Anna V. Madden owned five matured shares of the defendant bank, represented by a certificate issued December 4, 1934. When on May 10, 1939, she assigned the shares to the plaintiff by a sealed assignment, as well as by delivery of an indorsed certificate, she owed the defendant a balance, larger than the value of the shares, upon a mortgage note, after the proceeds of a foreclosure sale and apparently also the value of any shares pledged as security for the mortgage debt, had been credited upon the note. See G. L. c. 170 (St. 1933, c. 144), § 27. The judge found that there was no consideration for the assignment. Prior to the assignment the defendant had notified the assignor that it had applied the matured shares in question toward the discharge of the indebtedness to the defendant. When on May 26, 1939, the plaintiff presented to the defend
In cooperative banks there are three classes of stock, all of the ultimate value of $200 a share: (1) unmatured shares, that are in process of being paid for by instalments, and are represented by a pass book, G. L. c. 170 (St. 1933, c. 144), §§ 12, 48; (2) matured shares (§§ 20, 21), that were once unmatured but have been paid up in full to the ultimate value of $200 a share, and, instead of being paid off in the normal course, by the concurrence of the shareholder and the directors are permitted to continue, represented by a certificate, until withdrawn by the shareholder under § 17 or retired by the directors under § 19; (3) paid-up shares (§12), which resemble matured shares, but are paid for in full by the shareholder as soon as issued. The shareholders control the corporation. §§ 6, 7. “Shares, whether matured, unmatured or paid-up, may be transferred only on the books of the corporation, in such manner as its by-laws may provide.” § 42. Matured and paid-up shares are entitled to the same rate of dividends as unmatured shares, up to five per cent per annum. § 44.
The act of the defendant in applying the matured shares to the payment of the indebtedness to the defendant, cannot be deemed a retirement of the shares which would leave no liability upon the defendant except in contract for the payment of the value of the shares with interest. G. L. c. 170 (St. 1933, c. 144), § 19. It is true that under that section the directors may “retire matured or paid-up shares at any time and in such order and manner as they may provide.” But the application of the matured shares to the payment of the indebtedness did not purport to be a retirement of the shares, it is not shown to have been the act of the directors who were the only officers having power to retire matured shares, and the action taken docs not appear
The defendant could have on the matured shares no lien, not stated in the certificate, for the payment of any indebtedness of the shareholder. Sargent v. Franklin Ins. Co.
As distinguished from the extinguishment of cross demands up to the amount of the smaller by mutual agreement presently to be executed (Cary v. Bancroft,
Under a provision, formerly common with respect to corporations in general, that shares of stock shall be transferable only on the books of the corporation, a transfer by assignment and delivery of the certificate passed only an equitable title. Sibley v. Quinsigamond National Bank,
But as to shares in cooperative banks, the applicable statute, which originated after the enactment of the uniform stock transfer act, has not followed that act but has adopted the older provision that shares “may be transferred only on the books of the corporation.” St. 1912, c. 623, § 33. St. 1914, c. 643, § 8. G. L. c. 170, § 39. G. L. c. 170 (St. 1933, c. 144), § 42. The number of shares that any one person may hold is narrowly limited. G. L. c. 170
The objection to an action for conversion of shares of stock, that a share is not a tangible chattel (Lowell, Transfer of Stock [1884], §§ 11, 238) has not prevailed generally. London, Paris & American Bank, Ltd. v. Aronstein,
In other forms of action a transferee having no legal title could recover the value of the stock from the corporation upon its wrongful refusal to transfer the stock on
But in an action for conversion the plaintiff must have a present legal right to immediate possession of the thing converted. Bacon v. George,
Order dismissing report affirmed.
