22, 1885, surrendered to the railroad company and canceled. Upon the back of each of these certificates there was the following indorsement:

“■ For value received do sell and assign unto E. Emmett shares of stock represented by the within certificate and do hereby constitute and appoint J. J. Owens, attorney irrevocable for and in name and to transfer the- said shares upon the books of the within named company with power of one or more attorneys under to appoint for that purpose.
“ Witness hand and seal this 21st day of Aug. 1885.'
“JOSEPH RICHARDSON.
In the presence of '
“ H. W. Nichols.”

It was conceded that the name “ Joseph Richardson ” upon these transfers was in the handwriting of the plaintiffs’ testator. When these four certificates were subsequently surrendered to the railroad company, four other certificates were issued, by which it was certified that the defendant, “ E. Emmett,” was entitled to the stock represented. These four certificates were subsequently surrendered to ’ the railroad company, purporting to have upon their back a similar transfer and a power of attorney purporting to be signed by E. Emmett, the defendant, and four other certificates were issued to Mauriac & Bishop. The defendant, however, swore that she did not sign the transfers and never authorized any one to sign her name thereto. Subsequently these certificates issued to Mauriac & Bishop were surrendered to the railroad company with an indorsement in the same form on the back, by which the stock was retransferred to the defendant Emmett, and new certificates in her name were issued, so that the whole 350 shares of stock appeared upon the books of [209]*209the railroad company at the time of the testator’s death to be the property of the defendant Emmett. It further appeared that during this period after 1883 the dividends upon this stock were paid quarterly; that up to July, 1885, the time the stock was transferred to defendant, they were paid by check to the order of Joseph Richardson, and from that time to the testator’s death the dividends were .paid directly to E. Emmett, receipted for by her,' and the checks representing these dividends were indorsed by her. These checks all appear to have been deposited to the credit of Joseph Richardson’s brokers; but the defendant personally collected the dividend checks and signed receipts therefor. It also appeared that during the time that this stock was in the name of Mauriac & Bishop they gave an order requesting the railroad company to pay such dividend to the defendant; that this order was presented by the defendant and the dividend received by her, and that the checks representing this dividend were subsequently deposited by Joseph Richardson to his own credit with banking. houses with whom he kept accounts ; that the certificate for 200 shares of this stock was in the possession of the Atlantic Trust Company, the transfers on the back being apparently indorsed by the defendant from November 1,1894, down to the time that they were sold after the death of Richardson, as collateral security for loans made to Richardson, and that the signature “ E. Emmett ” upon the back of these certificates of stock in question was in the handwriting of Richardson, the plaintiffs’ testator.

The defendant was then called upon her own behalf and testified that her parents died when she was five years old, at which time she came to live with Mr. Richardson. The original certificates of this stock issued in her name were then shown to her, and she testified, under objection and exception by the plaintiffs, that in the autumn of 1885 the certificates were in her possession at the house at which she lived, 110 East Houston street; that at that time the words “ E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 A.D. 205, 70 N.Y.S. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-emmett-nyappdiv-1901.