St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Universal Glass Co.

299 S.W. 132, 220 Mo. App. 1205, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 36
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 8, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 299 S.W. 132 (St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Universal Glass Co.) 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
St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Universal Glass Co., 299 S.W. 132, 220 Mo. App. 1205, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 36 (Mo. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

BECKER, J.

— In July, 1921, the board of directors of the Universal Glass Company, a Delaware corporation, whose principal office was in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, authorized the pledge of its bonds-(held in its treasury and theretofore unissued) secured by mortgage on its property, located at Valley Park, Missouri, as collateral for a loan to the company, the bonds so pledged to be “not more than four times the amount-of the loan.” The appellant, R. H. Bellman was at the time a member of the board of directors of said Universal Glass Company. In November, 1921, one Charles J. Geibel of Butler, Pennsylvania, loaned to the company $7500 on its note secured by $30,000 par value of its bonds. Upon the maturity of the hote, *1208 the loan was reduced to $2500, and a subsequent payment o£ $1000 further reduced the loan to $1500, for which the company gave Geibel its note with $6000 of its bonds as collateral. This note, dated at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, May 7, 1923, promised payment to Geibel at 603 First National Bank Building, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (the company’s office), thirty days after date, the note further reciting that the $6000 bonds were pledged to secure this indebtedness, as well as any other liability of the company to him, and that Geibel had full power and authority, if the note was not paid when due, to sell the bonds at public or private sale, without demand, advertisement -or notice, with the right to purchase them himself, and to use the proceeds to satisfy the indebtedness of the company to him. There was also due to Geibel from the company at that time a commission of $500 on account of sales of real estate belonging to the company, according to the minutes of the meeting of directors held December 19, 1922.

When this- note, dated May 7, 1923, became due and demand for its payment was not met, Geibel directed one B. H. McNey, a broker, through whom the original loan of $7500 was made, to notify the company that the collateral would be sold to satisfy the indebtedness of the company to him. McNey gave both oral and written notice to that effect, the latter being in the form of a letter to the company, dated September 1, 1923. There being no response, McNey thereupon undertook the sale of the collateral for Geibel, soliciting offers from brokers in Pittsburgh and from the officers and directors of the company. For more than a month after giving, this notice to the company, dated September 1, 1923, he was unsuccessful in his efforts to find a purchaser for the bonds. Finally he negotiated with R. H. Bellman, appellant here, and at the time a director of the company, who agreed to buy the bonds if he could pay for them with his notes. Geibel, on or about October 15, 1923, sold the $6000 bonds to Bellman for $2400, taking Bellman’s notes in payment. The $1500 note of the Universal Glass Company, dated May 7, 1923, with the words “Collateral sold at figure to cover amount of indebtedness,” written across the face thereof, was introduced in evidence at the trial, and according to the testimony of the appellant, Bellman, was found by him in the files of the Universal Glass Company when the Company went out of business, which was some time prior to the trial. In addition to this note for $1500- and the commission of $500, above referred to as due Geibel, there was unpaid interest and the broker’s commission and expenses of sale to be met, which, altogether, made up the full amount of $2400 realized from the sale of the collateral. No objection was ever made to this sale by the company, whose board of directors were notified by both Bellman and Geibel of this purchase by Bellman.

*1209 When the loan was first made by Geibel to the company, in 1921, he had deposited with his bank, the Guaranty Trust Company of Butler, Pennsylvania, the bonds pledged with him as collateral, and when the remaining $6000 of these bonds were sold by him to Bellman, following the Glass Company’s failure to pay the $1500 note, the trust company had notice of the change of ownership and retained custody of them by agreement with Geibel and Bellman as security for the balance of the purchase price due from Bellman to Geibel, as well as other .indebtedness of Bellman to Geibel resulting from the purchase of some stock. This balance Bellman reduced by payments from time to time to the sum of $1725, for which amount Geibel now holds Bellman’s note. This note and the $6000 bonds were in the possession of the Guaranty Trust Company of Butler until these bonds were forwarded to the Special Master in this cause by the trust company, at the request of Bellman, whose affidavit of claim for payment for the amount due thereon was also filed with the Master. The Special Master filed a report recommending that the court disallow the claim of Bellman as the owner of these bonds’. Bellman excepted to the report, reaffirming in the circuit court his right as purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration of' the $6000 bonds of the Universal Glass Company owned by him, to be paid, as were all other owners of these bonds, the par value thereof, together with interest due thereon, in, to-wit, the sum of $7306.66. The circuit court allowed Bellman the sum of $2400 on his claim,with interest at six per cent per annum from October 15, 1923. Bellman in due course appeals.

The assignments of error may be condensed into one, namely, that the trial court erred in its judgment, finding, order, and decree in sustaining Bellman’s exceptions in part only and allowing him but $2400 with interest, instead of sustaining his exceptions in full and allowing appellant Bellman the full amount of his claim, namely,-$7306.66, which is the aggregate sum -of the par value of $6000 of Universal Glass Company bonds owned and held by him with unpaid coupons thereto attached, together with interest.

It is contended here on behalf of the appellant that the pledge of the $6000 bonds of the Universal Glass Company made by it when it executed and delivered its promissory note, dated at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, May 7, 1923, whereby it promised to pay to C. J. Geibel at its office in Pittsburgh, the sum of $1500, thirty days after date, was a Pennsylvania transaction whose effect and validity, as well as the rights and obligations of the parties thereto, are determined by the laws of the State of Pennsylvania. We are in accord with that statement as an abstract proposition of law. An examination of the record before us shows no setting out of any constitutional provision or statutes of the State of Pennsylvania in tany pleading or motion, nor *1210 does it appear that any such constitutional provision or statutes were sought to be introduced in evidence, nor that any decisions of the courts of last resort of that State, were ever referred to throughout the trial. Such being the record in this case the appellant cannot invoke this rule of law, nor obtain any benefit from any provision of the constitution or statutes of the State of Pennslyvania, for the reason that courts do not take judicial notice of the laws of other states, and it is a trite doctrine that where a foreign statute or statutes of another State are relied on'as giving, conferring, or constituting a cause of action, they must be substantially stated with such distinctness that the court may judge their effect, and the facts pleaded which bring the case within the purview thereof. [Gibson v. Ry. Co., 225 Mo. 473, 125 S. W. 453, and cases cited therein; Tennent v. Ins. Co., 133 Mo. App. 345, 112 S. W. 754; Johnston v. Gawtry, 83 Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
299 S.W. 132, 220 Mo. App. 1205, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-union-trust-co-v-universal-glass-co-moctapp-1927.