Turnbull v. Longacre Bank

163 N.E. 135, 249 N.Y. 159, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 780
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 163 N.E. 135 (Turnbull v. Longacre Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turnbull v. Longacre Bank, 163 N.E. 135, 249 N.Y. 159, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 780 (N.Y. 1928).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

The plaintiffs are stockbrokers and dealers in securities. In the course of their business they deliver securities to other brokers within the city of New York. On the 11th day of November, 1924, the plaintiffs telephoned to the Wall Street Messenger Company to send a messenger to the plaintiffs’ office, for the purpose of delivering securities to certain other brokers. When the messenger came to the plaintiffs’ office he was handed certificates of corporate securities of the Freed-Eiseman Radio Corporation, the Lehigh Valley Coal Company and the Standard Oil Company (Indiana), with instructions to deliver them to other brokers. All the certificates were indorsed in blank and transferable by delivery. The messenger stole the certificates.

The stolen certificates came into the possession of the defendant Brinkman. By him they were used as collateral security for a loan of $13,000, which he obtained from the defendant Longacre Bank on the 17th day of November, 1924. The loan was renewed by the bank, but has never been paid. In making and renewing the loan the *163 bank acted without negligence, honestly and in good faith.

The plaintiffs upon discovery of the theft gave notice thereof to the corporations which had issued the certificates. Beginning on January 6, 1925, the plaintiffs published in the New York Times a notice of the theft one day in each week for five successive weeks. Thereafter the corporations issued new certificates to the plaintiffs upon the application of the plaintiffs and upon receipt of indemnity bonds issued by the National Surety Company of New York. Thereafter the plaintiffs learned that the stolen securities were in the possession of the Longacre Bank. Then they brought this action.

The prayer of the complaint is that the defendant Longacre Bank be restrained from transferring, selling or assigning the securities, or from seeking in any manner to have the said securities transferred, upon the books of the corporations which issued the securities. Incidental to this relief the plaintiffs ask that these; corporations be restrained from transferring the securities upon their books, and that the Longacre Bank be directed to deliver the securities to the plaintiffs for the purpose of canceling the same upon the books of the said corporations. The foreign corporations appeared voluntarily in the action, and a restraining order was issued, pendente lite, as prayed for in the complaint.

The Longacre Bank then answered the complaint and set up as a defense to the plaintiffs’ claim that it was entitled to retain possession of the securities as a purchaser for value without notice. The bank in its answer pleaded counterclaims against the defendant corporations which had issued the said securities. It demanded that these corporations accept surrender of the certificates and issue new certificates in lieu thereof to, and in the name of, the bank, and pay to the bank any and all dividends accrued on the certificates or on the shares of stock represented thereby.

*164 After trial the court at Special Term gave judgment that the defendant bank was entitled to retain the securities as pledgee, subject to the right of the plaintiffs to redeem the pledge by paying the debt for which the certificates were collateral security. The court dismissed the bank’s counterclaim against the corporations which issued the securities. The Appellate Division modified the judgment, by awarding to the bank the dividends on the securities accruing after the corporations issuing the certificates received notice of the loss or theft of the certificates, and by directing that new certificates be issued on surrender of the original certificates which were stolen.

It is unnecessary for us to decide whether at common law the defendant bank might retain the stolen certificates as pledgee. Elements of negotiability of certificates of corporate stock, lacking at common law, have been supplied by article VI of the Personal Property Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 41 — Uniform Stock Transfer Act). Title to a certificate may be transferred by delivery of the certificate indorsed in blank (section 162). It is provided by section 166 that the delivery of a certificate to transfer title in accordance with the provisions of section one hundred and sixty-two is effectual, except as provided in section one hundred and sixty-eight, though made by one having no right of possession and having no authority from the owner of the certificate or from the person purporting to transfer the title.”. Section 168 provides that if the delivery of a certificate was made (c) without authority from the owner * * * the possession of the certificate may be reclaimed and the transfer thereof rescinded, unless: (1) The certificate has been transferred to a purchaser for value in good faith without notice of any facts making the transfer wrongful * * Here the evidence and findings establish that the Longacre Bank is a purchaser for value and without notice of any facts making the transfer wrongful. It is evident that *165 under the provisions of the Personal Property Law the possession of an innocent purchaser for value of certificates of stock indorsed in blank is fully protected. In that respect, though delivery was made by one who, being a thief, had himself neither right of possession or authority to transfer title, such certificates possess the attributes of negotiable instruments. The bank has acquired title to the certificates as pledgee. The plaintiffs may reclaim the certificates only by payment of the debt for which they are security.

We have assumed that the Personal Property Law applies to transfers of the stolen certificates. It is true that the term certificate ” as used in article VI of the Personal Property Law includes only a certificate of stock in a corporation organized under the laws of this State or of another State whose laws are consistent with this act ” (section 183), and there is no proof in the record that the laws of the States of Pennsylvania and of Indiana, under which the Lehigh Valley Coal Company and the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) were organized, are consistent with the Personal Property Law (Uniform Stock Transfer Act). At the trial no party to the action offered such proof, and, on the other hand, no party contended that unless such proof was offered the provisions of the Personal Property Law did not apply. The court and all the parties assumed that, even without such proof, the rights of the parties are defined by the statute. It is too late now to raise a contention that proof should have been given that the laws of Pennsylvania and of Indiana are consistent with the Uniform Stock Transfer Act. (Peckinpaugh v. Noble & Co., 213 N. W. Rep. 859.) The appellants do not even now claim that such proof could not have been given at the trial, if any party had seen fit to waste the time of the court by requiring proof of a fact about which no real controversy could exist.

*166 We agree with the Appellate Division that the bank is entitled, upon surrender of the certificates to the corporations which issued them, to receive new certificates.

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Bluebook (online)
163 N.E. 135, 249 N.Y. 159, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turnbull-v-longacre-bank-ny-1928.