20 Ga. App. 767 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
(After stating the foregoing facts.) When
this case was before the Supreme Court (Freeman v. Jackson, 146 Ga. 55, 90 S. E. 467), under the evidence as disclosed by the record it was held that the direction of a verdict for the defendant was erroneous. We have carefully examined the original record on file in the office of the clerk of the Supreme Court, and we find that in several material respects the evidence contained in that record is different from that contained in the record now before this court. In the record before the Supreme Court the only evidence as to who was the proper bank official to transfer stock on the books of the bank was the following testimony of Jackson, the defendant, and Hunt, the cashier of the bank, respectively. Jackson testified: “I thought Mr. Hunt was the proper party to transfer the stock on the books of the bank. I thought so'at the time and I think so yet.” Hunt, the cashier, upon this question gave the following testimony: “It was the duty of the cashier and president, or vice-president, in the absence of the president, to transfer stock when sold. . . It was the president’s and the cashier’s duty to transfer stock on the books of the bank. New stock would have to be issued and necessarily have to be signed by the cashier and the president.” Moreover, the evidence in the Supreme Court record did hot definitely show that when Jackson delivered the certificate of stock to Hunt, the purchaser, Hunt was directed, as the cashier of the bank, to make the transfer upon the books of the bank. The only evidence on that question was the following testimony of Jackson: “I delivered the certificate to Mr. S. A. Hunt, the pur
In the record in the instant ease the testimony upon these points was as follows: Thurman, the bookkeeper of the bank, testified: “When transfers of stock were made, it was Mr. Hunt’s duty to make those transfers. I mean S. A. Hunt Jr., who at the time was cashier of the First National Bank of LaFayette.” S. A. Hunt Jr. testified, that he was acting as cashier of the bank at the time it was closed by the bank-examiner; that he had been serving in that capacity about ten years; also: “It was a part of my duties to look after the transfer of stock on the books of the bank.” “Some time prior to the closing of the bank I purchased ten shares of stock from Mr. T. A. Jackson, represented by one of the certificates shown on the books of the bank. The date of that purchase was April 29, 1913; that was nearly two months prior to the closing of.the bank. I paid him in cash for that stock, and he delivered the certificate to me and signed the transfer in blank.' That is the form of the transfer that was on the back of that certificate, and it was signed by T. A. Jackson, and that stock certificate was delivered to me, and 1 paid him in cash for it, and, at the same time he delivered it to me, he made a request of me, as the cashier of the First National Bank of LaFayette, to transfer that stock on the books of the bank, and at that time Mr. Jackson made a request of me, as the cashier of the bank, to transfer that stock on the books of the bank. It was my duty, as cashier of the bank, to make those transfers, and, as cashier, I had charge of and kept these stock-books, and all the transfers of stock that were made were made and signed by me, as cashier of the bank. That stock'was never transferred on the books,—this particular ten shares of stock that I purchased from Mr. Jackson. I guess it was my fault. It came about in .this manner: Mr. Jackson and myself had been on a trade for several days about this stock, and when he started to transfer the stock, he started to write my name in it, and I told him that probably my wife might want it in her name, and to wait until I could see about that, and I put the stock certificate in my pocket, and the next day I changed clothes and the stock certificate was left in my pocket, and my wife took the papers out and put them in my trunk, and it just escaped my memory. It was through an inadvertence of mine that the transfer was not made,
In the case made by the record before the Supreme Court that court decided that it did not come within the ruling in the case of Whitney v. Butler, 118 U. S. 655 (7 Sup. Ct. 61, 30 L. ed. 266), which was as follows: “A, an owner of shares in the capital stock
In our judgment, however, the facts as disclosed by the record now before this court bring this case, in principle, up to the case referred to. In that case the certificate was surrendered to the president of the bank, accompanied by a power of attorney, which would have enabled the officers of the bank to make the transfer on the books, and a demand that this be done. In the instant case the certificate was delivered to the cashier of the bank by the shareholder in person, and accordingly no power of attorney was needed, as the shareholder signed the transfer which was on the back of ■ the certificate, and expressly authorized the cashier of the bank to write the name of the purchaser in the space left blank in the transfer for that purpose, and furthermore the cashier had authority, and was expressly directed, to transfer this certificate upon the books of the bank. In the Whitney case the stock was bought, not for the bank itself, but for a customer of the bank. In the instant case, likewise, the stock was not bought for the bank, but was bought by the cáshier thereof for himself individually. In both eases the stock certificate was delivered to an officer of the
Upon the second trial of this case there was no uncertainty, as the Supreme Court intimated there was upon the first trial, as to what person had purchased the stock from Jackson, and as to whose name it should have been transferred in. The undisputed evidence in the record before us is that Hunt, and not Mrs. Hunt, had bought and paid for the stock, and that the stock was delivered to Hunt himself, and that Hunt, as the cashier of the bank, Was - officially instructed to enter the transfer of the stock upon the bank’s books, and that it was his duty to do so immediately. Hunt had authority, and contracted with Jackson, to fill in the blank, in the transfer certificate, by entering therein either Mis name or that of Mrs. Hunt. -The uncontradicted testimony was that it was Hunt’s duty, and not Jackson’s, to see that this was done. '•
We are clearly of the opinion that Hunt was the person liable for the assessment on this stock, and not Jackson. It therefore follows that the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed.