Isenberg v. Huntingdon Millwork & Lumber Co.

62 Pa. Super. 491 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1916

Opinion by

Bice, P. J.,

This suit in equity was based on the plaintiff’s allegation that J. C. Louder, the decedent, was the owner at his death-of five shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, which ownership was evidenced by a certificate, absolute on its face, which was issued in his name and was found amongst his papers after his death. The bill alleged, inter alia, that the company was conducting the business for which it was incorporated, and by its officers refused to account to the plaintiff and to pay over to him the share of profits due the decedent’s estate, and prayed: (1) the appointment of a receiver; (2) an accounting to the plaintiff for all money received in the course of its business since the death of J. O. Louder; (3) general relief. The answer of the com*494pany, attested by John S. Bare, its president, and sworn to by him, averred that J. C. Louder was not the owner of the five shares of stock, but held the certificate therefor in trust for John S. Bare; that no money was paid by J. C. Louder for the stock, but it was understood by and between the parties that Louder should hold the shares in his own name for Bare, and that if at any time Louder could pay for the stock, he was to be permitted to do so and upon payment was then to become the owner. The case was referred to a master who found from the evidence that the stock never became the property of J. 0. Louder, but at the time of the issuance of the certificate and now was and is the property of John S. Bare, and consequently reported that the bill should be dismissed. The above finding, partly of fact and partly of law, was based on the uncontradicted oral evidence of two witnesses of what took place at the time the certificate was issued. The case is before us by plaintiff’s appeal from the court’s decree overruling the exceptions to the master’s report and dismissing the bill.

A trust — that is, the beneficial title or ownership of personal property of- which the legal title is in another— may be created by parol, and shares of corporate stock are not an exception to this general principle. The certificate therefor in the possession of the person in whose name it was issued is prima facie evidence of his ownership of the stock, but it is rebuttable by clear, precise and indubitable proof that it was taken and is held in trust for another who is the real owner. The trust may be express, in which case no particular form of language is necessary, but any words which sufficiently indicate intention will be competent to create a trust: Bisph. Eq. (7th Ed.), Sec. 20. And such conclusion is strengthened where the stock was paid for not by the nominal holder of the certificate, but by the person claiming to be the beneficial owner. It is not essential to the admission of parol evidence to establish the trust that a fraud was originally intended. It is enough that though the parties *495acted in mutual good faith at the inception of the transaction, an attempt is made to wrest the instrument held in trust to a purpose not contemplated, or to use it in violation of the accompanying agreement. It has been said, “It is as much a fraud to obtain a paper for one purpose, and to use it for a different and unfair purpose as to practice falsehood or deceit in its procurement” : Rearich v. Swinehart, 11 Pa. 233. See also White v. Black, 14 Pa. Superior Court 459, and cases there cited. Applying these principles to the case in hand, the master was right in saying that if the administrator of Louder afterward undertook to use the certificate for a purpose that was not contemplated and contrary to the agreement of the parties at the time the certificate was executed, then that would be a fraud; and, of course, the plaintiff would not be entitled to the aid of a court of equity in such attempt, even though he were not actuated by an evil intent. “What is meant by ‘indubitable’ proof in connection with such cases, is evidence that is not only found to be credible, but of such weight and directness as to make out the facts beyond a reasonable doubt; in the very nature of things, that conclusive and absolute proof, which results from the production of record evidence, or rests on the solution of a mathematical problem, can never be the effect of the verbal testimony of witnesses”: Boyertown National Bank v. Hartman, 147 Pa. 558. See also Cullmans v. Lindsay, 114 Pa. 166; Burt v. Burt, 221 Pa. 171; Snyder v. Phillips, 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 648. As already stated, the master’s finding was based' on the uncontradicted testimony of two witnesses, and we now add, after full consideration of the testimony given by them, that in our judgment it comes up to the standard recognized in the foregoing cases, and many others dealing with the same subject.

The remaining question is as to the competency of the two witnesses, John S. Bare and Nevin Peightel. The former was called by the plaintiff and gave the testimony *496as to his actual ownership of the stock while under examination in chief. Even if it be conceded that the plaintiff was not conclusively bound by his testimony, it is nevertheless too plain for argument that his competency as a witness and the competency of his testimony cannot now be questioned by the party who called him. The principal objection to Peightel, a witness called by defendant, is that he was a stockholder of the defendant company at the time of the conversation sought to be proven as well as at the time when the bill was filed, and this being an action by the administrator of J. C. Louder, a deceased stockholder, he was disqualified under clause (E) Sec. 5 of the Act of May 23, 1887, P. L. 158, which provides, that “any other person whose interest shall be adverse to the said right of such deceased party,” shall not be a competent witness to any matter occurring before the death of said party. Obviously the interest must exist at the time when the oath is administered. As to the nature of the interest Chief Justice Gibson said: “To exclude a witness, it is necessary, that he should have a vested interest, not in the question, but in the event of the suit. It must be an interest, that the judgment in the cause would operate upon-; for if by the event, he would neither acquire or lose a right, nor incur a responsibility, which the law recognizes, he is competent. Every other kind of interest goes to credibility”: Wolf v. Carothers, 3 S. & R. 240. This doctrine has been approved in construing clause .(E) Sec. 5 of the Act of 1887: Dixon v. McGraw, 151 Pa. 98; Horne v. Petty, 192 Pa. 32; Metcalf v. Buck, 36 Pa. Superior Ct. 58. Therefore, whatever may be said of Peightel’s ownership of stock at the time of the transaction concerning which he testified, as then vesting in him a disqualifying interest, such disqualification could be removed at any time before he was sworn by an “ex-tinguishment, in good faith, of his interest” (Sec. 6, Act of 1887), and was removed by his sale of his stock before he was called as a witness. See 1, (look pn Corporations *497(7th. Edition) Sec. 11. There is no testimony to impeach the bona tides of this sale or to warrant the conclusion that it was conditional. So far as appears it extinguished his interest as a stockholder, and therefore made him a competent witness, even if he was not so before.

In arriving at the foregoing conclusion the argument of appellant’s counsel based on the testimony of John S. Bare as to the existence of a “tentative agreement” has not been overlooked. But this agreement being in writing, in order to predicate a conclusion that, notwithstanding Peightel’s sale of his stock there arose out of the agreement an interest adverse to the decedent which disqualified him to testify in this case, the writing itself ought to be before Us so that its precise terms and the parties to it may be known and considered. It has not been printed, and without it no satisfactory conclusion adverse to Peightel’s competency can.be drawn from the vague testimony regarding the contents of the paper. In the state of the evidence as presented it seems sufficient to say that Peightel’s absolute sale and transfer of his stock for $85.00 a share extinguished his disqualifying interest in the event of the suit, even though there was a collateral undertaking on his part that if the assets of the company should not be sufficient to make the stock worth $85.00 a share he would pay the purchaser the difference. So far as his liability under such collateral agreement is concerned it would make no difference whether the ownership of the five shares of stock in suit was in the estate of J. C. Louder or in John S. Bare.

The assignments of error are overruled and the decree is affirmed; the cost of this appeal to be paid by the appellant

The opinion in the above mentioned case was written by Judge Bice, to whom the case was duly assigned for that purpose during his term of office, and is now adopted as the opinion of the court.

By the Court.

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