97 A. 323 | Conn. | 1916
The shares of stock which the plaintiff owned in the DeNunzio Company, Incorporated, gave him the right to share in the management of the corporation, in the profits when declared as dividends, and in the assets of the corporation upon dissolution. Until dissolution he had no legal title to any part of the property of the corporation. The shares of stock were personal property, being a chose in action. Worth
v. Forest,
This action, therefore, cannot be maintained, unless the circumstances of the case show an acceptance by the defendants of a part of the stock and an actual receipt of the same by them. Devine v. Warner,
There was no delivery of the certificate of stock to the defendants, and no receipt by them of the certificate of stock. The trial court held that "the acceptance and use by the defendants of the entire assets of the corporation of which they and the plaintiff were the sole stockholders, with the mutual intention of thereby transferring the interest of the plaintiff to themselves, constituted a sufficient performance of the contract of sale to satisfy the statute of frauds, notwithstanding the fact that the shares of stock were, by the request of the defendants, retained in the plaintiff's safe and were never signed over or delivered to the defendants." The court thus held that these circumstances constituted the acceptance and actual receipt required by the statute.
We think this conclusion erroneous. A completed legal transfer of stock requires (1) an assignment and delivery of the certificate to the transferee; (2) a delivery of the stock to the corporation issuing it, a notation upon the books of the corporation of the transfer, and a delivery to the transferee of a new certificate of stock in the place of the old. Reed v. Copeland, *347
In this case the defendants never had possession of the certificate of stock, which remained in the hands of the transferor, the plaintiff. It was never assigned to them, nor was a power of attorney to transfer delivered *348 to them or made out. The corporation never lost its control of its assets; this continued until its bankruptcy. The plaintiff as an officer and stockholder never had possession of any of the assets of the corporation in his own right. His possession as an officer and stockholder was that of the corporation. As an individual he never had any corporate assets which he could turn over to the defendants, and no right to the possession of any which he could give to them. The capital stock of a corporation represents its assets, dedicated primarily to the uses of the corporation and the payment of its debts, and secondarily, upon dissolution and after payment of its debts, to its shareholders on a pro rata distribution. The plaintiff did not give the defendants possession of any assets of the corporation, for he had no control of, or title to, these, which he could transfer; and the defendants never obtained any use of assets transferred to them by the plaintiff, as the trial court assumes as the basis of its conclusion. Their relation to the assets was that of officers and stockholders acting for the corporation, and that relation before this contract of sale was identical with that after its making. Properly analyzed, the finding goes no further than to present a case of "mere words indicative merely of the parties' assent to the agreement of sale"; and we have held that mere words will not constitute an acceptance and receipt sufficient to satisfy the statute of frauds.
We find one instance where the reasoning of the trial court has been adopted by a court of last resort. Ford
v. Howgate,
There is error; the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the Court of Common Pleas in Fairfield County with direction to render judgment for the defendants to recover their costs.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.