Brinkerhoff-Farris Trust & Savings Co. v. Home Lumber Co.

118 Mo. 447 | Mo. | 1893

Gantt, P. J.

In February, 1888, the BrinkerhofE-Farris Trust and Savings Company loaned J. "W. Oleland $13,000 and accepted as collateral security, two certificates of stock in the Home Lumber Company, each certificate calling for fifty shares, of the par value of $100 per share. One certificate was numbered 40 and bore the date of May 1, 1885, and the other was dated April 12, 1886.

The certificates were in the following form and were alike, save as to the number and date:

“CERTIFICATE OF STOCK.

“State oe Missouri.

“Home Lumber Company.

“No. 40. 50 Shares.

“This is to certify that J. ‘W. Oleland is proprietor of 50 shares of the, capital stock of the Home Lumber Company, transferable only on the books'of the company by said stockholder or his attorney upon surrender of this certificate.

“Nevada, Mo., May 13, 1885.

“J. W. Oleland, President.

“B. H. McDonald, Secretary.

“Endorsed: J. W. Oleland.”

Oleland having defaulted in the payment of the note for which the stock was security, the trust and savings company sold it and, through its president, became the purchaser thereof June 24, 18.89, and after-wards, on June 28, 1889, presented the two certificates to the lumber company and asked to have the stock transferred to it on the books of the lumber company, which was refused because the lumber company asserted that Oleland was indebted to it in the sum of $13,000 and it had a lien on said stock by virtue of - its ‘ ‘by-laws, ’ > and for the further reason, that it claimed that, by another by-law, Oleland was restricted from selling this *453stock to any outsider until he had first given the refusal to the board of directors and the purchase thereof had been refused by each and every member of the board.

The trust and savings company insisting that it had no notice of such by-laws, and that they were void as to it, brought this action as for a conversion of the stock alleging its value to be $11,000 on the twenty-eighth of June, 1889, the date of the alleged wrongful conversion.

The defendant, after a specific denial of the allegation of the petition, made the following additional defenses:

“Further answering, defendant says that by article 12 of the by-laws of defendant, adopted in the year 1881, it was provided, that no stockholder should sell or assign any of his or her certificates of stock to any person not already a stockholder unless he or she shall first have offered the same to the board of directors and the purchase thereof been refused by each and every member thereof at the prices offered'by any other person, and that said Cleland never did offer said stock to said board of directors, nor gave them, nor any stockholder, the refusal thereof, and that plaintiff never was a stockholder of defendant.

“And, further, that on the first day of July, 1884, the defendant duly adopted by-laws which provided, among other things, that the stock of the company should be transferred only on the books of the company, and any transfer of the stock shall be subject to the lien of the company thereon for any indebtedness due the company from the holder thereof.

“And that at the time of the alleged transfer of the said stock by said Cleland to plaintiff, he was and still is indebted to defendant to the amount of $5,000, now long overdue, and that he is insolvent, and if plaintiff ever procured said stock from him at all it was *454only a collateral security for a loan, and with full notice of the said by-laws:

“Wherefore defendant avers that plaintiff had no right to have said stock transferred to it, and that if it should turn out that plaintiff is the holder of said Cleland’s interest therein, then it is subject to the lien of defendant for the $5,000 indebtedness aforesaid, and also that in this event the court will adjudge it to be subject to said lien, and order- it sold for the payment thereof, etc.”

To this answer the plaintiff duly filed a reply saying it had no knowledge nor information sufficient to form a belief as to whether or not Cleland was indebted as alleged, and denying that the shares of stock were subject to any indebtedness of Clel- and’s.

The evidence tended to show that Cleland owned the one hundred shares of stock; that it was paid up; that he was indebted to the company .about $13,000 when he transferred-the stock to the trust company. It appeared from the proceedings of the board of directors in 1881, and prior to the date of either certificate, that the board adopted the following by-law:

“Any shareholder shall not sell nor assign any of his or her certificates of stock to any person not already a stockholder unless he or she shall have first offered the same to the board of directors and the purchase thereof been refused by each and every member thereof at the price offered by any other person.”

And on July 1, 1884, the board adopted the following by-law: ,

“Article 10, section 1. The stock of this company shall be transfex*red oxxly oxx the books of the company, and any traxxsfer of stock shall be subject to the lien of the company thereoxx for any indebtedness due the company from the holder. * *

*455And the following resolution:

“Resolved, that section 1, article 10, of the by-laws first adopted, be written or .printed on all certificates of stock of said Home Lumber' Company, as a notice to purchasers of said stock of the lien of the company ■for any indebtedness of the holder thereof to the company.”

Section one of article 10 . of the by-laws was adopted in July, 1884, and none of the stock in this controyersy was issued till May, 1885, and a portion in 1886, but neither of these certificates had section 1, article 10, either written or printed on it.

The testimony fails to show any notice to plaintiff of the existence of either of the by-laws mentioned, or of Cleland’s indebtedness to the lumber company prior to taking the stock as security. And if it is to be bound by them, it must result from an implied notice, growing out of the nature of the security itself, or by the notice acquired after the loan was made and before the sale under the pledge. ■

Plaintiff offered evidence that the stock had paid an annual dividend of nine per cent, every year since the incorporation of the company in 1881, except one year when it only paid two and one-half per cent., one year, ten per cent. Mr. Moore, the president, and Mr. Davis, the secretary, testified that Cleland’s other stock was sold for sixty and seventy cents, after his failure.

H. P. Earris was sworn and testified, that he was treasurer of Brinkerhoff-Farris Trust & Savings Company; that this company was engaged in the general business of mortgage loans, discounts; etc.; that he had been engaged in the general brokerage business for seventeen years and had a large experience in the negotiation of loans in-stocks and bonds during that time, at Clinton, Henry county, Missouri. He was *456then asked this question: “Q. State to the court what, in your judgment, stock that produced, nine out of ten years, a dividend o'f not less than nine per cent, and sometimes ten, and possibly more, is reasonably worth, in the market for sale1?”

Objection by counsel for defendant. It is not a proper way to arrive at the value of the stock. Objection overruled and defendant excepts.

“A. It would certainly be worth not less than par in my judgment.”

The court also permitted plaintiff to prove by Caldwell and other witnesses, that Messrs Davis and Moore, had represented to other holders of Cleland’s stock, that it was worth par, in their opinion, to which evidence defendant duly excepted.

The court declared the law to be that, unless plaintiff had notice of the indebtedness of Cleland, and the by-laws of July 1, 1884, before it took the stock as collateral, then it was not bound by said by-law; and refused to declare the law to be that, if it had such notice before buying the stock from Earris, it would be bound by it. The court also refused to declare the law to be that, if Cleland had not complied with the by-law requiring him to first offer the stock to the company before selling it elsewhere, the plaintiff could not recover.

The court found the issue in favor of the plaintiff and assessed the damages at the par value of the stock and interest from date of demand. Motions for a new trial and in arrest were duly made and overruled and exceptions were duly taken to the admission and exclusion of evidence and giving and refusing instructions and the case is brought to this court by appeal.

I. Thé defendant is a business corporation organized and existing -under the provisions of article 8, chapter 21, of Revised Statutes of 1879, and the *457general provision of article 1, of said chapter 21, so far-as applicable.

By section 709, Revised Statutes, 1879, the directors of a corporation like this are only empowered to make “by-laws to direct the manner of taking the votes of stockholders on the question of increasing or diminishing the number of directors or trustees, or oí changing the corporate name.” The power to make all other needful or necessary by-laws is conferred upon the corporation itself, and can only be exercised by the stockholders. Rex v. Westwood, 7 Bing. 1; Bank v. Bank, 17 Mass. 33; Carroll v. Bank, 8 Mo. App. 249; State Savings Association v. Printing Co., 25 Mo. App. 642; Albers v. Merchants’ Exchange, 39 Mo. App. 583.

It was very clearly pointed out by Judge Hayden in Carroll v. Bank, supra, that in the cases of Mechanics’ Bank v. Merchants’ Bank, 45 Mo. 513, and Ins. Co. v. Goodfellow, 9 Mo. 149, and Spurlock v. Railroad, 61 Mo. 326, the directors in each case, received their authority to make the by-laws in question in those cases directly from the legislature.

It is very clear that the attempt of the directors of the defendant company to adopt the by-laws, restricting the rights of its stockholders to convey their stock to any one until the said directors had refused to purchase it or while indebted to the corporation, was without warrant or authority of law, and as such is not binding, either on the stockholders or those purchasing from them. The company itself had no right to pass such a by-law. Moore v. Bank, 52 Mo. 377.

But it is claimed by appellant that the so-called by-law and the resolution, although not valid as a by-law, is nevertheless binding as ,a valid agreement on all who were parties to it, and that, as Mr. Cleland was then the president of defendant and a'director, he was bound by it, and that plaintiff, as a purchaser from *458Cleland, took only an equity, and was chargeable with notice of this lien, asserted by defendant, and that all the certificates of stock are not negotiable papers, plaintiff cannot occupy the position of an innocent purchaser for value and without notice.

It is true that certificates or shares of stock are not strictissimi juris negotiable paper, but they approximate to it as nearly as practicable. In Bank v. Lanier, 11 Wall. 369, the supreme court of the United States said, “the power to transfer their stock is one of the most valuable franchises conferred by congress on banking associations. Without this power, it can readily be seen the value of the stock would be greatly lessened, and, obviously, whatever contributes to make the shares of the stock a safe mode of investment, and easily convertible, tends to enhance their value. * * * It is in obedience to this requirement that stock certificates of all kinds have been constructed in a way to invite the confidence of business men, so that they have become the basis of commercial transactions in all the large cities of the country, and are sold in open market the same as other securities. Although neither in form nor character negotiable paper, they approximate to it as nearly as practicable.”

It has been uniformly ruled in this state, with the exception of White v. Salisbury, 33 Mo. 150, that in the absence of a legislative enactment restricting the transfer of stock to any particular mode, the transfer is complete on delivery of the certificate with power to transfer and the payment of the purchase money, not only between vendor and vendee, but when the corporation has unjustifiably refused to make the transfer on its books, against a creditor of the vendor who, without notice of the transfer, attaches the stock. Ins. Co. v. Goodfellow, 9 Mo. 149; Chouteau Spring Co. v. Harris, 20 Mo. 382; Moore v. Bank, 52 Mo. 377; Mer*459chants’ Bank v. Richards, 74 Mo. 77, approving same case in 6- Mo. App. 454; Wilson v. Railroad, 108 Mo. 588. See, also, Planing Mill v. Bank, 86 Tenn. 252; Johnston v. Laflin, 103 U. S. 800; Webster v. Upton, 91 U. S. 65; Bank v. Bank, 63 Cal. 359.

So that we think it can now be safely affirmed that when no restriction is placed upon transfer of stock by the public law of the state, of which all are bound to take notice, or the transferrer of the stock is not bound by a valid contract of restriction of which the transferee or assignee has notice, one who purchases a certificate of stock, receives and pays for it, is not bound by any restriction or lien of which he has no notice.

The spirit of all modern legislation is opposed to secret liens. At common law a corporation has no lien on the stock of its stockholders for any indebtedness to it. Accordingly, when such a lien is asserted, it should clearly appear to be authorized by public law, or by a duly adopted by-law, or valid agreement, of which the purchasers of the stock have notice. None of these, conditions existed as to the stock in suit when it was transferred as security for plaintiff’s loan, and consequently plaintiff took it without being bound by so-called by-law and resolution.

By section 739, Revised Statutes, 1879, this stock was expressly declared to be personal estate and transferable in the manner prescribed by the by-laws and no shares should be transferred until all previous calls thereon should be fully paid. The only restriction on the transfer by this section is upon the stock which was not fully paid up; a restriction not applicable here, because this stock was fully paid up in the beginning. The purpose of permitting the company to require a transfer on the books was clearly to advise the company of the change of ownership in order that only the .owners of the stock should participate in the cor*460párate election, and to enable the corporation to pay dividends without risk, or make assessments upon the holders of its stock, but certainly it was not intended that under this power to regulate transfers, the company should create or reserve a secret lien upon the stock. "Without reference to its quasi-negotiable character, the pledge or sale of this stock was simply a pledge or sale of personal property, and the-pledgee or vendee, without notice of the lien, took it discharged therefrom. ' He did not purchase a mere equity in paper, but he purchased personal property. If that property was bound by a lien of which he had lawful notice, he took subject to it, and if he had no such notice he took it discharged therefrom. The mere recital that “it was only transferable on the books of the company” was not notice, either of a restriction on sale, or of a lien thereon.

Nor are we impressed with the equity of defendant’s claim. It urges that it permitted Oleland to become indebted to it because he owned the stock, and yet it permitted him to remain its ostensible owner, and exacted neither pledge nor mortgage on it, although aware that there was nothing on the face of the stock to indicate it had, or claimed, a lien on it. Against an innocent subsequent purchaser, there would seem to be little to commend defendant’s claim to a court of justice. - Bullard v. Bank, 18 Wall. 589; Driscoll v. Mfg. Co., 59 N. Y. 96; Moore v. Bank, 52 Mo. 377.

II. But, upon another ground, we think plaintiff ought not to be subject to the lien of Gleland’s indebtedness. The defendant had attempted to adopt this by-law and resolution, which required “said section 1 of article 10” to be printed on the face of this stock, and yet issued, it afterwards without these conditions printed on it. Its conduct in this respect can only be construed, 'as to all subsequent purchasers of this stock, *461as a waiver of its by-law. By the clearest principles of right it is estopped from asserting this lien now, as against the plaintiff, who was- without notice. Bank v. Pinson, 58 Miss. 421; Moore v. Bank, 52 Mo. 377; Planing Mill v. Bank, 86 Tenn. 252; Bank v. Bank, 63 Cal. 359; Bank v. Durfee, ante, p. 431.

The court correctly declared the law to be that, unless plaintiff had notice of the indebtedness of Cleland and of the by-law of July 1, 1884, before it took the stock as collateral, then it was not bound by said by-law, and properly refused the instruction asserting a contrary principle.

III. The remaining question relates to the method of fixing the valúe of the stock for the purposes of assessing the damages for its conversion.

It is plain that the stock had no market value. None of it was ever listed or sold, except Oleland’s, and that was sold to the officers of defendant, under the assertion of a lien to the amount of twenty-two and -one-half per cent, of its value. Under these circumstances the learned circuit judge permitted plaintiff to show the value of this stock by proving its capacity for earning dividends, and it was shown that it had'' averaged nine per cent, per annum, for ten years, and plaintiff then called a broker as- an expert to show that stock that had for ten years earned nine per' cent, dividends was worth par. Generally, the measure of damages for the conversion of stocks is their market value at the time of conversion, but when, as in the case at bar, no market value can-be established by the prices current, it seems to us perfectly competent to resort to other modes of proof to establish its actual value, and this may very properly be done by proof of its dividend earning capacity; the value of the assets of the corporation and by individual sales of stock not under compulsion., Cook on Stock and Stockholders, sec. 581, *462noteB, and cases cited; 1 Spelling on Private Corporations, sec. 499, p. 545; Freon v. Carriage Co., 42 Ohio St. 30; Deck v. Feld, 38 Mo. App. 674; Simpkins v. Low, 54 N. Y. 179; Murray v. Stanton, 99 Mass. 345. “In the absence of evidence of actual sales, the market value is presumptively the par value.” Harris’ appeal, 12 Atl. Rep. 743; Alexander v. Relfe, 74 Mo. 495.

IV. The court permitted Mr. Parris, after qualifying as an expert, to give his opinion as to the value of the stock based upon its dividend earning capacity for ten consecutive years. 1 Sutherland on Damages [2 Ed.], sec. 448. And this is assigned as error in these words: “It is not the proper way to arrive at the value of the stock.” It will be observed that the objection does not go to the competency of Mr. Parris as an expert, but simple to the manner of showing value.

We do not think his opinion is competent, but as the plaintiff was entitled to the presumption that the stock was worth par in the absence of a market value, it being fully paid, up, and as its capacity to earn dividends was shown to be large, and the burden was on defendant to show the market value was lower than par, and the sales it showed were made to the officers of defendant some six months after refusal to recognize plaintiff’s rights, and, under an assertion of their lien upon the stock, its admission is not sufficient to reverse the cause, especially in view of the statements of both the president and secretary of defendant to the officers of plaintiff that the stock was worth par. These admissions were made by the managing officers of defendant as such, in discharge of their duties as such, and moreover was competent, we think, as tending to contradict their evidence as to the stock being worth only sixty to seventy cents.

*463The trial court properly declared the law, and heard all the estimates as to the value of this stock, and its judgment is clearly for the right party, and is affirmed.

All concur.