Union National Bank v. Topkis Bros.

2 A.2d 148, 23 Del. Ch. 59, 1938 Del. Ch. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 28, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 A.2d 148 (Union National Bank v. Topkis Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union National Bank v. Topkis Bros., 2 A.2d 148, 23 Del. Ch. 59, 1938 Del. Ch. LEXIS 46 (Del. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

The agreement between Topkis and Sapp and Frankel was in the form of a sale of stock with a repurchase clause. The complainant insists that such an agreement is in contemplation of law a chattel mortgage, and that as it was never recorded as required by Section 3333 of the Revised Code 1935, it was of no effect as a lien. The complainant further takes the position that if the so-called chattel mortgage was not a lien, then the lien of the attachment, though subsequent in point of time to the $1750.00 loan transaction, is superior in right thereto.

The intervenors answer by saying first that the agreement was not a chattel mortgage, because it is not to be construed on its face as such; second, even if it be a lien, it is not such by way of chattel mortgage within the meaning of the statute requiring such mortgages to be recorded, because shares of corporate stock are not the type of personal property which the act contemplates; and third, even if it was a chattel mortgage and not recorded as required so as to become a legal lien, the complainant is not entitled in opposition thereto to claim to be a subsequent purchaser for value without notice of Sapp and Frankel’s rights.

i

Was the agreement of sale and repurchase a chattel mortgage? This question is at the heart of the complainant’s case as presented on its brief.

In 1 Jones, Chattel Mortgages and Conditional Sales, § 190, it is indicated that the object sought to be served by statutes requiring the recordation of chattel mortgages is to substitute a record or filing of the mortgage in place of a delivery of possession of the mortgaged property, inasmuch as the mortgagee is to retain the possession which in the law of chattels is such an important evidence of [65]*65ownership. Accordingly the author proceeds to state in Section 278 of his work that such statutes “apply only to goods and chattels capable of delivery and not to defeasible or conditional assignments of choses in action. It is not necessary to the validity of such assignments that they be recorded.” .

Now a share of stock in an incorporated company, though it is “personal property,” using the phrase of § 3333, Revised Code 1935, dealing with the recording of chattel mortgages, is certainly not property that is tangible. In Spoturno v. Woods, 8 W. W. Harr. (38 Del.) 378, 192 A. 689, the Supreme Court of this State spoke of corporate stock as being intangible property and pointed out that at common law it could not be levied upon or attached. This was because of its ideal nature and as a consequence thereof of its incapability of manucaption. It is only because of some ° statutory substitute for actual seizure and delivery that so-called levies upon shares of stock and their sale on execution are possible.

In Marsh v. Woodbury, 42 Mass. (1 Metc.) 436; Heermans v. Blakeslee, 97 Wash. 647, 167 P. 128, it was held that choses in action are not within the statute dealing with the recording of chattel mortgages. And in Williamson v. N. J. Southern R. R. Co., 26 N. J. Eq. 398, it was held that shares of stock are not such goods and chattels as were within the contemplation of the chattel mortgage statute. In Delaware, the statute (Revised Code 1935, § 3333) does not use the phrase “goods and chattels.” Its phrase is “personal property.” But as the rationale of the decisions which hold that shares of stock are not in the embrace of statutes requiring the recordation of chattel mortgages, is based on their intangible character, I conceive that the variation in the phraseology as between “goods and chattels” and “personal property” is of no moment. In Kentucky the statute appears to have dealt with the recording of mortgages upon real and personal property. There, where we find substantially [66]*66the same phrase, viz., “personal estate,” as we find here, viz., “personal property,” it was held that shares of stock, equally with choses in action, because they have no visible corpus and no fixed location, are not within the recording statute. Spalding v. Paine’s Adm’r., 81 Ky. 416, 422.

Of course a share of stock is personal property. So is a chose in action. If a share of stock is the proper subject of a chattel mortgage within the meaning of a recording statute applicable to “personal property,” a chose in action would be equally so. The complainant, however, does not question the rule as to choses in action. The reasoning which underlies that rule is applicable to shares of stock.

The statute itself contains a provision which necessarily excludes so intangible and unlocated a piece of “personal property” as a share of stock from its contemplation; for it is to be noted that the mortgage is to be recorded “in each county where any of the mortgaged property is held.” Now in what county can stock be said to be held? That stock of a Delaware corporation has its situs in the State is expressly declared by statute. But in what county is it held? Where the corporation is? But the corporation is not located in any particular county. Where the stockholder is? But he moves about. The statute makes it a misdemeanor for the mortgagor to remove the mortgaged property from the county where it was held when mortgaged, without notice to the mortgagee. Would the stock wander out of the county with its owner? If so a misdemeanor would be committed unless the mortgagee was previously notified of the owner’s journey out of the county of recordation. Where the certificate is? But the certificate is not the share as has frequently been said by the courts of this State. Evidently the statute contemplates only visible, tangible property which has a defnitely ascertainable locus. It seems clear that the personal property referred to in the statute is personal property which is capable, in the language of the court in [67]*67Williamson v. N. J. Southern R. R. Co., supra, “of visible possession.”

If the contention of the complainant be accepted to the effect that shares of stock are the subject of a lien under our chattel mortgage statute, the effect on commercial transactions that involve its transfer, pledge and sale is impossible of estimate. No one would risk a purchase of it or a loan on the faith of the registered owner’s title, unless he had first searched all the chattel mortgage indices in the State to ascertain if a lien was of record against it. It is unreasonable to say that the statute was ever intended to cover personal property of so intangible and ideal a nature as shares of stock. The statute itself in its reference to the county “where any of the mortgage property is held,” negatives the suggestion.

So that the complainant’s case can gain no support from the contention that what Sapp and Frankel obtained by the sale and repurchase agreement with Topkis was a chattel mortgage that lost its legal lien through failure to have it recorded.

The complainant, by its attachment, acquired a legal right in the nature of a lien to look to the stock standing in Topkis’ name for satisfaction of its judgment.

Before it acquired this right, the rights of Sapp and Frankel had arisen. Whether their rights were those of purchasers from Topkis or equitable lienors against him, they were prior in point of time to the complainant’s attachment.

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Related

In re Paul Scotton Contracting Co.
325 F. Supp. 324 (D. Delaware, 1971)
In re Soss
52 F. Supp. 123 (D. Delaware, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 A.2d 148, 23 Del. Ch. 59, 1938 Del. Ch. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-national-bank-v-topkis-bros-delch-1938.