The plaintiff is a Massachusetts corpora- ■ tian wholly owned and controlled by the defendant Albert M. Kiernan and his brother and sisters. There are twenty-two shares of preferred stock, of which said Kiernan owns four, and thirty shares of common stock, of which Kiernan owns six. He is the president, but works at a machine, while one of .his sisters manages the business. The agree
Kiernan wished to raise money on his stock, but he was unwilling to offer it to the corporation because he did not wish his relatives to know of his financial difficulties. On February 17, 1944, he borrowed $1,760.23 from the defendant East Cambridge Garage, Inc., a corporation of varied activities, one of which was lending money, for which he gave a collateral note signed by him payable $10 a week, secured by a pledge of all his stock. Only one weekly payment was ever made, and the entire principal became payable by a provision in the note early in March, 1944.
Kiernan delivered the stock certificates to the defendant corporation as pledgee, with a separate document of transfer accompanying each certificate, signed by him but not completely filled out. These documents were similar in form. A typical one read as follows: “For value received I hereby sell, assign and transfer unto [blank] three (3) shares of the preferred capital stock of The Monotype Composition Company, Incorporated, standing in my name on the books of said corporation represented by Certificate No. 13 herewith, and do hereby irrevocably constitute and appoint [blank] attorney to transfer the said stock on the books of the within named company with full power of substitution in the premises.”
A decree denominated “final” was entered on December 28, 1944, granting the plaintiff an injunction against the sale of the stock, on the ground that the purported transfer of the stock to the defendant corporation was invalid, dismissing the counterclaim so far as it is against the plaintiff, and dismissing the bill as against the defendant members of the firm of R. L. Day and Company, by whom.the proposed auction sale was to have been conducted. On January 15, 1945, the defendant corporation appealed. The counterclaim so far as it is against the defendant Kiernan was not disposed of by the decree of December 28, 1944, but on May 7, 1945, there was entered an additional “final” de.cree ordering Kiernan to pay the amount due on the collateral note. On May 14, 1945, the defendant corporation appealed from the decree of May 7,1945, and purported to “reaffirm” its appeal from the decree of December 28, 1944. If these so called “final” decrees were in truth final as to separable controversies, the seasonable appeals from each bring the whole case here. If, however, there was no final decree until that of May 7,1945, which supplemented the decree of December 28, 1944, the whole case is here on the appeal from that • final decree. Kennedy v. Shain,
The validity of the restraint upon alienation contained in the agreement of association and the by-law is not challenged. See Longyear v. Hardman,
Possibly the transaction in the present case was not a “sale” of the stock. Silversmiths Co. v. Reed & Barton Corp.
As between the defendant corporation and Kiernan it is true that the transaction was what is commonly called a pledge, with power to sell. Kiernan retained rights in the stock (J. H. Wentworth Co. v. French,
This is not a case of the delivery of a stock certificate, without more, as a pledge. The stock certificate was accompanied by a transfer in blank, signed by the stockholder. Delivery of the stock certificate with such a transfer pur- . ported to pass the legal title to the stock, and but for the restrictive by-law was sufficient to do so. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 155, §§ 27 (b), 43. Edgerly v. First National Bank,
Neither is this a case in which the defendant corporation is entitled merely to a certificate of stock in its name as pledgee. In Crease v. Babcock,
In the absence of a restraint upon alienation, a transfer like the one in the present case enables a pledgee, if he desires, to obtain a new certificate absolute in form in his own name, which as between him and the corporation will give him all the incidents of ownership. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 155, §§ 29, 46. Johnson v. Somerville Dyeing & Bleaching Co.
As between the plaintiff corporation and the defendant corporation, the transfer made in this case was as repugnant to the agreement of association and the by-law as a transfer intended to be absolute and final would have been. It presented almost as great a threat of interference by strangers in the corporate affairs of the plaintiff. We think it was prohibited by the agreement of association and the by-law. See Fopiano v. Italian Catholic Cemetery Association,
Affirmed with costs.
Notes
“No stockholder shall sell or transfer any stock in this corporation except upon the following conditions, which however may be waived by the board of directors in any particular instance: A stockholder wishing to sell or transfer any of his stock shall first in writing offer to sell the same to the corporation through the board of directors, disclosing the consideration for the proposed sale or transfer and the name and address of the person to whom it is to be made. The board of directors shall have thirty days from the date of such offer to purchase the stock in behalf of the corporation for a consideration to be determined by three arbitrators, of which one shall be appointed by each party and the third by the two appointed; or the board may after such determination elect to buy the said stock at the price of the proposed sale or transfer.”
Such a form of transfer is called an assignment “in blank” in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 155, § 27 (b). The first blank in that form is left for the name of the transferee in whose name, a new certificate is to be issued. The second blank is left for the name of the clerk in the office of the corporation or transfer agent who may record the transfer on the books. Christy, Transfer of Stock (2d ed. 1940) § 63. Palmer v. O’Bannon Corp.
Rev. Sts. (1836) c. 36, § 49; c. 90, §§ 36-38; c. 97, §§ 31, 36-41. Fisher v. Essex Bank,
