Rigg v. Reading & Southwestern Street Railway Co.

43 A. 212, 191 Pa. 298, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 816
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 8, 1899
DocketAppeal, No. 16
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 43 A. 212 (Rigg v. Reading & Southwestern Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rigg v. Reading & Southwestern Street Railway Co., 43 A. 212, 191 Pa. 298, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 816 (Pa. 1899).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Dean,

This ease is on the equity side of the court; it is an appeal to a chancellor to reach forth his strong hand and take from an alleged wrongdoer, chattels, unjustly withheld from an alleged clean handed innocent owner. The response to the appeal has been favorable and full. It is, in substance, based on these findings of fact:

One William Rebmann, being the owner of 159 shares of stock. of the Reading and Southwestern Street Railway Company, on December 8,1897, for the consideration of 19,687.74, by written contract, sold and agreed to transfer them to John A. Rigg, his coplaintiff. At the time, the certificates of stock were in possession of James W. Shepp and Daniel B. Shepp, who laid claim to them under a verbal contract of sale made with them by Rebmann ten days before the sale to Rigg, to wit: on November 29, 1897; this alleged prior sale was wholly ineffectual to pass title to, or put right of possession in, the Shepps, therefore, the Shepps were ordered to deliver the shares of stock to Rigg-

Assuming, for the purpose of this issue, these to be the established facts, do they, in the face of other established facts, warrant the interference of equity ?

How came these stocks into the possession of the Shepps ? Rebmann, one of the plaintiffs, testifies as follows:

“Q. You said they advanced the money to purchase this stock? A. Yes, sir. Q. And isn’t it a fact that they said to you that they wanted to increase their influence in the company ? A. Yes, sir. Q. And that they would put these shares in your hands? A. Yes, sir. Q. And that you should not sell them to any person unfriendly to them without giving them first chance? A. Yes, sir. Q. Was that said? A. Yes, sir; that [301]*301was the agreement. I was to stick to the Shepps and that they would stick to me. Q. Was that said at the beginning of these different purchases? A. Yes, sir; I went in with that understanding; that is how I came to get into this affair at all. Q. You knew nothing of this railroad until the Shepps talked to you about it? A. No, sir; I went over the road with Mr. Shepp before it was completed. Q. Before it was completed ? A. Yes, sir. Q. The purchase of stock by you was suggested by Mr. Shepp? A. Yes, sir.”

James W. Shepp, one of defendants, testified thus:

“Mr. Rebmann started buying shares of the Reading and Southwestern Street Railway Company as early as the fall of 1892 or spring of 1898; it was through my suggestion that he bought shares, and at the time the arrangement was that the shares that he purchased were for our mutual interest, and that at any time he wanted to dispose of his shares they were to come back to either myself or my brother; we asked him to invest because he said he had some money, and we wanted to increase our holdings in the road, and we being friends -of his, for that reason we encouraged him to go in with us on a mutual basis. Shares were bought from time to time during 1893 and 1894 at different intervals; we invariably advanced the money to buy the shares, and he would pay us on account as he could. The first sixty-nine shares that we purchased were transferred to him and were in his name on the books of the company; the other ninety shares have never been transferred to him; they never stood in his name; they have always been in my name for the reason that we were not fully paid for them, and for the further reason that we considered them the same as our own, because when Mr. Rebmann wanted his money he could get it at any time for the shares;' it was mutually agreed that at any time he needed the money we would return it to him, or, in other words, purchase his stock.

“ Q. Was the price at which you were to purchase his stock fixed at any time ? A. Prior to November 29, the price was not fixed, but on November 29, the price was fixed at #100 a share. Mr. Rebmann come into our office quite frequently and inquired as to the progress of the road and seemed to be very much interested in it. My brother made him a proposition of #100 a share on November 29, which he told me of the [302]*302following day. Q. Were you there when the proposition was-made? A. No, sir. Q. You were not there on the 29 th, when the proposition was made? A. No, sir; I was not there at that time, on that day. Q. Did your brother report it to you afterwards ? A. My brother reported it.”

The testimony of D. B. Shepp is in complete accord with that of his brother. As to the main fact, that Rebmann’s purchases were made with the understanding, that the stock was to be held to promote their mutual interests,—that is, Rebmann, to use his own language, was to stick to the Shepps and the Shepps were to stick to him, and Rebmann was not to sell to unfriendly parties without giving them the first chance to purchase,—there is no conflict in the testimony; and it is just as undisputed that by reason of the same understanding or agreement the Shepps came into the actual, manual possession of the certificates. Whether by a sale to the Shepps on November 29, Rebmann divested himself of all property in the stock, so that, on December 8, following, he had nothing to s¿fl to Rigg, we will not inquire, and will not here discuss. Their possession was not wrongful; ninety of the shares stood in their name, sixty-nine were under written pledge for a loan of the very money paid for them; under the express testimony of both themselves and Rebmann, up to the date of one or other of the alleged sales, by Rebmann’s agreement, they were held for him and them to further their mutual interests. Rigg avers, that Rebmann made an absolute sale to him on December 8; the Shepps reply that he had made an absolute sale to them on November 29, previous. Rigg replies, there was no valid sale to the Shepps, and in this he is supported by a rather equivocal denial of Rebmann, who in this particular, to some extent, contradicts the Shepps. But, it is not disputed, that both Rigg and the Shepps were at about the same time in hot pursuit of Rebmann to get from Mm the absolute title to these shares; it strikes us, a chancellor would have to strain Ms conscience somewhat to approve the business methods of either; but Rigg knew from Rebmann that there was a contract between him and the Shepps which clouded Rebmann’s right to sell; he did not inquire of Shepp the nature of tMs contract, but declared he would take the chances of it.

. If, then, there be added to the facts found by the learned [303]*303judge of the court below, the further facts, that this stock was purchased under an agreement between Rebmann and the Shepps to promote their mutual interests; that the Shepps not only actively aided in purchasing it, but advanced money to Rebmann for that purpose, and that he was still largely indebted to them for such advances; that the stock went into their possession, to be held by them for the common interest; that Rebmann had agreed with them not to sell to unfriendly parties without giving them the first opportunity to buy; that he did sell, knowingly, to a hostile party; that the purchaser knew of the previous arrangement between Rebmann and the Shepps, in pursuance of which the stock was purchased and was then in their possession, yet said he would take his chances, in the face of it; in view of all these facts, is it a case for a decree for specific performance ? For let the decree be framed ever so adroitly, that is its substance and effect; and if it were not so, plaintiffs would not be in a court of equity asking for one. Says Beach on Modern Equity Jurisprudence, p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 A. 212, 191 Pa. 298, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rigg-v-reading-southwestern-street-railway-co-pa-1899.