Tyson v. George's Creek Coal & Iron Co.

81 A. 41, 115 Md. 564, 1911 Md. LEXIS 174
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 26, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 81 A. 41 (Tyson v. George's Creek Coal & Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyson v. George's Creek Coal & Iron Co., 81 A. 41, 115 Md. 564, 1911 Md. LEXIS 174 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The stock ledger of the appellee, the George’s Creek Coal and Iron Company, contains, among others, two accounts: one with “Morris Robinson, New York,” and one with “Morris Robinson, Agent.” The former account, discloses that there were issued to him in his individual capacity three hundred and fifty four shares of the stock of the appellee company. Of this number three hundred and thirty-one were disposed of by Robinson and re-issued to those to whom they had been assigned by him, leaving twenty-three shares outstanding in his name. These were issued, as shown by the account, eleven shares on October 12th, 1831, and' twelve shares on June 1st, 1838, the certificates therefor being numbered 21 and 88, respectively. The latter account discloses that there were issued to him as agent three hundred and fifty shares of stock. Of these shares two hundred and fifty were acquired by him from John H. Alexander, at that time the president of the appellee company, and issued to him December 26th, 1831, and one hundred shares from *566 John Duer, vice-president of the American Life Insurance and Trust Company, issued to him September 8th, 1838. The account then discloses that two hundred and fifty shares, the number that he had acquired' from John H. Alexander, were on September 14th, 1838, re-issued to John H. Alexander, leaving Robinson holding, as agent, only the one hundred shares that he had acquired from John Duer, the certificate for the same being numbered 616.

The record discloses that at the time of the issuance of this stock Morris Robinson was cashier of the New York Branch of the Bank of the United States, which position it seems he held for a number of year’s. He. later became the first president of the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, and died in 1849. Letters of administration upon his estate were granted in New York and an inventory of his property filed, but in it no mention is made of his ownership of the stock of the appellee company above referred to.

No dividends were declared by the company upon its stock before the death of Morris Robinson; in fact, no dividends were declared thereon earlier than 1864 or thereabouts. From that time on dividends were declared at regular intervals until 1903, when they issued a stock dividend of 100 per cent. As the books of the company then showed that the twelve and eleven shares issued to Morris Robinson were still standing in his name, the twenty-three additional shares issued as a stock dividend upon said twelve and eleven shares, were accordingly issued to him in his individual capacity, the certificate therefor, No. 3628, being withheld by the company. And as the one hundred shares issued to Robinson as agent were still outsanding to him in that capacity, the one hundred additional shares issued as a stock dividend thereon were likewise issued to him as agent, the certificate therefor being numbered 3629, which was also withheld by the company. After the issuance of the stock dividend of 100 per cent, the company thereafter declared dividends not only upon the original stock issued to Robinson as individual and *567 as agent, but also upon tbe additional stock issued as stock dividends, and as there was no claimant for such dividends they were retained by the company, and consequently are still unpaid.

In 1909 letters of administration upon the personal estate of Morris Eobinson in Maryland were granted to Malcolm V. Tyson, the appellant, who, as he testified, made dilig’ent search for the three certificates, Eos. 27, 88 and 616, representing the stock issued to Morris Eobinson in his individual capacity and as agent, and failing to find them, he caused a notice to be inserted in the Baltimore Sun giving notice of the loss or destruction of said certificates, and stating that application had been made to the company for the issuance of new certificates of stock in lieu thereof. This advertisement, it seems, brought no information as to the whereabouts of the certificates, whereupon the appellant, as administrator, made written request of the company to issue to him as administrator of Morris Eobinson, deceased, new stock certificates in the place of those which were supposed to be lost or destroyed, and filed with the president of the company a statement of the circumstances of the loss or destruction of said certificates' and of his ineffectual efforts to find' them. Upon the company declining to issue new certificates in lieu of the old ones, the appellant, as administrator, filed his bill in this case, alleging the facts as we have stated them and asking the Court to require the company to issue new certificates of its stock unto him in lieu of those lost or destroyed, and to transfer unto him certificates Eos. 3628 and 3629, and to pay over unto him all accrued dividends that may have been earned upon said stock since the death of the said Morris Eobinson.

To this bill the appellee answered, admitting the issuance of the stock to Eobinson as and in the manner above stated, but requiring proof as to the fact that the decedent, of whom the appellant was administrator, was the Morris Eobinson to whom the stock had been issued, as well as other *568 facts therein alleged that were not within its knowledge, and further answering, said:

“It appears by the stock ledger ‘A’ of the defendant, that there was outstanding on February 11th, 1851, certificate No. 616 for 100 shares of the' capital stock of the defendant, dated September 8, 1838, in the name of Morris Robinson, ‘Agent’, and there is nothing on the stock ledger to show that said certificate has been transferred from the name of said ‘Morris Robinson, Agent’. But the said defendant does not know whether the said ‘Morris Robinson, Agent’ died possessed of or entitled to the said certificate or any of the shares of stock for which the same was issued; or whether the said certificate still stood in the name of the said ‘Morris Robinson, Agent’, at the time of his death; and, therefore, the defendant does not admit that the said ‘Morris Robinson, Agent’, did die so possessed of or entitled to the said shares of stock or any part thereof, or that, at the time of his death, if he did die, the said certificate of stock stood in his name.
“That it is advised, and it so avers, that even if the said ‘Morris Robinson, Agent’, was still possessed of or entitled, at the time of his death (if he be dead) to the said certificate No. 616, for said 100 shares issued to him on the 8th of September, 1838, and even if the plaintiff was duly appointed by the Orphans’ Court administrator of the personal estate of Morris Robinson, and that the said Morris Robinson is the ‘Morris Robinson, New. York’, to whom was issued the above named certificate No. 21 for eleven shares, and certificate No. 88 for twelve shares of the cápital stock of the defendant, nevertheless the plaintiff is not entitled, as such administrator, to any part of the one hundred shares for which said certificate No. 616 was issued by this defendant to ‘Morris Robinson, Agent’, because said stock did not belong to said Morris Robinson, in his individual capacity. Moreover, until the contrary appears, the presumption of law is that the said stock for which said certificate No. 616 was issued did not belong, when it *569

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Bluebook (online)
81 A. 41, 115 Md. 564, 1911 Md. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyson-v-georges-creek-coal-iron-co-md-1911.