At the close of all the evidence both parties moved for the direction of a verdict, so that if there were any disputed questions of
A court of competent jurisdiction has held that Wood never gained any title to these shares of stock; that he never conveyed any title to Callaghan, and Callaghan has accepted the results of that litigation and has been relieved of the payment of costs in an action ancillary to his own action by surrendering the certificates for cancellation, but the plaintiff urges that these certificates were not the stock — that they were mere evidences of the stock — and that the cause of action for the alleged conversion survived such surrender and cancellation, and that it was error for the court to submit the evidence of the judgment in the common-law action, and the evidence of the subsequent adjustment between Callaghan and the Verdón Company. Obviously there is nothing tenable in ‘such a proposition; the defendant had a clear right to show that the plaintiff had no title or interest in the stock; that plaintiff’s assignor, for a valuable consideration, and in acknowledgment of the fraudulent possession of the same, had surrendered the certificate for cancellation, and there was no better evidence of these facts than the records of the court where the case had been tried and disposed of without questioning on the part of plaintiff’s assignor. The cause of action here attempted to be asserted is entirely fanciful, and has no foundation in law or in justice.
But if Andrew Wood, the original possessor of this stock, had been the lawful owner of the same, it is difficult to understand how the defendant could be guilty of a conversion. The defendant concededly surrendered ten shares of his stock to the corporation, and the corporation issued a certificate of stock for ten shares to Wood on the 17th day of March, 1900, and that certificate was never out of the possession of Wood or his assignees during the time that the defendant is alleged to have had the transactions resulting in an overissue of the stock of the corporation. That certificate, while
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Jerks, Hooker and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.
