53 Mich. 35 | Mich. | 1884
The plaintiff in this case counts upon the conversion by defendant of a certificate of stock in the Muskegon Wood Package & Basket Company, of the nominal value of two thousand five hundred dollars, belonging to the plaintiff and standing in his name. The company is a corporation, and the plaintiff, prior to April, 1881, was its secretary and manager, and the defendant was its president. The plaintiff ceased to be secretary of the company about April 20, 1881, and when he surrendered the office, left this certificate in the company’s safe. From the safe it was taken by defendant, as he claimed, without intention, and because
There was no evidence that defendant had ever made any use of the certificate for his own purposes; he had merely refused to'surrender it to the plaintiff when it was demanded. Neither was there evidence that the plaintiff had ever been denied .his rights as a shareholder in the corporation, either at a corporate meeting or at any other time. The plaintiff’s action was grounded on the two facts that the defendant had retained in his hands the plaintiff’s certificate of stock, and had refused to surrender it:on demand. This refusal was submitted to the jury as evidence of a conversion, and they found a conversion upon it, and gave the plaintiff a verdict for the par value of the stock, which they" appear to have found to be the market value.
The questions arising upon the record are — First, whether trover will lie for a certificate of corporate stock; second, if it will lie, whether a conversion was sufficiently shown in this case; and third, whether the damages are to be measured by the market value of the stock.
I. That trover will lie for shares of stock was held in Morton v. Preston 18 Mich. 60. The facts in that case were that the widow and heirs of a shareholder in a corporation, thinking to avoid the expense of administration, took his certificate of shares and indorsed their names upon it, and then left it with
II. In this case there neither was nor could be any con•version of the stock, for though the defendant had the certificate in his possession, he could not make use of it. It stood in the name of the plaintiff, and could not be trausferred without the plaintiff’s indorsement, which it did not have, and the defendant could make neither the certificate nor the shares the property either of himself or of any third person by anything he could do with the certificate. Anderson v. Nicholas 28 N. Y. 600, 604, per Denio, C. J. If,
There may therefore have been a technical conversion in this case, though no use was made of the certificate. Demand for the certificate, and refusal to deliver it, did not of themselves constitute a conversion, but they were evidence of a conversion to go to the jury. Thompson v. Rose 16 Conn. 71; Dent v. Chiles 5 Stew. & P. 383: s. c. 26 Am. Dec. 350; Houston v. Dyche Meigs 76; Coffin v. Anderson 4 Blackf. 395; Sturges v. Keith 57 Ill. 451: s. c. 11 Am. Rep. 28; Packard v. Getman 6 Cow. 757: s. c. 16 Am. Dec. 475; Hawkins v. Hoffman 6 Hill 586; Davis v. Buffum 51 Me. 160; Farrar v. Rollins 37 Vt. 295; Huxley v. Hartzell 44 Mo. 370; Lander v. Bechtel 55 Wis. 593.
III. But the court erred in holding that if a conversion was made out the plaintiff was entitled to recover the market value of the shares. As the plaintiff has all the while remained, and still is, the owner of the shares, and the defendant will not by the recovery become owner, the error
The case of Connor v. Hiller 11 Rich. Law 193, apparently favors the rule of damages given to the jury in this case.¡ The action was for the conversion of a certificate of shares in; bank stock, and the court, in a very short opinion, citing. Parry v. Frame and Clowes v. Hawley, supra, as authority,! decided that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the market
We think the case should be remanded for a new trial.