Schrader v. Westport Avenue Bank

156 S.W.2d 753, 236 Mo. App. 362, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 101
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 156 S.W.2d 753 (Schrader v. Westport Avenue Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schrader v. Westport Avenue Bank, 156 S.W.2d 753, 236 Mo. App. 362, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 101 (Mo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

*366 BLAND, J.

This is an action for the conversion of certain nonnegotiable debentures issued by the Community Telephone Company. Plaintiff recovered a judgment in the sum of $3440, and defendant has appealed. Defendant pleaded defenses, equitable in nature, and moved that the suit be transferred to the equity docket. This was done, and the case was tried, without objection, as one in equity.

The facts show that plaintiff, for a number of years prior to the month of December, 1936, owned eight one thousand dollar bonds of the Trinity Lutheran Hospital Association; that for sometime prior to the month of December, 1936, she had been acquainted with one, Wilson E. Tucker, who had purchased for her some Gary Telephone stock in the years of 1932 and 1933; that he also managed three or four farms for her; that her relations with him were such that she had confidence in his ability and integrity; that in December, 1936, Tucker was engaged in the brokerage business, and was associated in that business with Prugh, Combest and Land, security brokers, in Kansas City; that Tucker advised plaintiff to sell her Trinity Lutheran Hospital Association bonds and to purchase Community Telephone Company debentures and, with her authority, Tucker sold her bonds and purchased nine Community Telephone Company debentures of the par value of $8000.. These latter bonds are the ones involved in this proceeding. Prugh, Combest and Land caused the Commerce Trust Company, the transfer agent of the Community Telephone *367 Company, to transfer to plaintiff’s name, upon the records of the issuing company, the Community Telephone debentures. This was done on December 11, 1936. These debentures or bonds were pledged on December 30, 1936, to the defendant bank in Kansas .City by Tucker as additional collateral for two loans of his with the bank totalling $2500. When he pledged them he withdrew other securities and delivered the bonds, together with nine blank assignments clipped together and purporting to have been signed by the plaintiff. These blank assignments were those in general use by brokers and banks in Kansas City in the transfer of securities. In addition to being blank assignments they were also blank powers of. attorney, authorizing the persons, whose names were to be inserted therein, to transfer the bonds on the books of the company issuing them. The principal contention at the trial was whether plaintiff actually signed the blank assignments and powers of attorney.

Plaintiff and her daughter testified that Tucker did not deliver the bonds in question to plaintiff; that he gave various excuses for not doing so; that he told the plaintiff that the “government was changing too many things. . . . The government is not through with them and he couldn’t get the papers; . . . that the corporation was being revamped and that he couldn’t get the securities. There was quite a bit of readjusting in the business;” that “his plausible excuse was that there was so much red tape connected with their readjusting;” that he told her “various stories;” that this continued for a period of a year and a half or more.

However, there appears in the record a receipt, dated December 11, 1936, for the bonds in question, purporting to have been signed by the plaintiff. At the trial plaintiff acknowledged that she signed this receipt, and did not explain the apparent discrepancy between that act and her testimony. Plaintiff employed an attorney and it was then for the first time, discovered that the bonds had been deposited with the defendant by Tucker as collateral security for his loans.

Plaintiff testified at the trial that she not only had not seen the bonds but that she did not sign any of the blank. assignments and powers of attorney; that her purported signature to them was not hers. Her deposition was taken sometime before the trial and apparently all nine of the blank assignments, purporting to bear her signature, were shown to her. She was questioned in her deposition concerning them. She was handed one of them and when asked if the signature to it was actually hers, she replied in the affirmative; that she could not say when she signed it; that she was leaving for Europe and that Tucker told her .not to worry and that when she came back he would have the papers and give them to her. (No explanation was offered at the trial for the discrepany. between this testimony and that sworn t.o by plaintiff at the trial.)

*368 Plaintiff further testified in her deposition: “Q. Did be say be would sell them for you ? A. Yes, be did. Q. (Interrupting): Was be supposed to sell those bonds for you? A. No, no, no. Q. He never was supposed to sell those bonds? A. No, and I never seen them. Q. Well, why did you sign this endorsement in blank (indicating Exhibit' ‘A’) ? A. Well, it' was told me that I had to, and of course, I trusted him just like I trust Mr. Fligg, now, to sign things, and I signed them. Q. Did he explain to you why he wanted it signed? A. Well, he said he had to do that, to make the sale, to get the 'papers. Q. To make the sale? Was he supposed to sell these for you? A. No, to get them. Q. Well, what were you going to do with them — were you going to keep them? A. Yes, sir”; (italics ours). She further testified in her deposition that she signed only one of the assignments and did not remember signing any more than one; that .she read the one she signed and noted that it recited: “I hereby sell, assign and transfer unto-;” that she understood what that meant: “Q. And you signed and turned those over to him? A. Well, to come right down to it, I never have seen that paper (indicating Exhibit ‘A’). Q. You didn’t even look at it? A. No, I never have seen this paper. Q. That is your signature, though ? A. I doubt that it is my signature. Q. How ? A. I never have seen this paper (indicating Exhibit ‘A’). Q. Well, is that your signature, or is it not? A. Well, it is very close to it, but I doubt it, that I ever — Q. (Interrupting) : Well, you said awhile ago it was your signature? A. Yes, but I never seen this paper (indicating Exhibit ‘A’). I never seen that bond (indicating) and I never saw that paper (indicating) until today.”

Plaintiff’s daughter, testifying for her, was shown the former’s purported signatures upon the blank assignments and powers of attorney. She stated that the signatures appearing thereon resembled that of the plaintiff, but that she did not know whether they were her signatures.

Defendant introduced, as a witness, a handwriting expert, who compared the signatures on the blank assignments with various other admitted signatures of plaintiff and he testified that the signatures on the blank assignments were the same as the admitted signatures.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 S.W.2d 753, 236 Mo. App. 362, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schrader-v-westport-avenue-bank-moctapp-1941.