89 Me. 500 | Me. | 1897

Haskell, J.

The shareholders of the defendant bank on April 11, 1894, voted voluntary liquidation, and appointed a committee with power to accomplish that result. The committee voted to pay liquidation dividend No. 1 May 1, 1894, of four dollars per share. That and various subsequent similar dividends amount to $103 a share. To recover these dividends on ten shares amounting to $1030 this action is brought.

Prior to the vote of liquidation the plaintiff bank acquired ten shares in defendant bank, recorded in the name of one Weeks, as collateral security for a loan, and still holds the same, the loan being unpaid and amounting to more than the liquidation dividends on the shares. The certificate contained the usual stipulation, “Transferable only on the books of said bank in person or by attorney on the surrender of this certificate.” Weeks signed in blank the usual transfer and power of attorney printed on the certificate. The plaintiff did not present its certificate for transfer at the defendant bank, nor did the bank, or its committee, know of the transfer until seventy per cent of the dividends had been paid to Weeks in the following manner. The first dividend in cash, and the others by indorsement by his consent upon his paper held by the bank. The bank confesses its liability for the thirty-*504three per cent unpaid, but denies its liability for seventy per cent paid to Weeks.

“The negotiability or transferable quality of the stock of a national bank depends upon the laws of the United States,” and is not governed by state laws. Continental Nat. Bank v. Eliot, 7 Fed. Rep. 370; Dickinson v. Central National Bank, 129 Mass. 279; Merchants Bank v. State Bank, 10 Wall. 604; Central Nat. Bank v. Williston, 138 Mass. 248.

A national bank may, by law, subject the shares of a stockholder to a lien for his indebtedness to the bank, and the assignee of such shares cannot procure a transfer of the same upon the books of the bank until such indebtedness shall have been paid. Knight v. The Old National Bank, 3 Cliff. 429; Union Bank, v. Laird, 2 Wheaton, 390.

The assignee of shares with power to transfer the same takes an absolute title to the shares subject to any lien created by the articles of association, or by-laws thereunder, and on presentment of his certificates may require new ones to be issued to him as against subsequent assignees or attaching creditors. Bank v. Lanier, 11 Wall. 369; Moores v. Bank, 111 U. S. 163-166; Dickinson v. Bank, supra; Sibley v. Quinsigamond Nat. Bank, 133 Mass. 515. Upon this subject, Bank v. Eliot, supra, is very instructive and collates and compares many authorities upon the subject. See also Johnston v. Laflin, 103 U. S. 800.

The doctrine of the cases is, where there is no provision in the law of the bank, as in this • case, to subject shares to the payment of any debt of the shareholder to the bank, that the transferee of shares that are made transferable only on the books of the bank by the shareholder or his attorney, and a surrender of the certificate, as here, takes a perfect title to the shares and may assert the same by transferring the shares under a power for the purpose to himself and require the bank, upon surrender of the certificate, to give a new one therefor, certifying the shares to stand recorded in his own name; and this he may do against subsequent purchasers from, or attaching creditors of, the assignor, or his assignees in insolvency or bankruptcy.

*505If the assignee may hold the shares against subsequent transfers by the assignor, against his attaching creditors, against his assignee in insolvency or bankruptcy, shall he not hold them against the assignor himself ? By the terms of the certificate the shares are transferable only upon the books of the bank and the surrender of the certificate. Without the surrender of the certificate the bank cannot issue another upon a transfer made by the apparent owner, either in person or by attorney, that shall deprive the real owner of his shares; and if the apparent holder cannot transfer shares, that he has already conveyed away, a fortiori, he cannot pro tanto transfer them to the bank by receiving liquidation dividends. He should not hold and enjoy the corpus of the shares in that way, as against the real owner, any more than the shares themselves. These he cannot sell to a stranger; why should he sell them to the bank?

It is said the bank has no notice and pays innocently, while the holder is guilty of negligence in not giving notice of his title to the shares. Not so. The holder is not required to give notice, for his certificate informs him that so long as he retains that, the shares cannot be transferred to another; and the bank has given him this assurance by its own certificate, and he may safely rely upon it. Let the bank follow its own stipulations. Let it not countenance the transfer of shares, in violation of its own rules, or_ pay their corpus in liquidation, which is an equivalent, without requiring the production of the certificate of shares, and then bank shares will hold that confidence among merchants and bankers and persons who deal in stocks that congress intended they should hold, thereby giving them value and making them desirable property for those who may be borrowers of money in the market.

This doctrine should not, and does not, apply to the payment of dividends that do not partake of the transfer of the corpus of the shares, but are only a distribution of their increase, that may well be made among stockholders of record at a given date.

Defendant defaulted.

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