THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY, BY THEODORE D. PARSONS, ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT, v. OTIS ELEVATOR COMPANY, A CORPORATION, DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT, ABRAHAM GRENTHAL, SUBSTITUTED RECEIVER OF J. B. SKEHAN & CO., DEFENDANT-APPELLANT, AIDA M. RHODES, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS EXECUTRIX OF THE WILL OF FRANK C. RHODES, DEFENDANT.
Supreme Court of New Jersey
Argued September 30, 1952-Decided November 10, 1952
10 N.J. 504 | 92 A. 2d 385
See also 19 N. J. Super. 107, 88 A. 2d 20.
See also 19 N. J. Super. 107, 88 A. 2d 20.
Mr. Aaron Van Poznak argued the cause for plaintiff-respondent.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
JACOBS, J. In 1949 the plaintiff State of New Jersey duly instituted its proceeding in the Chancery Division under
In 1902 Certificate No. 1070 representing 35 shares of Otis Elevator Company stock was registered on the company‘s books in the name of Frank C. Rhodes, Bank of America, 44 Wall Street, New York, N. Y. Rhodes was an employee of the bank. A dividend check dated April 15, 1904, payable to Frank C. Rhodes, was cashed; no later dividend checks were ever cashed. Under date of October 20, 1909 the defendant Otis Elevator Company received a letter on the stationery of the Bank of America and signed Frank C. Rhodes, which returned a dividend check and stated:
“The certificate for the shares, which apparently still stand in my name upon your books, was endorsed by me and delivered to A. H. Vanderpoel, Esq., as Receiver of J. B. Skehan & Co., a number of years ago, and I have no further interest therein. I shall be obliged if you will note this fact upon your books in order that you may avoid sending me checks for future dividends, in the event that the present owner continues to omit to have the shares transferred.”
There is no additional evidence to indicate that Certificate No. 1070 was in fact delivered to Vanderpoel. The original certificate has never been found, Vanderpoel never took any action bearing thereon, and the shares at all times remained registered in the name of Frank C. Rhodes. Nothing in the available records of the receivership of J. B. Skehan & Co. actually supports the position that Vanderpoel was entitled to or did receive the certificate. In January 1908 a stipula-
After the entry of the order of discontinuance in the receivership action, no further proceedings were taken therein until 1950 when Albert Lowenfels, as administrator of the estate of David Aaron, filed a petition for the appointment of a substituted receiver. His petition alleged, upon information and belief, that David Aaron, who died in 1896, was a proved creditor of J. B. Skehan & Co. which went into receivership in 1895, that the plaintiff and the defendant in the receivership action effected a discontinuance and “virtual termination of the receivership” on February 28, 1908 without notice to creditors, that there is an asset still existent and unadministered, and that a substituted receiver should be appointed with all the power and authority of the original receiver. On October 25, 1950 Grenthal was appointed by the New York Supreme Court as substituted receiver and thereafter asserted his claim to the Rhodes Certificate No. 1070 and its increments, including stock dividends and split-ups and cash dividends. The answer filed by him in the lower court set forth, in accordance with
General Electric Company and Sprague Electric Company had made arrangements for the exchange of securities; Sprague stockholders were to deposit their shares with the trustee United States Mortgage & Trust Company for de-
At the trial Grenthal sought to establish the foregoing, but because of the long lapse of time he was unable to produce any one having first-hand information. His sole witness was Bernard Cowen, a New York attorney who had conducted an examination of such records as remained available. The Chancery Division found, and we think rightly, that his testimony fell far short of establishing the essential links to the chain of events asserted in the answer in support of Grenthal‘s claim of ownership. Thus, no evidence
When the State of New Jersey instituted its action in 1949 the Rhodes stock had been unclaimed for 40 years and presumptively was abandoned and available for
On his appeal Grenthal relies primarily on the contention that the letter of October 20, 1909 from Rhodes to Otis was sufficient, without any additional proof, to establish a valid claim to the Rhodes stock in Vanderpoel as receiver and in Grenthal as his successor. The letter did not in terms purport to, and did not in fact, constitute a present assignment of the certificate. At best it was a single item of hearsay evidence admissible as a declaration against interest by Rhodes that several years earlier he had endorsed the stock and had delivered it to Vanderpoel. See 5 Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed. 1940), § 1455. In the light of all of the other circumstances presented it was insufficient to compel a factual finding by the trial court that Vanderpoel as receiver was entitled to and had actually obtained the stock as legal and beneficial owner but had wrongfully failed to account therefor to creditors of J. B. Skehan & Co. Cf. Maddock v. Connolly, supra; Zuckermandel v. Zuckermandel, supra. See Beacom v. Robison, 157 Pa. Super. 515, 43 A. 2d 640, 643 (1945), where the court applied the established rule that
Finally, Grenthal seeks to attack the judgment entered in the lower court on the ground that the “State has not proved the necessary jurisdictional and statutory conditions of the Escheat Act and the allegations of its alleged cause of action.” In view of the lower court‘s finding, which we sustain, that Grenthal had not established any valid claim to the Rhodes stock, he is in no position to question the sufficiency of the State‘s proofs as against other defendants who have not appealed. Cf. In re Atlantic City, 3 N. J. Super. 62, 63 (App. Div. 1949). Furthermore, the pleadings of the State and Otis set forth the essential and undisputed jurisdictional facts bearing on the Rhodes stock within the requirements of
The judgment below is affirmed.
Rhodes, in whose name the stock was registered on the books of the company, wrote the company the letter that is in evidence stating that he had endorsed the certificate for the shares of its stock and had delivered it to the receiver of J. B. Skehan & Co. Rhodes’ letter is not only clear and unambiguous as to his endorsement of the certificate and its delivery to the receiver but also as to the termination of any claim thereto on his part: “The certificate for the shares . . . was endorsed by me and delivered to A. H. Vanderpoel, Esq., as Receiver of J. B. Skehan & Co., . . . and I have no further interest therein.” In the absence of any proof to the contrary it necessarily follows that the title to the stock passed to the receiver and that the stock is an asset of J. B. Skehan & Co. to be administered for the benefit of its creditors. As between a transferor and a transferee of a share of stock, the transferee obtains complete title to the stock even though the transfer is not recorded on the books of the corporation. Fidelity Trust Company v. Newark Milk & Cream Company, 89 N. J. Eq. 224 (E. & A. 1918).
True, the receiver never administered the stock and the receivership action was subsequently discharged on his motion. Equity, however, will not permit a trust to fail for want of a trustee, and here we now have a trustee in the substituted receiver of J. B. Skehan & Co. Having title to the stock, the receiver or his successor, the substituted receiver, may not abandon it without an order of the court directing him so to do: “A receiver is a mere custodian without power to abandon any claim or asset of the bankrupt,” Solomon v. Federal Trust Company, 123 N. J. Eq. 265 (E. & A. 1938). There being no evidence in the case to indicate that the receiver transferred the stock to another, it must necessarily be presumed that the receiver and his successor
The majority opinion approves the factual findings of the trial court that the substituted receiver had not established his claim, but like the trial court based its findings on the premise that the receiver‘s claim must be established by clear and convincing proof, citing in support Maddock v. Connolly, 82 N. J. Eq. 533 (Ch. 1913), and Zuckermandel v. Zuckermandel, 135 N. J. Eq. 598 (Ch. 1944). In my opinion, however, the burden placed upon the receiver is too great and the cases cited are not pertinent to the facts at hand. In both these cases the plaintiffs were seeking to establish claims against the defendants based on lost instruments, in the one instance a mortgage and in the other a written contract. In the instant case the stock certificate has apparently been lost, but there is no question as to the existence, extent or nature of the right of ownership of the stock of the defendant corporation which the lost certificate once evidenced. The sole question is whether the substituted receiver has established his ownership of the shares in the defendant corporation so as to defeat the State‘s right of escheat based on the presumption of abandonment arising out of the fact that the shares have remained unclaimed or the identity or whereabouts of their owner unknown for 14 consecutive years,
I would reverse the judgment below.
Mr. Justice Heher and Mr. Justice Oliphant authorize me to say that they concur in this opinion.
For affirmance-Justices WACHENFELD, BURLING, JACOBS and BRENNAN-4.
For reversal-Chief Justice VANDERBILT, and Justices HEHER and OLIPHANT-3.
