Weller v. American Telephone and Telegraph Co.

290 A.2d 842, 10 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1221, 1972 Del. Ch. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 16, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 290 A.2d 842 (Weller v. American Telephone and Telegraph Co.) 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
Weller v. American Telephone and Telegraph Co., 290 A.2d 842, 10 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1221, 1972 Del. Ch. LEXIS 121 (Del. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

MARVEL, Vice Chancellor:

Plaintiff seeks the entry of a judgment against two corporations, namely American Telephone and Telegraph Company and General Electric Company, based on her claim for injuries sustained by her as a result of the alleged unauthorized registration of stock owned by her in each such company. Separate suits were filed against such issuers. However, the cases having been consolidated for trial purposes, this opinion will be filed in each case.

At the time of the acts complained of plaintiff was the registered holder of 500 shares of common stock of American Telephone and Telegraph Company and 100 shares of common stock of General Electric. Later, the shares of the latter company were split two for one.

In 1968, Gertrude L. Weller, a 94 year old widow, was invited to live in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jumper. This change of residence came about because the plaintiff had known Mrs.' Jumper for many years and was also acquainted with Mr. Jumper, who had performed various helpful services for her in the past. Because of her lonely circumstances and advanced age she was more than delighted to accept the Jumpers’ proposal. As a token of her appreciation for their apparently unselfish gesture Mrs. Weller, after moving in with them, made a gift of 100 shares of American Telephone and Telegraph stock to Mr. Jumper.

Thereafter, because of her age and poor health, plaintiff gradually surrendered more and more responsibility concerning the details of her business affairs to Mr. Jumper. Thus, she acquiesced when he took upon himself to open her mail, being reassured by him on numerous occasions that he was sending her stock dividend checks and other income receipts to her bank. During this period Mrs. Weller evinced complete trust in the Jumpers notwithstanding momentary worries over the fact that her mail was being opened by Mr. Jumper and that she was not actually being shown the income checks which she had received in the mail. However, she was easily convinced that there was nothing to worry about.

In February, 1970, after having moved to her nephew’s to live, following disclosure to some extent of Mr. Jumper’s actual nature, Mrs. Weller ascertained that for over a period of almost two years she had been systematically defrauded by Mr Jumper. In other words she became aware for the first time of the fact that Kenneth Jumper had used a form containing her signature for the purpose of opening a joint trading account with a stockbroker, namely the third party defendant Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., and that Mr. Jumper thereafter had apparently forged her name to the stock certificates here involved for the purpose of selling them on the market.

The trial evidence is to the effect that Mr. Jumper had not only forged plaintiff’s name to plaintiff’s stock certificates .but had also closed out her savings account and terminated her checking account by means of a forged signature. Needless to say, the income checks which Mr. Jumper had removed from Mrs. Weller’s mail had also been diverted to his own use.

Plaintiff thereupon notified the defendants American Telephone and Telegraph Company and General Electric Company on March 4, 1970 that the stock certificates representing her investments in such companies had been sold by means of forged signatures and requested the issuance to her of replacement certificates. The defendants having declined to issue such certificates as requested, this action ensued, *844 the complaint naming as defendants the issuers of the certificates in question. Mer rill Lynch was later joined as a third party defendant in its capacity as the broker which had guaranteed Mrs. Weller’s signature.

The third party plaintiffs, American Telephone and Telegraph Company and General Electric Company, having moved for summary judgment against the third party defendant Merrill Lynch on the ground that in the event of the establishment of the alleged forgery upon which plaintiff relies for recovery, such party will be ultimately liable for plaintiff’s injuries as a guarantor of her signature under § 8-312(3) of the Uniform Commercial Code, 1 an order granting such motion was entered on December 13, 1971.

At trial, plaintiff introduced expert testimony to the effect that the signatures on the stock certificates in question were not those of Mrs. Weller, which evidence was not controverted. And I am satisfied from a consideration of all of the evidence of record that during the period from May 1 to July 1, 1968, plaintiff’s signature was in fact forged on the certificates in issue by Mr. Jumper after he had improperly obtained access to her bank deposit box. Merrill Lynch now argues, however, that Mrs. Weller is barred from the recovery she seeks because she admittedly signed 2 a form which enabled Mr. Jumper to open a joint trading account in Mrs. Weller’s as well as his name at Merrill Lynch. The form for the opening of such joint account contained the following provision:

“With respect to our joint account with right of survivorship we confirm that:
1. In all matters pertaining to the account you may act with orders or instructions from either of us.”

The third party defendant Merrill Lynch contends, first of all, that inasmuch as such agreement gave Mr. Jumper the right to authorize the sale of plaintiff’s securities, such defendant was justified in its act of guaranteeing Mrs. Weller’s apparent signature.

In my opinion, such contention is untenable, first because Mrs. Weller cannot by any reasonable interpretation of the document relied on by Merrill Lynch be deemed to have agreed in advance to Mr. Jumper’s forgeries; secondly, even if it were to be assumed that the defendant Merrill Lynch can be .said to have acted reasonably pursuant to Mr. Jumper’s instructions, there is no language in the trading agreement here in issue authorizing it successfully to guarantee a forged signature as genuine.

In seeking to obtain the entry of a judgment against American Telephone and Telegraph Company and General Electric and in the end to obtain relief from Merrill Lynch, plaintiff relies, inter alia, on § 8-106 of the Uniform Commercial Code which provides as follows:

“The validity of a security and the rights and duties of the issuer with respect to registration of transfer are governed 'by the law (including the conflict of laws rules) of the jurisdiction of organization of the issuer.”

Both of the corporate issuers in this action are organized under the laws of the State of New York. Accordingly, New York law must be here applied although it appears that the texts of the Delaware and New York Uniform Commercial Code are basically the same. However, as will be noted later, the section governing the form of relief to be granted a stockholder who has succeeded in obtaining judgment against the issuer of a corporate security has been interpreted in New York but not in Delaware.

*845

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Bluebook (online)
290 A.2d 842, 10 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1221, 1972 Del. Ch. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weller-v-american-telephone-and-telegraph-co-delch-1972.