101 N.Y.S. 87 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
The facts were stipulated; at the close of the testimony each party moved the court for a direction of a verdict, and neither thereafter requested any submission to the jury. The court directed q verdict for the plaintiff and ordered that the exceptions be heard by this court in the first instance. The action is not for a conversion, for the plaintiff received the stock and sued for the damages incident to the omission of the defendant to transfer it. "The proposition of the plaintiff is .that it became the duty of the defendant to make the transfer on or about July 29, 1903, but as it did not make the transfer until October 22 or 24, 1903, it must, therefore, respond for any damages incident to such delay. After the plaintiff received the stock it was sold at public vendue. The plaintiff sued for and has recovéred' the difference between the price realized and the value of the stock' on July , 29, 1903 — some $14,000 — with interest.
The stock in a foreign corporation owned by a non-resident was not taxable. (Matter of Whiting, 150 N. Y. 27.) Therefore, the consent of the State Comptroller, provided for • by section 228 of the Tax Law, was not necessary in order to protect the defendant. But I am of opinion that this action does not lie. In Denny v. Manhattan Co. (2 Den. 115) the resident transfer agent of a foreign corporation unjustly refused a transfer, and the plaintiffs brought action on the case. The court held that the action did not lie against the defendant, as it was not the agent of the plaintiffs and owed them no duty, but the agent of the defendant,, to whom alone it ivas answerable for any neglect in the discharge of agency. The judgment was affirmed in the Court of Errors, the chancellor and two of the senators delivering “ written opinions in favor of affirming the judgment of the Supreme Court upon the ground upon which its decision was made.” (5 Den. 639.) In Colvin v. Holbrook (2 N. Y. 129) the court say: “The question must be deemed at rest in this' State by the decision in Drury” (misprint for Denny) “ v. The Manhattan Co. (2 Denio, 118), affirmed in the court for the correction of errors.” (See, too, Montgomery County Bank v. Albany City Bank, 7 N. Y. 459, and 1 Morawetz Corp. [2d ed.] 537, citing Denny’s Case, supra.)
The eminent and able counsel for the plaintiff does not quarrel
Hirschberg, P. J., Hooker and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Exceptions of the defendant, sustained and motion for new trial, granted, costs to abide the event. .