68 N.Y.S. 565 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
. The complaint in this action' avers that the plaintiff was the owner of or in control of 1,650 shares of the capital stock of the Akron Street Railway and Illuminating Company, of Akron, Ohio, 600 shares of which the plaintiff owned and 1,050 shares of which he held as collateral security for the payment of certain promissory notes ; that on or about the 19th day of January, 1899, plaintiff delivered the whole of said shares of stock to the defendant for the express purpose of enabling him to deposit said shares with the Manhattan Trust Company in Hew York, in pursuance of a plan for the reorganization of said street railway company ; that under said plan it was provided that with each share of stock should be deposited with the trust company the sum of five dollars in cash, and that all the property rights and interest of the said railway should be purchased by a committee chosen by the bondholders of. the company, and thereafter a new corporation was to be created which should issue to the stockholders making the deposit new stock for their deposit in proportionate amounts; that subsequently such plan was modified by requiring only the deposit of ten per cent, or fifty cents per share, in place of five dollars per share; that on the 20th day of January, 1899, the defendant deposited with said trust company said shares as his own property, and also deposited therewith ten per cent, or $825 ; that thereafter-the new corporation was organized, which purchased all the property of the said railway, and the plaintiff became entitled to receive thereby a proportionate share of the stock therein that after the sale to the new corporation the stock was worth $20 per share for common, and $56.50 for the preferred; that in accordance with the plan of distribution, plaintiff became entitled to have and receive -for his-shares of stock, over and above the assessment which had been paid thereon, $12,911.25.
The effect of this arrangement did not deprive the plaintiff of all interest in his stock; it simply constituted the defendant his agent or trustee to take title thereto for delivery to the trust company.' So far as he made the contemplated advance he acquired a right therein which he doubtless became entitled to enforce, and the plaintiff could not repossess himself of the stock until he had made such payment, nor could he, by the exercise of any right possessed by him, defeat the use of the stock for purposes of reorganization. Beyond this, however, the defendant obtained no right to the stock or its proceeds as against the plaintiff. It appeared that after the stock was deposited, a sale of the railroad was made to Cleveland parties, from which sale' the defendant received.for the stock which he- held, including the plaintiff’s, after deducting all payments made by him thereunder for assessments, the sum of $71,840.
The only payment which the defendant made upon the stock was the ten per cent. It is true that he gave a check for the additional sum of $4.50 per share, but this check was never delivered to the trust company and was never, in fact, paid in cash. After the sale was perfected and the defendant had received the money, the plaintiff made a demand upon the defendant for a certificate of the new company represented by his stock, and at the same time tendered the amount of the assessment and interest thereon. The defendant refused to deliver the same, claiming that
The court submitted the case to the jury in a charge to which no exception was taken and no fault found. It is not printed in the record, and it must, therefore, be presumed to have fully pro
The judgment and order should, therefore, be. affirmed, with costs.
Rumset, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.