Worthington v. Cleveland City Ry.

19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 321, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 433, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 328
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 321 (Worthington v. Cleveland City Ry.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worthington v. Cleveland City Ry., 19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 321, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 433, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 328 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

LAUBIE, J.

The case of George IT. Worthington against the Cleveland City Railway Company is here on appeal. The action is for the purpose of compelling the defendant to issue a number of shares of stock to the [323]*323plaintiff in exchange for stock of the Cleveland City Cable Company, or, if the court finds that that cannot be ordered done, he asks for judgment for the value of the stock which he claims to hold.

The claim is based upon the fact that the Woodland Avenue & West Side Railroad Company and the Cleveland City Cable Company had consolidated in 1893, and that provision was made by which shares in certain proportion were to be issued ■ to the stockholders of each company by the consolidated company in exchange for the stock of the constituent companies; that after the consolidation the plaintiff obtained these certificates or shares of stock in the cable company from John J. Shipherd, as security upon certain bonds that he had loaned, to John J. Shipherd, doing business under the name of Charles IT. Potter- & Company, and who was also the transfer agent of the consolidated, company, defendant; and that he is entitled, therefore, to have the stock of this constituent company transferred into shares of stock of the consolidated company.

It seems to be assumed on both sides, and, indeed the action of the plaintiff is founded upon the assumption, that this consolidation was authorized by, and subject to, the conditions of Rev. Stat. 3384 (Lan. 5452), which provides for the consolidation of railroad companies, and we, therefore, assume the same.

Now, the plaintiff does not seek such relief, or to recover by reason of any act done by John J. Shipherd for the defendant as its transfer agent, but upon declarations he made at the time he delivered such stock certificates to plaintiff. Shipherd, as the transfer agent, was authorized, when the question as to the amount of stock that a stockholder in the Cleveland City Cable Company was to receive, and the amount of money he was to pay had been determined by the board, to accept and cancel the stock of the Cleveland City Cable Company and to issue to the stockholder the requisite number of shares of the stock of the Consolidated Company to which he was entitled, and blank certificates of stock, signed by the proper officers, were in his possession. The facts are as follows:

Worthington was loaning to Shipherd certain bonds of the Columbus City Railroad Company for the purpose of aiding that company in the discharge of its floating debt, Shipherd being the president of that company; and, as security therefor, and for the return of these bonds, Shipherd delivered to him these certificates of stock in the • Cleveland City Cable Company, — stock which apparently, on its face, belonged to John J. Shipherd himself, and which the defendant claims was spurious. Mr. Worthington did not himself make this contract, but he did it through Mr. Painter. Painter testifies that when this stock was of[324]*324fered to him as security he objected; that he asked Shipherd to transfer it into stock of the Cleveland City Railway Company, the defendant, and that Mr. Shipherd said, no, he could not do that because he didn’t have the money required to pay his proportionate share of the floating debt of that company, referring to the terms of the contract of consolidation which provided that each stockholder of the cable company was to stand his proportionate share of the floating debt of that company, which was to be paid before he could receive his proportionate shares of stock in the new company, and said to Painter, “you take the stock and you can pay it, and I will issue to you the stock of the new company in lieu thereof, ’ ’ or words to that effect. Relying on this promise, Painter took the stock of the cable company for Mr. Worthington as security for the bonds loaned to Shipherd in the name of Charles H. Potter & Company.

It is clear, therefore, that the transfer agent, Shipherd, was not performing or doing any act for either of these companies; he was simply acting for himself in his individual capacity and for his personal benefit, or for the benefit of the company that he represented, located in Columbus, and how can the Cleveland City Railway Company, the defendant, be responsible for that declaration, and be compelled to issue stock in lieu of such cable company stock, or to pay its value.

Under what circumstances would the declaration of Mr. Shipherd as its transfer agent bind the defendant company? It would only bind the company in ease he was acting for it, so as to constitute the declaration a part of the res gestae — a part of the act itself. •

This rule is stated in the brief of the eminent counsel for the plaintiff in this case. In his brief he refers to the case of Union Cent. Life Ins. Co. v. Cheever, 36 Ohio St. 201, 208, and to the opinion delivered by himself while he was a distinguished member of the Supreme Court of this state, as follows:

“It is because the declaration of an agent is a verbal act and part of the res gestae, that it is admissible, and whenever what he did is admitted in evidence then it is competent to prove what he said about the act while he was doing it.”

In that case it was held that Cheever was not acting for his wife at the time he made the declaration, and, therefore, his declaration did not bind her and was not admissible against her. Well, let us apply that rule here. What was Shipherd doing for the defendant company? If he was acting solely for himself, endeavoring to make a contract with Worthington for his own benefit, or the benefit of the Columbus City Railroad Company, how is. his declaration a part of the res gestae of [325]*325any act done for the defendant, and admissible against it? He must have been acting for the defendant at the time, doing some act for it, transacting its business, or his declarations are not admissible against it. The universal rule is, The declarations of an agent are only admissible against the principal when made in performing the business of the principal, or professing to act for the principal in the doing of some act within the apparent scope of his authority.

Now, in this case, Mr. Worthington, or Mr Painter, as representing him, did not go to either the office of the defendant or the agent of the defendant for the purpose of obtaining information upon which he might rely in the making of a contract with some third party in regard to this stock. He went to find John J. Shipherd, who in the contract, as appears from the testimony, represented the Columbus City Railway Company, if he represented anyone but himself, for the purpose of loaning to Shipherd, or to the Columbus City Railway Company, these bonds, and receive in security therefor whatever Mr. Ship-herd might offer. Shipherd offered stock of another company first, and subsequently offered this stock of the Cleveland City Cable Railway Company, and this declaration was made simply to induce Mr. Painter to enter into a personal contract with him, John J. Shipherd.

That declaration therefore is not admissible as testimony against the defendant, as it had no relation to any act that Shipherd was performing for the defendant, and could not be any part of the res gestae of an act done for the defendant.

But aside from this there is still another complete objection to plaintiff’s action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 321, 9 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 433, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worthington-v-cleveland-city-ry-ohcirctcuyahoga-1904.