United National Bank v. Tappan

79 A. 946, 33 R.I. 1, 1911 R.I. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 3, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 79 A. 946 (United National Bank v. Tappan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United National Bank v. Tappan, 79 A. 946, 33 R.I. 1, 1911 R.I. LEXIS 102 (R.I. 1911).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

This is a bill of interpleader brought by the United National Bank of Providence to determine the rights of the several respondents to certain bonds, shares of stock and sums of money heretofore held by the complainant and now deposited in the registry of the Superior Court, the said property being the surplus of a pledge made to the complainant by the respondent Lewis H. Tappan, heretofore doing business as Lewis H. Tappan & Co., to secure the amount of an indebtedness of said Tappan to said complainant.

.Tappan was engaged in business in Providence as a banker and broker. The respondent Tillinghast is trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of Tappan (chosen since the commencement of this action). The respondent Billinge is assignee of Henry G. Thresher, a customer of Tappan. The respondent McDonnell is assignee of Henry A. Water- *3 house, Charles Morris Smith, Jr., Elizabeth L. Pearce, William F. Leeder, David Bernkopf, Samuel K. Grover, Anita C. Baker and Philip Allen, all of whom were customers of Tappan. The other respondents, Edward P. Greene, Anna F. Greene, George M. Parks, Helen A. P. Merriman and James M. P. Taylor, were also customers of Tappan.

The several respondents (other than Tappan and Tilling-hast) and the said assignors of McDonnell and Billinge, in the course of dealings with Tappan, had each delivered to him certain of the stocks and bonds involved in this case which, together with certain other stocks belonging to himself, Tappan repledged to the complainant to secure an indebtedness as above stated.

On June 9th, 1909, Tappan made a common law assignment to the respondent Tillinghast, and later, on the 9th day of November, 1909, was adjudged bankrupt and the respondent Tillinghast was chosen Trustee in Bankruptcy and was by decree of the Superior Court, December 3, 1909, permitted to intervene and was made a party to this suit. On June 9th, 1909, the pledge above mentioned remained unaltered in the possession of the complainant. Immediately thereafter the several respondents (other than Tappan and Tillinghast) and said assignors of McDonnell and Billinge gave notice to the complainant of their several claims to property in the pledge and demanded return of same. The respondent Tillinghast, first as assignee and later as trustee, also made claim to the property. The complainant resorted to the pledge and sold a portion thereof. After satisfying its claim, the property which is the subject matter of this action remained. By stipulation it appears that the portion of the pledge which was sold was disposed of in such manner that the amounts realized from the sale of the several parts thereof can readily be ascertained.

After the assignment by Tappan to Tillinghast and before the commencement of this action, the parties named as assignors of the respondents. McDonnell and Billinge severally assigned to them their right, title and interest in and *4 to the stocks, bonds, etc., which they had deposited with Tappan and all claims and demands arising from or out of the disposition thereof by Tappan and the complainant.

The respondent, John A. Tillinghast, trustee in bankruptcy of said Tappan, in his answer admits substantially all the allegations of the bill, but claims to be entitled to the said cash surplus and also to the said bonds and shares of stock. He alleges that all of said customers except the respondent Henry G. Thresher customarily bought and sold stock through Tappan on margin, but, instead of or in addition to paying a deposit of cash as such margin, they deposited margin in the form of stocks and bonds under an agreement whereby it was expressly provided that Tappan should have the right to hypothecate, sell, or dispose of, without notice, such stock or bonds or interests therein, however held, whereby the right accrued to said Tappan to treat said stock and bonds in all respects as similar to deposits of the then cash value of said stock and bonds, and to hypothecate, pledge or sell the same as his own property for the purpose of procuring funds with which to carry the accounts of said customers with his correspondents, being liable, however, only to credit the accounts of such customers with the then value of such stock and bonds as margin paid on their, accounts.

In respect to the respondent Henry G. Thresher, the Trustee in Bankruptcy in his answer claims that said Thresher did not deposit any of the shares of preferred or common stock of the United Wire & Supply Company, referred to in the bill of complaint, with Tappan in the same manner as the other respondents, but that all of said preferred and common stock had been purchased prior to said assignment by Tappan, in the name of Lewis H. Tappan & Co., under the orders of said Thresher, who had deposited only a portion of the purchase price thereof with said Tappan, but that title to said stock had never at any time vested in said Thresher up to the time of said assignment; so that at that time said Thresher had no title at law or in equity to said stock but only a right of *5 action to demand of said Tappan that he deliver to said Thresher any 119 shares of preferred, and any 71 shares of the common stock of said company upon being tendered by said Thresher the balance due on his account.

The trustee further claims in his answer “that when stock or bonds are deposited with brokers by way of margin, or when the title of stock purchased on margin is taken in the name of the broker, it is the general custom in this State, in case such use is demanded by the exigencies of the case, to make use of such deposits of stock and bonds or of such stock purchased, for the purpose of raising money with which to carry the accounts of such customers, and that such custom was well known, or from its generality must be presumed to have been well known, to said customers; that said Tappan in fact executed the orders of said customers in the purchase and sale of stock and bonds in connection with which said margins were deposited with said Tappan, and that in order to do so, and in order to carry the accounts of said customers, it became necessary for him to hypothecate or pledge, and accordingly he did in fact, for the purposes aforesaid, from time to time, hypothecate or pledge said stock and bonds with said bank as security for loans from said bank, as well he might; and that upon said-application of said margins of stock and bonds or of said purchases of stock being made by Tappan under the terms of the respective deposits or purchases thereof with or by himself, all the right of said customers to receive back the identical stock or bonds received or purchased was at an end, and said Tappan was only hable to give them credit respectively for the then value of said stock and bonds. He further claims that the loan by the bank having been fully paid out of the proceeds of a portion of the stock and bonds deposited by Tappan with the bank, the surplus ought to be returned to him as Trustee in Bankruptcy of said Tappan.”

The respondent, Arthur J. Billinge, Assignee of Henry G. Thresher, alleges in his answer that for a considerable time *6

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Bluebook (online)
79 A. 946, 33 R.I. 1, 1911 R.I. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-national-bank-v-tappan-ri-1911.