Was the action here barred by the statute of limitation? 1 The answer to this may well depend upon several considerations. It is contended by plaintiff in error that although his action may have accrued when the last of the stock certificates was transferred on August 29, 1955, the running of the statute was suspended under the provisions of Code § 3-807. “If the defendant, or those under whom he claims, *741 shall have been guilty of a fraud by which the plaintiff shall have been debarred or deterred from his action, the period of limitation shall run only from the time of the discovery of the fraud.”
If Pruett forged the stock power under which the certificates were transferred and actively concealed his actions from Dr. Frye, representing to him that his stocks were still registered in his name and held by the broker in his behalf, there can be no question that he was guilty of an actual fraud involving moral turpitude.
Austin v. Raiford,
We are not unmindful of Glover v. National Bank of Commerce of N. Y.,
Did title to the stock pass under the transfer here? Was there any duty on Commonwealth to determine whether the stock power was genuine when the certificates were presented for transfer? We think so, particularly since it is alleged that the power was forged and that Commonwealth had on file plaintiff’s true signature.
In Western Union Tel. Co. v. Davenport,
Does it relieve the corporation of this duty if the stock certificates are presented for transfer by a broker to whom the owner has entrusted the certificates for custodial safekeeping and with whom he has had a course of dealing? Apparently it does not. Where corporation stock was canceled and transferred on the books of the corporation by broker’s use of altered assignments, without knowledge or consent of the owner, the owner was entitled to recover from the corporation the value of the stock. Hill v. American Tel. &c. Co.,
Do the provisions of the Uniform Stock Transfer Act
(Code Ann.
§§ 22-1901, et seq.),
2
which were of force and effect in 1955 when the alleged transfers took place, alter the situation? We conclude that they do not. Louisiana also adopted the act, as have many of the other states, and its Supreme Court holds that: “[T]o effect a transfer of stock, LSA-R.S. 12:524, sub-paragraph A, 1 and 2,
3
makes two things necessary—one, the endorsement of the certificate or the assignment thereof in a separate instrument, or a power of attorney,
signed by the person appearing by the certificate to be the owner of it,
and the other, the delivery of the certificate. . .” Succession of Pailet,
These principles of law are in harmony with what the courts of Georgia have said about forged transfers, and liability of the corporation when a transfer is thus effected. In
Georgia Cas. Co. v. McRitchie,
A circumstance obtains here that perhaps did not in any of the cited cases, or at least it does not appear so from facts recited in them, viz., Commonwealth had on file the true and genuine signature of Dr. Frye. If it had compared the signature on the stock power with that it must have become evident that the power was not genuine, or at least it would have been on inquiry and, being on inquiry, was on notice of what the inquiry would have led to or disclosed. Code § 37-116.
There is, of course, no presumption that an indorsement or stock power is forged. Indeed, when it comes to the corporation for transfer in apparent regular order there is a presumption of genuineness, for it is never to be presumed that a crime has been committed. The burden of establishing the forgery is upon him who asserts it. Cf. Nolan v. American Tel. &c. Co.,
If the stock power here had been signed by Dr. Frye in blank and delivered with his certificates to Pruett, though not for the purpose of a transfer, an estoppel would have arisen against his assertion that the transfer was unauthorized, for when a loss must be suffered which results from the acts of one of two people, i.e., the act of the owner in delivering a stock power signed in blank, and the act of the corporate officers in accepting from the broker an unauthorized power, it must fall upon him who first trusted the defaulting broker. Code § 37-113.
We conclude that no title passed under the transfer based upon a forged stock power.
*745 We now pass to a consideration of whether a prescriptive title may have ripened in the defendant. It is contended by Commonwealth that since the plaintiff must show title in himself in order to maintain the trover action the general demurrer was properly sustained because it appears from the petition that Commonwealth has been in adverse possession of the certificates for more than four years prior to the bringing of the action, relying on Code § 85-1706.
The rules for determining whether title to personalty has ripened by prescription are the same as those applying to real estate.
Blocker v. Boswell,
If the litigation here had been between Dr. Frye and a bona fide purchaser for value who had held the stock under claim of right since the transfer, it seems obvious that a prescriptive title must be held to have ripened in the purchaser. But such is not the case. Commonwealth redeemed or purchased the stock for itself. And since there is a fiduciary relation between the corporation and its stockholders giving rise to the duty on its part to protect the Stockholder against fraudulent transfers based upon forged or unauthorized indorsements or stock powers,
6
there can be no adverse possession of the corporation which can become the foundation of a prescriptive title unless the facts clearly and unmistakably demonstrate that the character of its possession is in truth and in fact adverse. “[T]he Statute does not begin to run until the possession of the trustee . . . becomes
adverse, tortious and wrongful,
by the disloyal acts of the trustee, which must be
open, continued
and
notorious,
so as to preclude
all doubt
as to the character of the holding of the property, or the
want of knowledge
on the part of the
cestui que trusts Scott v. Haddock,
Of course the corporation does not hold title to the stock of its stockholders, and is not a trustee—since one of the func
*746
tions of a trustee is to hold title to the res for the benefit of his cestui que trust—yet, there is a fiduciary relationship. If it is to hold the stock of a stockholder adversely to him we think that its possession should be of such nature and that the facts should be such as to preclude want of knowledge on the part of the stockholder. Certainly that does not appear from the allegations here. And see
Hoyle v. Jones,
We conclude that under the facts here pleaded there could have been no adverse possession of the stock by Commonwealth as against Dr. Frye. Consequently no prescriptive title has ripened in it.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Code § 3-1003.
Repealed by Uniform Commercial Code, Ga. L. 1962, p. 156 (Code Ann. § 109A-10—103).
Section 1 of USTA, and same as Code Ann. § 22-1903, before its repeal by UCC.
Although the general purpose of the Uniform Stock Transfer Act has been held to be to give impetus to freedom of business transactions by malting corporate stock freely negotiable, Reynolds v. Reynolds,
If Commonwealth had required that Dr. Frye's signature be guaranteed by a bank or other responsible institution, it might have afforded itself protection by having a cause of action against the guarantor of a forged signature. Schneider v. American Tel. &c. Co.,
See generally our discussion of the corporation-stockholder relation in the first division of this opinion, and
