5 Blackf. 197 | Ind. | 1839
Trial of the right of property in certain bank stock. In July, 1836, one APMachen became the subscriber for seventeen shares of stock in the branch bank at Fort-Wayne. The first instalment of the sum to be paid for the stock became payable on the 31st of October next thereafter, amounting-to 318 dollars. MMachen, being unable on that day to make the payment himself, executed an instrument in writing whereby he certified that he" surrendered the seventeen shares of stock so by him subscribed for to Spencer, the defendant in error. On the same day, but whether before or after the execution of that instrument does not appear, Spencer paid to the proper persons the amount due, and took from them a recéipt in the name of MMachen. On the 27th of the same month Coleman, the plaintiff in error, caused an execution against M’Machen to issue from the office of the clerk of the Circuit Court of Allen county, which, on the 14th of November, was levied upon the seventeen shares of bank stock as the property of MMachen. Proceedings on the execution were stayed by the claim of Spencer to the property, which was duly preferred before a justice of the peace on the 28th of November. On the 4th of December, MMachen made a regular assignment of the stock to Spencer in the proper book at the branch bank, which did not go into operation until about the 26th of November, before which period there was no book in which the transfer could have been made. The cause was taken by appeal to the Circuit Court, by which, a jury being waived, the right 'of' property was found to be in the claimant, Spencer, and final judgment rendered accordingly.
The only question presented for our consideration is, in whom was the legal ownership of the stock at the time it was attached by the execution — MMachen or Spencer ?
Property in the form of stock in our state bank is entirely'
Previous to the payment of the first instalment, M’Macicen could convey no right to Spencer, because he possessed no right transferable by the statute; and after the payment, the stock acquired by it could only be disposed of by assignment upon the bank books. It follows that the attempt made by M’’Macicen on the 31st of October, to transfer the seventeen shares to Spencer, must be wholly inoperative.
As M'Machen could not assign the inchoate right acquired by his subscription, it is evident that the stock acquired by the payment of the first instalment, which was necessarily made in his name, was his property. Whatever claim Spencer may have upon M’’Machen for the money advanced by him, he could acquire no right to the seventeen shares of bank stock, without a transfer of them in the manner prescribed by the statute. Before that was done, they were seized by virtue of the execution, and became liable to be sold to satisfy it.
Several cases analogous to this have arisen in England under the acts of parliament regulating the sale and transfer of ships, in which it has been decided that the legal property in vessels attempted to be transferred, did not pass in consequence of the omission of some statutory form, when under the same circumstances, the sale of other property would have been complete. Abbott on Shipp. 57, 58. 3 T. R. 406.
We think the Circuit Court erred in adjudging the bank stock to Spencer, the claimant.
The judgment is reversed, and the finding of the. Court as to the ownership of the property set aside, with costs. Cause remanded, &c. ,