140 P. 271 | Cal. | 1914
This is an appeal by plaintiffs, who are husband and wife, from a judgment in favor of defendant, and from an order denying their motion for a new trial, in an action brought by them to recover possession of certain stock certificates representing thirty shares of stock of the Union Oil Company of California, a corporation, of which they allege themselves to be the owners and entitled to possession.
The facts of the case are established by a stipulation of the parties, which is included in a bill of exceptions. The trial court gave judgment that plaintiffs take nothing.
So far as is material to the controlling considerations in this case, the facts are as follows: Defendant is a duly organized banking corporation. Plaintiffs, as has been said, are husband and wife. In September, 1908, they purchased the shares of stock here involved. The same are community property. The certificates therefor were issued in the name of plaintiff Nellie M. Fowles, and have ever since stood in her name in the books of the corporation. On the back of the certificates was a form to be used in transferring the stock, as follows: *655
"For value received _______________ hereby sell, assign and transfer unto ___________________________
shares, shares, shares,
of the capital stock represented by the within certificate, and do hereby irrevocably constitute and appoint _______________ attorney to transfer the said stock on the books of the within named company with full power of substitution in the premises.
Date ________________ 19__
Endorsement:"
On December 29, 1909, Nellie M. Fowles signed her name after the word "Endorsement" on each of the certificates of stock thus: "Nellie M. Fowles," and she and her husband then delivered the certificates together with certificates for thirty other shares, to one C.B. Miner, as collateral security for the payment of a certain note of Mr. Fowles to said Miner, dated December 29, 1909, and being for four thousand dollars. On account of the principal of this note two thousand dollars has been paid, and the other thirty shares pledged as collateral have been returned to the pledgors. When the certificates in question were delivered to Miner by plaintiffs, they were pinned to the note. Subsequently Miner separated such certificates from the note, and without the knowledge or consent of either plaintiff, hypothecated them and the stock represented thereby, with defendant, as collateral security for an indebtedness of his own to said defendant. At the time of the original delivery of said certificates to defendant, Miner stated to it that he owned the stock represented thereby, and defendant believed from the statements made by Miner, from the name of Nellie M. Fowles indorsed thereon, and the possession of the certificates by Miner, that he was such owner, and continued to so believe until sometime in August, 1910. Except for such belief it would not have accepted such stock as security. Defendant never had any knowledge or notice of the claim of plaintiffs or either of them until sometime in August, 1910. About that time Miner absconded, and is now a fugitive from justice and wholly insolvent. Then plaintiffs first learned of the disposition made by Miner of their stock, and defendant first learned of the claim of plaintiffs. Up to *656 that time defendant had no personal acquaintance with and had never met plaintiffs or either of them. Miner's indebtedness to the defendant has not been satisfied, and a sale of the stock of plaintiffs is essential to its payment. The Union Oil Company has paid a regular monthly dividend ever since September, 1908, and that it was paying such dividends was a matter of general and common knowledge among business men and bankers of the city of Los Angeles, where defendant's business was conducted. Defendant never claimed or received any of said dividends, and plaintiffs have been paid all of the same. Defendant had no knowledge or information that plaintiffs or either of them were receiving any of such dividends. Prior to the commencement of this action, plaintiffs tendered to defendant all amounts due from them to Miner, and demanded return of the stock.
Defendant claims that under these circumstances, it is entitled to retain the stock as security for Miner's debt to it. If this claim be well founded, as the trial court concluded, plaintiffs must necessarily fail in this action for the recovery of the possession of the stock.
Of course, Miner had no authority to alienate the stock pledged to him by plaintiffs beyond the title actually possessed by him, or to pledge the same to another as security for his own debt, and his action in so doing was a gross fraud on plaintiffs. As between him and plaintiffs, the latter were the owners of the stock, notwithstanding the pledge. And it is also well established that "the general rule is, that one in possession of personal property can transfer to another by pledge or sale, no greater interest in the property than he himself has." (Chase v.Whitmore,
This case, as we have said, has been repeatedly cited by this court approvingly so far as this declaration is concerned, and the principle therein set forth applied. (See Chase v. Whitmore,
All claims of appellants based upon the fact that the stock was in fact community property, and that the blank assignment was signed by the wife only, appear to be fully answered by the provisions of section 325 of the Civil Code. The shares stood on the books of the Union Oil Company in the name of the wife alone. That section, as amended in 1905, [Stats. 1905, p. 397], provides: "Shares of stock in corporations standing on the books of the corporation in the name of a married woman may be transferred by her, her agent or attorney, without the signature of her husband, and in the same manner as if such married woman were a feme sole." Prior to the amendment of 1905 the section provided that such stock as was "held or owned" by a married woman could be so transferred. The code commissioner's note to the section states that the amendment is designed to make it clear that shares of stock standing in the name of a married woman are presumed to be her separate property, and that they may be dealt with by her as such, in the absence of proof and notice to the contrary. We do not see how, in the face of this statute, it can be doubted that one taking stock standing on the books of a corporation in the name of a woman, married or single, has the right to assume, in the absence of something reasonably sufficient to create a suspicion to the contrary, that she is the sole owner thereof and is empowered to transfer the same, and that, under such circumstances, he is not called upon to make any inquiry in regard thereto. No case has been cited by appellants that would support any different conclusion. Leiper's Appeal, 108 Pa. St. 377, is clearly distinguishable from the case at bar, as is demonstrated in respondent's brief. The statute is clear and unambiguous, and does not appear to admit of any other construction. It is proper also to note, as bearing on the delivery of the certificates to Miner, that the husband himself secured the indorsement of the wife, and personally delivered the certificates indorsed by her to Miner. This fact, however, has no bearing on the question of notice to defendant.
It may be conceded that defendant knew that monthly dividends were being declared by the Union Oil Company. It had no information that any of the dividends declared were being paid to plaintiffs or either of them, so far as the stock pledged by it to Miner was concerned. Certainly no duty rested upon it, *662 in so far as plaintiffs were concerned, to make any inquiry in regard to this matter in the absence of notice of circumstances sufficient to create a suspicion that such payment was being made. We do not think that the mere fact that it must be held to have known that the stock stood on the books of the corporation in the name of Mrs. Fowles created such a duty. The circumstances in this connection are such that it cannot be held that they render the conclusion of the trial court that defendant took in good faith one not sufficiently supported by the facts shown. A reasonable explanation of the failure of defendant to demand and collect the dividends would be that it was entirely content with the security afforded by the shares, without regard to the dividends, and for that reason did not interest itself in the matter of collecting them.
The stipulation of facts states that Miner was a customer of defendant; that he was a broker, and daily dealt in corporate stocks; that he had theretofore often borrowed money from defendant and hypothecated corporate stocks therefor; that it was a usual and customary thing for him to have certificates of stock which showed on the face thereof that the stock had belonged to some other person than himself, and which were indorsed in blank, and that it was the custom of the said bank to make loans to said Miner, and to many other customers, upon stocks so held and indorsed. It is claimed that the mere fact that defendant knew that Miner was a stockbroker was sufficient, as a matter of law, to put it upon inquiry as to his powers with relation to this stock when the same was offered by way of pledge, the idea being that as it is the business of such a broker to buy and sell stocks for others, it is reasonable to assume that stock so indorsed in his hands is the property of others, and that while it may fairly be assumed that he has the power to sell such stock, it may not be assumed that he has the power to pledge it or otherwise treat it as his own property. We are unable to see any force in this claim, and certainly no such distinction is recognized by the cases brought to our attention, with the possible exception of one or two Maryland cases, which are in conflict with the authorities generally. The McNeil case was, as we have seen, one involving an unauthorized pledge by the brokers of the owner. The same is true of Shattuck *663 v. American Cement Co., 205 Pa. St. 197, [97 Am. St. Rep. 735, 54 A. 785], cited by appellants, where the court said, in relation to a certificate of stock indorsed in blank by the owner to his brokers, who had without authority pledged the same, that where one by his own act arms another with power to act for him, he who so arms the wrongdoer must suffer for the consequences of the wrongdoing, and that there was nothing to put the pledgee on inquiry. The stock was held to be subject to the unauthorized pledge. (See, also, Woods' Appeal, 92 Pa. St. 379, [37 Am. Rep. 694, 695].) In Ryman v. Gerlach, 153 Pa. St. 197, [25 A. 1031, 26 A. 302], it was simply held by a majority of the court that the evidence on the question of good faith should have been submitted to the jury.
We are satisfied that the conclusion of the lower court to the effect that the defendant took the stock in good faith and without notice cannot be held to be erroneous. There was no actual notice to it of circumstances sufficient to put a prudent man upon inquiry as to Miller's ownership thereof.
There is no force in the claim that renewals and extensions given by defendant to Miner, and the redelivery to him of certain securities pledged, without the knowledge or consent of plaintiffs, operated to release the stock from the pledge. All renewals and extensions and redeliveries were prior to any disclosure to defendant of the fact of plaintiff's ownership. Plaintiffs, of course, were neither guarantors nor sureties. They had not guaranteed the payment of Miner's debt to the defendant, nor had they pledged their stock to defendant for Miner's debt. Defendant had no knowledge whatever concerning them, and had no transaction with them. So far as it was concerned, Miner was pledging his own stock for his own debt. The cases cited by counsel upon this point are in no way applicable to the case at bar.
It is urged that defendant cannot be held, under the circumstances of this case, to have taken the stock in pledge for a valuable consideration. This contention is based on the claim that the stock was pledged by Miner to secure the payment of a pre-existing indebtedness on his part to defendant. According to the answer, the pledge was made on June 10, 1910, to secure the payment of a note given by Miner on that day to defendant for fourteen thousand dollars then loaned *664 to him, and interest. The stipulated facts show that this note was given by Miner for the balance then due by him to defendant on a note for thirty-two thousand dollars which was then past due, given by him to defendants prior to May 10, 1910, which latter note was given in renewal of notes theretofore given by him to defendant for loans of money actually made, and on which he paid to defendants on June 10, 1910, eighteen thousand dollars, and the interest then due. Among these previous loans actually made was one of one thousand five hundred dollars, made on January 4, 1910, for the repayment of which Miner at that time actually pledged twenty of said shares as collateral security. The remaining ten shares he pledged at the time of giving the thirty-two thousand dollar note, and the whole thirty shares thenceforth remained with defendant as collateral security for the indebtedness of Miner, as evidenced, first, by the thirty-two thousand dollar note, and subsequently by the fourteen thousand dollar note.
Looking only to the transaction of June 10, 1910, and regarding the stock as then originally pledged, it is clear that, under our decisions, the defendant was a pledgee for value. In Stroud v.Thomas,
The fact that Miner may have been guilty of a crime in connection with these certificates is altogether immaterial, under the circumstances of this case. What we have already said in regard to the rule declared in McNeil v. Tenth Nat. Bank,
In view of what we have said, no other point suggested in the brief of plaintiffs requires notice.
The judgment and order denying a new trial are affirmed.
Sloss, J., Shaw, J., Lorigan, J., and Melvin, J., concurred.