292 Mass. 181 | Mass. | 1935
The plaintiff deposited for safe keeping with an investment banker named Crowell, among other stock
Accordingly, the plaintiff signed five or six forms of transfer of stock with power to transfer the stock on the books of the corporation, the name of the transferee, the name of the stock and the number of shares being left blank, and delivered them to Crowell. The plaintiff further signed and delivered to Crowell a “permission to pledge,” addressed to The First National Bank of Boston, authorizing a person whose name was left blank, who was described as “the Borrower” and who was intended to be Crowell, to pledge “the following securities belonging to me,” the space for the listing of such securities being left blank, “Also any securities of mine/ours or of which I/we am/are the holder of record, which the Borrower may hereafter deposit with you for the purposes aforesaid,” as collateral security for whatever the “Borrower” might borrow.
Armed with these papers, Crowell borrowed on his own note from the defendant The First National Bank of Boston, at first $20,000, later increased to $35,000, and as collateral security pledged the certificate for five thousand three hundred ninety-seven shares of Moxie stock. The officers of the bank filled in the description of the stock in both the forms just described, and the name of Crowell as “Borrower” in the “permission to pledge.” At that time,
In December, 1932, more than a year after the pledge, Crowell was petitioned into bankruptcy and committed suicide. The plaintiff, who had supposed that the replacement of his loan of $20,000 was secured by a pledge of stocks bought with the proceeds of the sale of stock of Massachusetts Investors Trust, discovered that the defendant bank was holding, his Moxie stock as collateral security for Crowell’s borrowings. The plaintiff brought this bill to restrain any sale of the Moxie stock and to compel the redelivery of the certificate to the plaintiff. The facts were found by a master, whose report was confirmed, and a final decree was entered dismissing the bill with costs. The plaintiff appealed.
Apart from statute, a certificate of stock is not the embodiment of the shares represented by it. Kennedy v. Hodges, 215 Mass. 112. See also Kling v. McTarnahan, 277 Mass. 386. Neither the certificate nor the shares can be said to be fully negotiable, in the sense in which money or a negotiable instrument before maturity is negotiable. The owner of a certificate of stock, like the owner of an ordinary chattel, does not lose title when someone steals it and sells it to an innocent purchaser. Pratt v. Higginson, 230 Mass. 256. That remains true at common law although the certificate when stolen bears an indorsement in blank signed by the owner. Scollans v. E. H. Rollins & Sons, 179 Mass. 346, 352, 354. Russell v. American Bell Telephone Co. 180 Mass. 467, 469. Barstow v. City Trust Co. 216 Mass. 330. Casto v. Wrenn, 255 Mass. 72, 75. National City Bank of Chicago v. Wagner, 216 Fed. Rep. 473. The only way in which the owner can lose title at common law to an innocent purchaser from a wrongdoer having no title, is by estoppel. An owner, entrusting to another a certificate of stock bearing the owner’s indorsement in blank, knows that he is making actual deceit possible. When a business custom exists by which such a
The uniform stock transfer act (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 155, § § 24-44) now governs the transfer of title in Massachusetts to shares in corporations of Massachusetts and other States having laws consistent with it. Casto v. Wrenn, 255 Mass. 72, 75. Turnbull v. Longacre Bank, 249 N. Y. 159, 165. The purpose of that act is to make stock certificates and the shares represented by them more nearly negotiable than they formerly were. Warr v. Collector of Taxes of Taunton, 234 Mass. 279, 281, 282. Turnbull v. Longacre Bank, 249 N. Y. 159, 164, 165. Peckinpaugh v. H. W. Noble & Co. 238 Mich. 464. Jackson v. Peerless Portland Cement Co. 238 Mich. 476. Connolly v. Peoples State Bank, 260 Mich. 352. By § 27 (b) a certificate and the shares represented thereby may be transferred "by delivery of the certificate and a separate document containing a written assignment of the certificate or a power of attorney to sell, assign or transfer the same or the shares represented thereby, signed
Nevertheless, if we confine our attention to the delivery of the stock certificate to the defendant bank, accompanied by the “separate document” signed by the plaintiff, purporting to assign unnamed stock to an unnamed person, and ignore the “permission to pledge,” no valid transfer to the defendant bank is shown. Section 27 of the uniform stock transfer act purports to state the “only” methods by which legal title may be transferred. Place v. Chaffee, 251 Mass. 508, 510. Good Fellows Associates, Inc. v. Silverman, 283 Mass. 173, 180. Stuart v. Sargent, 283 Mass. 536, 542. Where, as in this case, the signature of the owner is on a “separate document,” that document must purport to assign, or authorize the transfer of, the “certificate” or “the shares represented thereby.” When the defendant
Much the same considerations apply to that part of the “permission to pledge” which contemplated the insertion of a list of securities but was delivered to the defendant bank without the insertion of the name of any security. If the “permission to pledge” had stopped there, the bank, in filling the blank with a description of the Moxie stock, would have been relying on Crowell’s word rather than on anything signed by the plaintiff. The finding “that permission to pledge is frequently accepted by banks and brokerage houses in blank as to the name of the security pledged” is not a finding of a general custom that would justify the bank in assuming that the plaintiff’s signature might be applied to any certificate that Crowell might present. Besides, the master finds that no custom existed of accepting a “permission to pledge” with the name of “the Borrower” left blank, as it was in this case.
But the “permission to pledge” signed by the plaintiff, in which the name of Crowell was rightfully inserted as “the Borrower” in accord with the understanding of the parties, went on to authorize “the Borrower” to pledge also, as security for loans to him, “any securities of mine/ours or of which I/we am/are the holder of record, which the Borrower may hereafter deposit with you.” The word
Decree affirmed with costs.