This appeal is taken from a judgment of dismissal entered after a general demurrer to plaintiffs’ complaint was sustained without leave to amend. Before entry of the judgment, plaintiffs were allowed by stipulation to tender an amended complaint, leave to file which was denied after a full hearing. A bill of exceptions was settled and filed wherein the sole specification of error is the denial of leave to amend. Inasmuch as the proposed amended complaint fails to cure the matters hereinafter noted, we will confine our review to the question whether the complaint states a cause of action.
The action was commenced in July, 1935, against respondent bank and Marco and Irving Heilman to recover damages for the alleged conversion of certain shares of stock of the Heilman Commercial Trust and Savings Bank and of the Merchants National Trust and Savings Bank. It does not appear that either of the Heilmans was served with process. The defendant bank was sued as the successor to the business of the two banks named.
In 1920 plaintiffs’ mother, Amy Heilman Aronson died intestate, leaving as her sole heirs the plaintiffs, who were minors. The two Heilmans were appointed as administrators and still continue to act as such, and the administration of the estate is still pending. In October, 1925, after settlement of their account as such, the entire estate was distributed to these plaintiffs, the decree expressly including all property of every kind and nature belonging to the estate, whether described in the decree or not. All the stock in question was inventoried as an asset of the estate, but it is alleged that no accounting of the transfers complained of was made to the probate court. Complaint is made of four separate wrongful transfers, two made prior to the date of distribution, and two made thereafter. The old certificates standing either in the *643 name of the deceased or in the name of the estate were for shares of stock in the banking corporations named, of which both administrators were either directors or officers or both. The old certificates were cancelled and new certificates issued without order of court or other authority, some on the endorsement of both administrators, others on endorsement of one administrator only. Though the complaint alleges that it was the intention and purpose of the Heilmans in changing the certificates “to use and dispose of the shares represented thereby for their individual benefit and profit”, it does not allege that they did so use the shares nor that they have ever disposed of any of them.
This is the outstanding weakness of the complaint. Conversion implies “some act of ownership or exercise of dominion over the property of another in defiance of his rights”. (24 Cal. Jur., p. 1022.) It is “the unwarranted interference by defendant with the dominion over the property of the plaintiff”.
(Byer
v.
Canadian Bank of Commerce,
8 Cal. (2d) 297 [
But we are confronted with a more serious question and that is whether under the facts alleged any conversion is chargeable to the selling banks, liability for which would be assumed by this respondent. The alleged conversion took place when the original banks transferred the shares on their books upon presentation by the administrators of the original certificates—some standing in the name of the deceased, others in the name of the estate. The complaint alleges the due appointment and qualification of the two Heilmans as administrators, and that they were acting as such at the time of these transfers. The gravamen of this phase of the case is that the transfers were procured without an order of confirmation of the probate court and that those banks accordingly committed an act of conversion by effecting the transfers without such order. Section 324 of the Civil Code, as it read at the time these transfers were made, provided: “such shares of stock . . . may be transferred by indorsement by signature of the proprietor, his agent, attorney,
or legal representative, and the delivery of the
certificate". It
*645
should be noted that the section does not require proof of the authority of the legal representative. It is at this point that the parties separate—the appellants arguing that, in the absence of such proof, a conversion results, the respondent arguing upon the strict terms of the statute which do not require it. The appellants rely upon
Quay
v.
Presidio & F. R. R. Co.,
The question presented here is controlled by the statute. Section 324, Civil Code, authorizes a corporation to make the transfer upon presentation of the certificates by the “legal representative” of the owner. It is conceded that the Heilmans were the legal representatives of the owners of the stock and that the transfers were made upon their demand. It is a rule which requires no citation of cases that when a statute measures the power or prescribes the mode of conduct, the individual cannot be charged with wrong if he does nothing more than follow the terms of the statute. This is all that the complaint alleges that the selling banks did in this transaction. There was, therefore, no conversion on the part of the selling banks under the facts here pleaded, and hence there was no liability cast upon the purchasing bank—the respondent herein.
The judgment is affirmed.
Curtis, J., Waste, C. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., and Seawell, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
