142 N.Y.S. 935 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
Charles E. Kilmer, a resident of Rensselaer county, died on the 23d day of March, 1906. At the time of his death he was the owner of 100 shares of the capital stock of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company (hereinafter referred to as Central stock); 100 shares of the first preferred stock of the United States Rubber Company (hereinafter referred to as the Rubber stock), and 500 shares of the Columbus Hocking Coal and Iron'Company stock (hereinafter ref erred to as the Columbus stock). The widow of Charles E. Kilmer (who has since married and is the plaintiff in this action) was duly appointed as administratrix, and as such became the owner of this property. She brings this action in her representative capacity to recover damages for the conversion of the stocks above referred to, and the jury who were called upon to pass upon the controverted questions of fact have found a verdict in her favor for the full amount of her claim, the defendants appealing from the judgment and from orders entered denying a new trial and granting an extra allowance.
The plaintiff, on coming into possession of the estate of her late husband, found the stocks above enumerated. The Central stock certificate, made to Charles E. Kilmer, had been indorsed in blank under the name of C. E. Kilmer, and the plaintiff claims that she procured Miss Foshay, who had been
Bliven, who is now recognized as having deceived both parties and having been convicted of a larceny of these same stocks, evidently realized that his account was not safe; that the plaintiff would be making demands upon him, and to meet this condition he told the plaintiff that it would take some little time to get the stocks transferred, and that if she would loan the stocks to the defendants’ firm they would pay her for the use thereof at the rate of two per cent per annum, and
There was a sharp conflict in the evidence as to these exhibits. None of these alleged exhibits made their appearance upon the original trial of this action. They did not appear in the trial of Bliven for grand larceny in the theft of these same stocks, and it was only upon a retrial, after a reversal of the . judgment in favor of the defendants (Kilmer v. Hutton, 131 App. Div. 625), that they were brought forward, resulting in a withdrawal of that action and the subsequent bringing of the present action. The plaintiff and her daughter, both of whom
“E. F. Hutton & Co.
“ May 11, 1906.
“Messrs. E. F. Hutton & Co.,
“ 33 New Street, City:
“Dear Sirs.— This is to certify that I pass title on 50 shares of New York Central standing in my name to Mr. C. A. Bliven, and give him power to transfer the above certificate to the name of E. F. Hutton & Co.
“I also guarantee the endorsement on the back of the certificate for 100 shares of New York Central, signed C. E. Kilmer, to be signed by the same person represented on the face of the certificate as Chas. E. Kilmer.
“Yours very truly,
“ HARRIET N. KILMER, Admx.
“Estate of Charles E. Kilmer.”
Bliven, it will be remembered, had negotiated to have this stock loaned to E. F. Hutton & Co., and he had represented to the plaintiff that it was necessary to have the stock in the name of this company that it could be used as collateral, and this paper was admirably designed to mislead the plaintiff and to allay suspicion. It did not authorize Bliven generally to deal with the stock; to transfer it to any one whom he might choose. It merely made him the conduit to “ transfer the above certificate to the name of E. F. Hutton & Co.” It is not a power to transfer absolutely but to transfer it to “ the name
It is urged that there is a difference between the Central and Rubber stocks and those of the Columbus company in that the latter stood in “street names,” indorsed in blank and were transferable by delivery under the usage of Wall street, but we are of the opinion that the plaintiff owning these stocks as administratrix and parting with them only upon the limited condition that they were to be held by the defendants to be sold for her benefit when they should reach a certain price, the latter could not get title to them because its own agent claimed to own them, unless the plaintiff had been guilty of negligence in dealing with Bliven in the manner which she did, and the defendants, under the evidence in the record now before us, are hardly in a. position to say that they did not hold Bliven out as their representative in this and the previous transactions with the plaintiff. We think the rule of law is not different in the two instances, and that the rule laid down by the court is within the authorities. If the plaintiff was seeking to recover from Waterman, Anthony & Co., to whom the defendants transferred this stock, different questions would be presented, but here the defendants placed Bliven in a position to work this wrong, and the plaintiff not having neglected any proper precaution—for this must be the effect of the jury’s determination whether the exhibits above referred to were forgeries or not—the defendants never had any right to coni' vert the stock to their own use, and having done so, they must, respond in damages to the plaintiff. .
By the larcenous taking of chattels the owner is. not divested
We do not find legal error in the record, and the judgment' and orders appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred; Smith, P. J., and Lyon, J., in result.
Judgment and orders affirmed, with costs.