Steindler v. Virginia Public Service Co.

175 S.E. 888, 163 Va. 462, 95 A.L.R. 220, 1934 Va. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 20, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 175 S.E. 888 (Steindler v. Virginia Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steindler v. Virginia Public Service Co., 175 S.E. 888, 163 Va. 462, 95 A.L.R. 220, 1934 Va. LEXIS 195 (Va. 1934).

Opinion

Campbell, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants instituted a suit in the Circuit Court of the city of Alexandria, the situs of appellee, to compel the appellee to transfer on its books, to appellants, eighty shares of preferred stock of the appellee, alleged to be owned by appellants, and to issue new certificates therefor to appellants. The bill or complaint also contained a prayer for damages in an amount sufficient to compensate appellants for the decline in the market value of the stock subsequent to the refusal of transfer.

Percy G. Dixon and William H. Humphries, the original owners of the eighty shares of stock, filed an intervening petition, alleging that they had been induced by fraud perpetrated upon them by one James Wallace and .........

Davies, to part with said stock, and, claiming the ownership of the stock, prayed that new certificates be issued to them.

The court by final decree denied the prayer of the intervenors, required the appellee to transfer the eighty shares of preferred stock to appellants and to issue and deliver to .appellants the usual and proper certificates, and to pay appellants all dividends accrued thereon, with interest to date of payment; but the court refused to require the appellee to respond in damages in accordance with the prayer of the bill.

Since that'adjudication the terms of the decree have been fully complied with by appellee. Upon proper petition, appellants were allowed an appeal from so much of the decree as refused to grant the prayer for damages. The intervenors have acquiesced in the decree, but appellee, by an assignment of cross-error, challenges the action of the chancellor in finding that appellants were entitled to have the stock involved herein transferred to them upon the books of the corporation, and the requirement of dividend payments.

[465]*465The facts upon which this suit rests are these: Dixon and Humphries, intervenors, were citizens of Rockbridge county. On the 21st day of August, 1931, Percy G. Dixon was the owner of sixty shares of seven per centum preferred stock of the Virginia Public Service Company, a Virginia corporation, and had in his possession proper certificates therefor. William H. Humphries was the owner of twenty shares of said stock and was possessed of a proper certificate therefor. On the 21st day of August they were jointly visited by two men who were strangers to them and who gave their names as James Wallace and Mr. Davies. They stated to Dixon and Humphries that one of them, Wallace, was a representative of a New York bank having connections with the Virginia Public Service Company, and that the other, Mr. Davies, was a representative of the company and was engaged in soliciting the participation of stockholders of the company in a pool which was being organized to trade in, or deal with, the stock of an alleged corporation known as the “Perpetual Self Winding Watch Company.”

During the course of the conversation Davies showed to Dixon-and Humphries a letter written on the alleged stationery of the Virginia Public Service Company, which purported to have been signed by Lewis Payne, vice-president, and authorized Davies to represent the company in connection with the transaction. Wallace and Davies also exhibited a printed form, headed “Virginia Public Service Company,” purporting to be a communication from the company urging its stockholders to participate in the pool. So impressed were Dixon and Humphries with the false and fantastic representations of Wallace and Davies in regard to the pool, that they endorsed their certificates of stock by signing their respective names to the blank forms of assignment and power of attorney printed thereon and delivered the stock to Wallace, who in turn receipted therefor.

Dixon and Humphries, upon request, gave to Wallace and Davies a note to T. V. Strickler, cashier of the First National Bank of Buena Vista, Virginia, requesting him to [466]*466guarantee their signatures on the certificates. Some time later in the day, two men, who were unquestionably Wallace and Davies, called at the bank, presented the note, produced the certificates and requested Strickler to guarantee the signatures, which request was complied with.

On the morning of the 22nd of August, a man giving his name as Fred Kayser presented all of the stocks of Dixon and Humphries at the office of the Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company, stock transfer agent of the Virginia Public Service Company, at 70 Broadway, New York City, and requested a transfer of the stock and the issuance of new certificates therefor in his name. After requiring Kayser to secure the guarantee of the Chase National Bank as to the genuineness of the signature of its correspondent, the Bank of Buena Vista, the clerk cancelled the old certificates and delivered the new ones to Kayser. On the afternoon of August 22nd, after the delivery of the stock to Kayser, the Central Hanover Bank was notified by Dixon and Humphries of the “swindle.”

On the morning of August 24th, pursuant to an appointment made by a Mr. Bach, Kayser went to the office of Shields and Company, brokers, and offered the stock certificates for sale. Bach had known Kayser under the name of Marshall, and after a conference with another member of the firm, the offer of sale of the stock was declined, on the ground, as stated by Bach in his deposition, that the stock was not a New York Exchange security, and on the further ground that it was in a different name than Marshall. Upon being advised of this decision, Kayser, or Marshall, asked the names of some unlisted security houses and was given several, including that of appellants.

The same morning, August 24th, plaintiff received a telephone call from a man giving the name of Fred Kayser and stating that he had been referred to them by Mr. Bach, with whom Mr. Steindler had been acquainted for some years. This caller stated further that he had eighty shares of Virginia Public Service Company preferred stock to sell, and asked the price, then gave an order to sell at par and [467]*467said he would bring the stock in later in the day. About two hours later a man arrived with the Kayser certificates, which Mr. Steindler examined and had verified by Mr. Preller, who called the transfer agent and ascertained that certificates numbered in accordance with the numbers on the certificates offered had been issued in the name of Fred Kayser under date of August 22nd, the date shown on the certificates, and that the address given the transfer agent was the same as the address given by the supposed Kayser to plaintiffs.

With that information, according to plaintiff, Steindler: “We proceeded to consummate the transaction with Mr. Kayser.” This consummation consisted of drawing a check of plaintiffs’ firm to the order of Fred Kayser for the sum of seven thousand, nine hundred and ninety-six dollars and eighty cents ($7,996.80)—being at the rate of $100 per share for the eighty shares of stock, less cost of transfer stamps—and delivered this check in exchange for the certificates presented.

After the purchase the certificates were sent by plaintiffs to their bank, the Trust Company of North America, for the purpose of having same transferred and then held subject to delivery whenever sold by plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.E. 888, 163 Va. 462, 95 A.L.R. 220, 1934 Va. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steindler-v-virginia-public-service-co-va-1934.