State Ex Rel. Squire v. Murfey, Blossom & Co.

2 N.E.2d 866, 131 Ohio St. 289, 131 Ohio St. (N.S.) 289, 6 Ohio Op. 8, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 291
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1936
Docket25838
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 N.E.2d 866 (State Ex Rel. Squire v. Murfey, Blossom & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Squire v. Murfey, Blossom & Co., 2 N.E.2d 866, 131 Ohio St. 289, 131 Ohio St. (N.S.) 289, 6 Ohio Op. 8, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 291 (Ohio 1936).

Opinion

Stephenson, J.

The Superintendent of Banks will be referred to herein as plaintiff, and Murfey, Blossom & Company as defendant.

There are but two questions in this case, viz.:

1. In an action by the Superintendent of Banks to collect the double liability of the stockholders of an insolvent Ohio bank, may a party who appears as a stockholder of record at the time the bank was closed avoid his double liability by showing that he had sold his shares more than sixty days before the bank was closed?

2. On the trial of such action, is such record stockholder entitled to a trial by jury?

There are, of course, some subsidiary questions raised in this case, but a determination of the two main questions will determine the case. We will consider these questions in their order.

When the delegates to the Constitutional Convention of 1912 amended Section 3 of Article XIII of the Constitution, they had in mind just one class of individuals, namely, creditors of institutions authorized by law to receive money on deposit, usually denominated banks.

While this section of the Constitution was self-executing, the General Assembly, out of an abundance of caution, enacted Section 710-75, General Code, ap *296 plying such provision of the Constitution specifically to banking institutions, and further provided:

‘ ‘ The stockholders in any bank who shall have transferred their shares or registered the transfer thereof within sixty days next before the failure of such bank to meet its obligations, or with knowledge of such impending failure, shall be liable to the same extent as if they had made no such transfer, to the extent that the subsequent transferee fails to meet such liability; but this provision shall not be construed to affect in any way recourse which such stockholders might otherwise have against those in whose names such shares are registered at the time of such failure.”

Many laws have been passed by the General Assembly relative to banks.

Section 710-6, General Code, prior to the commencement of this suit, provided for the appointment of a superintendent of banks and further provided that “the superintendent of banks shall execute the laws in relation to banks.”

He is likewise authorized by the latter part of Section 710-75, General Code, to enforce the individual liability of stockholders as provided for therein. That the Superintendent of Banks is the alter ego of the defunct bank that he is proceeding to liquidate and that the bank’s knowledge is his knowledge, is a misconception. He takes the bank as he finds it. He is the direct representative of the creditors of the bank, and whatever is done by him in the way of liquidating the bank is done for the benefit of its creditors primarily. Banks ordinarily can take care of themselves, but the state has seen fit to take care of their creditors.

Of course banks have rights which the superintendent must respect.

The individual stockholder in a defunct bank is entitled to some attention from the superintendent, and he usually gets it in the way of a notice to take care pf his super-added liability. Whether the super-added *297 liability sounds in contract, or whether it is a distinct, independent, statutory liability with which mutuality has nothing to do, matters little. It is fixed, and the only defense the stockholder who is proceeded against can have to an action to enforce the super-added liability is the defense that he was not a stockholder at the time the super-added liability attached.

Such is the defense in the instant case.

Eventually we come to the naked question, namely, under the laws of Ohio can a person be a stockholder in fact, but not in law, when the bank is taken over for liquidation by state instrumentality?

The defendant company admits it was a stockholder in fact when the bank was taken over for liquidation, but denies that it was a stockholder in law.

Will the law permit a trapped stockholder to impeach the stock record? That is what it amounts to.

The general law of personal property helps us none. Defendant accepted the shares of stock from Smith as a pledge for a debt. It had a legal right so to do. These certificates bore Smith’s power of attorney to transfer them. The certificates bore the rubber stamp of Murfey, Blossom & Company to the effect that it had no ownership or interest in the stock and that such transfer was merely for purpose of sale. The transaction that followed may be clear to brokers but it is not clear to courts. The certificates were presented to the Standard Bank and new certificates were issued to Murfey, Blossom & Company. Any reservation made by the rubber stamp passed into thin air and from that time on they had title to the shares of stock represented by the certificates.

It was not necessary, for all that appears from the record, for defendant to surrender the old certificates and have new certificates issued, as the old certificates carried Smith’s executed power of attorney to Murfey, Blossom & Company to sell and transfer them. This modus opercmdi is attempted to be explained by the *298 statement that it amounted to placing the certificates in “street form ” that it was done at the request of Smith, the pledgor of the stock; that the rubber stamp was for the purpose of giving notice to the transfer agent that the holder of the certificates had no title thereto but did have the power of sale and such an arrangement avoided the transfer tax.

"While it may be unfounded, the suspicion lurks that the arrangement presented a better appearance, in so far as Mr. Smith was concerned. While the proceeding has the ear marks of irregularity, we see nothing fraudulent about it. Eventually defendant delivered its certificates, duly executed for purposes of sale and transfer, to the Standard Corporation, and received $12,000 in cash, which amount it credited to the account of Mr. Smith.

The transfer was not made and when the Superintendent of Banks took charge, Murfey, Blossom & Company appeared on the stock record as the owner of the stock.

Was Murfey, Blossom & Company on trial, under all the facts and circumstances, estopped to deny ownership of the stock in question when it appeared as such on the stock record? This question must be determined in the light of the law of today, not the law'of yesterday. Lawyers .and judges may entertain their individual ideas as to what the law should be in a case of this character. Such ideas must be banished and the question, what is the law, must be answered.

“Estoppel is only a rule of evidence; you cannot found an action upon estoppel.” Low v. Bouverie (1891), 3 Ch., 82, 105.

Lord Coke said: “It is called an estoppel or conclusion, because a man’s own act or acceptance stoppeth or closeth up his mouth to allege or plead the truth.” 10 Ruling Case Law, 675.

Thus it will be seen that the rule of estoppel is as old as the common law.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.E.2d 866, 131 Ohio St. 289, 131 Ohio St. (N.S.) 289, 6 Ohio Op. 8, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-squire-v-murfey-blossom-co-ohio-1936.