75 N.J. Eq. 555 | N.J. | 1909
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The bill charges that the complainant is a New Jersey corporation; that Paxson was its president and chairman of the executive committee; that as a result of transactions with Williams and Graham, which need not here be set forth, Paxson advanced $40,000 to settle their claims against the complainant, and acquired from them five hundred and forty-nine thousand five hundred and four shares of the capital stock of the complainant; that this stock is the property of the complainant, subject only to the repayment of the advance of $40,000, with interest, which has been tendered. The important prayers of the bill are that it may be decreed that the stock was held by
It is conceded that in order to sustain jurisdiction over the defendant it must appear that the proceeding is a proceeding quasi in rem and that our statutes authorize the court of chancery to entertain jurisdiction of such proceedings as distinguished from proceedings in personam, over which alone a court of equity has jurisdiction in the absence of statute.
The question whether the proceeding can be sustained as a proceeding quasi in rem depends, of course, upon whether there is a res in this state upon which the depree can operate. That involves the question whether the stock of a New Jersey corporation belonging to a resident of another state can be said to have a situs in New Jersey, when it does not appear that the certificates of stock are within the state. Since the question is one which involves the rights of a non-resident under the fourteenth amendment to the federal constitution as construed in Pennoyer v. Neff, the decisions of the federal courts are of great, if not controlling, weight. The precise question has been decided in
“Foreign stock cannot be fully transferred by the representative of the deceased without doing some act in a foreign country. The certificate or other documents, if any, held by the owner of such stock may be in England but they are mere evidence of a debt due from a foreign government, or in other words from a debtor not resident in England, and this debt, i. e., the stock, must apparently be situate out of England.” Dic. Confl. L. (1st Am. ed.) 318-320.
Accordingly it is held that shares of stock for purposes other than taxation and some similar purposes, are personal property whose location is in the state where the corporation is created. Cook Corp. § 485. These reasons are applicable to the present case. A complete and effectual transfer of the stock can only be had upon the books of the corporation in New Jersey, and if the stock is ever to be converted into cash, otherwise than by mere sale, it must be by a distribution of the assets of the corporation to be had in New Jersey. In view of the control of New Jersey courts over our corporations, and especially of the necessity of that control being made effectual in case of a winding up, it is, we think, quite as important that the title to the shares
The right to vote at corporate elections depends upon the ownership of the stock. By the express provisions of our Corporation act the determination of a contested election is conferred upon our courts, and such a determination may necessitate an adjudication of the title to the stock. A corporation may also compel two claimants to stock to interplead. Cook Corp. § 387. Chancellor Green so held in Mount Holly, &c., Turnpike Co. v. Ferree, 17 N. J. Eq. (2 C. E. Gr.) 117, and dismissed the bill only because the complainant had assumed the responsibility of acting in advance of the order of the court and had incurred all the liability they could incur. A bill of interpleader as he there said, is proper, only where the complainants have property or funds in possession, or under control to which there are two or more claimants. That case is a direct authority in point. The complainant has all the possession of which such a chose in action as a share of stock is possible, as distinguished from the possession of the certificate which is only its paper representative ; it has at any rate the control of the substantial thing which the certificate only represents. It has such possession as is required for the purpose of a levy under execution or attachment, and it is seeking only a judicial ascertainment of the title to its own stock, which involves the determination of the beneficial ownership of the assets, real and personal, of the corporation, and the ultimate title thereto. We think for such a purpose at least the stock has a situs in this state.
It is argued, however, that the proceeding is necessarily m personam for the reason that some personal act will be necessary on the part of the executor in order to vest the title to the stock in the.complainant. The case seems to be thought analogous to a bill to remove a cloud from the title to real estate. This analogy fails, however, for the reason clearly set forth by the
The question whether our legislation has actually conferred jurisdiction is a question of statutory construction. The provision of our statute is very general, and authorizes proceedings in any case where the defendant is out of the state or cannot upon due inquiry be found therein, or conceals himself within the state. The language is more general than that of the act of congress which was under consideration in the Jellenik Case, and is similar to the provision of the Nebraska statute which was before the supreme court of the United States in Arndt v. Griggs, 134 U. S. 316, and to the provision of-the Texas statute which was under consideration in Roller v. Holly, 176 U. S. 398. The court there said that the provision had no application to suits in personam and must be restricted to actions in rem, and held that as it was impossible, in view of the generality of the statute, to say that it contemplated a procedure in one class of cases and not in another, the only reasonable construction was that it applied in all cases where, under recognized principles of law, suits might be instituted against non-resident defendants. The distinction between these two latter cases and Hart v. Sansom, 110 U. S. 151, is sufficiently pointed out by the opinions of Mr. Justice Brewer and Mr. Justice Brown. It is said by way of argument on the part of the appellant that this rule does not apply ex-
The order is therefore affirmed, with costs.