West & Co. v. Montgomery National Bank

7 Pa. D. & C. 371, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 140
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County
DecidedDecember 28, 1925
DocketNo. 4
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Pa. D. & C. 371 (West & Co. v. Montgomery National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West & Co. v. Montgomery National Bank, 7 Pa. D. & C. 371, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 140 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Miller, P. J.,

After hearing the evidence and arguments of counsel, we find the facts and draw therefrom the conclusions of lay? which follow.

Findings of fact.

1. The plaintiffs are stock brokers and investment bankers, buying, selling and otherwise dealing in stocks, bonds and other securities, with a principal office in Philadelphia, Pa., and branches in New York City and elsewhere. They do an extensive business and are of high standing and repute.

2. Mary Ann Davis is an unmarried woman who lives utterly alone in a house which she owns in Norristown, Montgomery County. Prior to June, 1924, she was possessed of substantial means. She is upwards of seventy-eight years of age and enjoys physical health that is fairly good, but men[372]*372tally she is somewhat impaired — although never having been so adjudged. Except a deposit in bank, she kept her securities in her house. She had never made an income tax return to the Federal Government nor paid any such tax.

3. Montgomery National Bank of Norristown is, as its name indicates, a chartered national bank of Norristown aforesaid, and the Norristown Insurance and Water Company is the local public service water company operating under a Pennsylvania charter.

4. On a day in June, 1924, Miss Davis, who was inside her house, heard a young man, who was a total stranger to her, knocking at her front door. She admitted him to the house. He represented falsely to her that he had been sent to investigate why she had not made income tax returns nor paid any such tax, informed her of the possible consequences, and so preyed upon her fears that, when he left, he carried with him a large number of her stock certificates for submission, as he deceitfully assured her was necessary, to his superiors at Washington. He had had her sign her name in ink on the back of such as did not, because of their age, have printed on them blank assignments and powers to transfer, and on those which had blank assignments and powers of attorney printed on their backs he had had her sign such at the end and in the proper place.

Miss Davis, when she delivered these certificates to her caller, did not intend to sell them or to part with their ownership, nor did she receive any value or consideration for them. She knew, however, that “when you sold stock, you signed it on the back.” Notwithstanding her age, decrepitude and impaired mental condition, she had been made the victim of a heartless fraud and her property had been fraudulently obtained from her by misrepresentation, imposition and deceit. None of it was ever returned to her. She thus turned over to the stranger certificates of stock, all made out in her name, representing her holdings in at least ten Pennsylvania corporations; said investments were of the best, and they had a value running into many thousands of dollars. The stranger, who gave the name of Seymore, was not shown to be a stock broker, and we find that Miss Davis did not intend to constitute him her agent to dispose of said certificates.

5. Amongst the certificates so delivered by her to the strange caller were:

(al) No. 83 of Montgomery National Bank of Norristown, dated March 16, 1880, to Mary Ann Davis, for six shares of its capital stock.

(b) No. 847 of the same bank, dated Feb. 9, 1891, to Mary Ann Davis, for four shares of its capital stock.

(c) No. 2110 of the Norristown Insurance and Water Company, dated Aug. 4, 1909, to Mary Ann Davis, for twenty-five shares of its capital stock; and

(d) No. 2173 of the last-named corporation, dated April 11, 1910, to Mary Ann Davis, for three shares of its capital stock.

None'of these four certificates had printed upon its back or attached to it a blank assignment and power of attorney to transfer, but all, when delivered by Miss Davis to the stranger, had her name written in ink upon the back so far down as to allow abundant space to write or type such assignment and power above the signature.

6. Amongst the certificates so delivered by Miss Davis to the strange caller was also No. 2429 of the Norristown Insurance and Water Company, dated March 10, 1911, to Mary Ann Davis, for nine shares of its capital stock.

This certificate had printed upon its back the usual blank assignment and power to transfer, and, before it was so delivered by her, she had signed her name, “Mary Ann Davis,” to it in ink in the proper place at its end and also [373]*373after the words “Know all men by these presents that,” at the beginning or top.

7. And amongst the certificates so delivered by Miss Davis to the strange caller was also No. 3074 of the Norristown Insurance and Water Company, dated Sept. 4, 1918, to Mary Ann Davis, for four shares of its capital stock.

This certificate had printed upon its back the usual blank assignment and power to transfer, and, before it was so delivered by her, she had signed her name, “Mary Ann Davis,” to it in ink in the proper place at its end and also after the words “Know all men by these presents that,” at the beginning or top.

8. Tilden, Reade & Co., Incorporated, were, in June, 1924, engaged in business in New York City as dealers in investment securities. On June 9, 1924, it wrote to plaintiffs at Philadelphia, saying: “We are interested in securing firm bid and asked prices on the following securities. ... We trust that you will expedite your reply, as we have a party who may be interested in same.” The list of securities set forth in the letter showed the names of ten Pennsylvania corporations, including Montgomery National Bank and Norris-town Insurance and Water Company, her certificates, in all of which Miss Davis had, as found already, earlier in the same month delivered to the strange young man who had called upon her.

9. There are about 2500 stock and investment brokers in New York City, of whom about 250 are known, actually or by reputation, to West & Co. When this letter was received by West & Co., they did not know nor had they heard of Tilden, Reade & Co., Incorporated.

10. Plaintiffs upon receipt of the letter mentioned in our 8th finding knew, of course, that, of the stock enumerated, Pennsylvania Salt Manufacturing Company and United Gas and Improvement Company were listed and had to be sold and bought on the exchange and that all the rest were unlisted.

11. A “firm bid” is a definite offer to pay a certain price; and a “subject bid” is tentative, in that it is subject to future confirmation or the performance of some other condition. By “checking the market” is meant inquiry of specialists, dealers and others having superior knowledge on the subject concerning the market price of unlisted securities.

12. Upon receipt of the letter mentioned in our 8th finding, plaintiffs, by their regular trader, an experienced man who had been in their employ for six years, promptly checked the market on the unlisted securities mentioned, obtained firm bids on some and subject bids on others, and afterwards, in regular course of business and in good faith, communicated with Tilden, Reade & Co., Incorporated, making firm bids on some and subject bids on others. Plaintiffs did not then know in whose name the certificates for the .stocks mentioned were made out.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Pa. D. & C. 371, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-co-v-montgomery-national-bank-pactcomplmontgo-1925.