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Full-Text Articles in Law

Corporations - Shareholders - Majority Liability For Improper Stock Redemption By Corporation And For Misrepresentations In Private Stock Purchases From Minority Holders, James M. Tobin May 1956

Corporations - Shareholders - Majority Liability For Improper Stock Redemption By Corporation And For Misrepresentations In Private Stock Purchases From Minority Holders, James M. Tobin

Michigan Law Review

In 1942 a seemingly innocuous suit was brought against the Axton-Fisher Tobacco Corporation to determine the propriety of the alteration of a stock redemption. In 1955 Judge Leahy of the Federal District Court for Delaware handed down an opinion on the damages and relief to be given in the case in what he hopefully termed was the final phase of this famous litigation. It is the purpose of this comment to appraise the basis of the recovery allowed by Judge Leahy. Two readily distinguishable problems will be treated: (1) the nature of relief from a stock redemption called by fiduciaries …


Bills And Notes - Holders In Due Course - Payment To An Impostor, Thomas S. Erickson May 1956

Bills And Notes - Holders In Due Course - Payment To An Impostor, Thomas S. Erickson

Michigan Law Review

Drawer bank drew a check on the plaintiff bank payable to a depositor on the faith of a withdrawal order purportedly signed by the depositor but actually forged by an impostor. The impostor forged the indorsement and cashed the check at defendant bank which received payment from plaintiff-drawee bank. Two years later, upon the death of the impostor, the fraud was discovered. Plaintiff-drawee bank voluntarily reinstated the drawer bank's account and, standing in the drawer's shoes, it won a judgment to have its account with the defendant reinstated. On appeal, held, reversed. The policy in favor of the free …


Creation Of Joint Rights Between Husband And Wife In Personal Property: I, R. Bruce Townsend Apr 1956

Creation Of Joint Rights Between Husband And Wife In Personal Property: I, R. Bruce Townsend

Michigan Law Review

Joint ownership of personal property in recent years has become a common practice--one to which husband and wife are especially addicted. The topic is worthy of more than academic concern as demonstrated by the public use of joint titles in the acquisition of all kinds of personal assets, particularly investment securities. A casual conversation with almost any banker would disclose that a very high percentage of accounts owned by married people are held jointly with their spouses. The current popularity of dual ownership, for example, is reflected in the marketing policy of the United States Treasury in the sale of …


Trusts - Life Insurance Trusts - Contingent Unfunded Life Insurance Trust As Testamentary Disposition, Jerome K. Walsh Jr. Apr 1956

Trusts - Life Insurance Trusts - Contingent Unfunded Life Insurance Trust As Testamentary Disposition, Jerome K. Walsh Jr.

Michigan Law Review

Settlor named defendant bank beneficiary of eight insurance policies on his life. At the same time he entered into a trust agreement with the bank under which the bank was to hold the policies until the death of the settlor and, upon his death, collect the proceeds and distribute them according to one of two alternate methods of distribution. If his wife elected to reject the provisions made for her in his will and insisted on her statutory share of his estate, then the insurance proceeds were to be divided info four equal parts and paid to his four daughters. …


Corporations - Officers And Directors - Effect Of An Equitable Lien On Directors' Liability, Robert Steele Apr 1956

Corporations - Officers And Directors - Effect Of An Equitable Lien On Directors' Liability, Robert Steele

Michigan Law Review

Defendants, directors of a corporation, appealed from a judgment against them in favor of their company's creditor. The corporation had executed a note promising to repay plaintiff's loan out of the funds from a forthcoming stock issue. The board of directors passed a resolution ordering the officers to repay plaintiff in this manner. The money was then spent for other purposes, with the knowledge of the individual directors, after which the corporation became insolvent. On appeal, held, affirmed. The note and resolution imposed an equitable lien on the fund from the stock sale. The corporation's conversion of this interest …


Bills And Notes-Discharge-Intentional Destruction Due To Mistake As A Discharge, Richard S. Weinstein S.Ed. Apr 1956

Bills And Notes-Discharge-Intentional Destruction Due To Mistake As A Discharge, Richard S. Weinstein S.Ed.

Michigan Law Review

The holder of sixteen bonds issued by defendant destroyed the bonds believing them to be worthless after they had been in default as to both principal and interest for six years. Ten years later the defendant went into bankruptcy for reorganization and the holder learned that under the plan of reorganization the bonds were exchangeable for $400 in cash and $600 in preferred stock. When defendant refused to recognize the indebtedness even though the holder tendered an indemnity bond against wrongful payment, the holder instituted suit to recover the value of the bonds. The lower court denied relief to the …


Some Abuses Of Antitrust Prosecution: The Investment Bankers Case, Ralph M. Carson Jan 1956

Some Abuses Of Antitrust Prosecution: The Investment Bankers Case, Ralph M. Carson

Michigan Law Review

The epochal decision of Judge Medina on October 14, 1953, in United States v. Morgan has already been the subject of adverse criticism by the losing Government counsel and defense by an opposing lawyer. Professor Steffen's grief at the ruin of his handiwork has led him into the impropriety of attacking with unwarranted epithet a thoroughly considered decision by one of the most eminent judges now sitting in our federal courts and into the more symptomatic fault of attributing to the new chief of the Antitrust Division political motivation in his decision not to appeal. He has the assurance to …


Rationale Of Valuation Of Foreign Money Obligations, Charles Evan Jan 1956

Rationale Of Valuation Of Foreign Money Obligations, Charles Evan

Michigan Law Review

What then should a creditor of a foreign money obligation collect where there was a delay in payment? When are damages for depreciation of foreign money recoverable? As of what time and in what currency are they to be computed? How is the value of a foreign money obligation to be measured where no damages may be had? The answers to these and other incidental questions require a thorough analysis of certain features peculiar to the law of money.

It is the purpose of this article to clarify these problems, to sum up the primary principles by which they are …