108 P. 676 | Cal. | 1910
A general demurrer to the complaint was overruled. The defendant refused to answer and judgment was given for plaintiff upon the facts stated in the complaint. The defendant appeals.
On June 15, 1908, the plaintiff became the owner of one-thousand shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, previously belonging to J. Dalzell Brown. The certificate for these shares was duly indorsed by Brown and delivered to the plaintiff. The consideration paid for the stock by the plaintiff was twenty-five thousand dollars. Brown was indebted to the defendant in a sum exceeding fifty thousand dollars. On July 28, 1908, the defendant began an action against Brown to recover said debt and caused a writ of attachment to be issued therein, which on July 29, 1908, was levied on Brown's interest in said stock. The action is still pending. At the time the attachment was levied, the transfer of the stock from Brown to the plaintiff had not been entered on the books of the defendant corporation, as required by section 324 of the Civil Code, and the defendant had no notice or knowledge of said transfer. This condition continued until March 11, 1909, when the plaintiff presented its certificate of stock to the defendant and demanded that the transfer from Brown to plaintiff be duly entered upon the defendant's books. Defendant refused to comply with the demand, basing its refusal on the claim that, by virtue of the levy of said attachment, it had a lien upon said stock prior and paramount to the right and title of plaintiff thereto. This action was thereupon begun to compel the defendant to enter the transfer on its books and issue to the plaintiff a new certificate for the stock, free from the lien of the attachment. The judgment directed that this be done.
Section 324 of the Civil Code declares that shares of stock in a corporation are personal property and that they may be transferred by indorsement and delivery of the certificate. It further provides that "such transfer is not valid, except as to the parties thereto, until the same is so entered upon the books *576 of the corporation as to show the names of the parties by whom and to whom transferred, the number of the certificate, the number or designation of the shares, and the date of transfer."
"The rights or shares which a defendant may have in the stock of any corporation" may be attached by leaving with the proper officer of the corporation a copy of the writ and a notice that the stock or interest of the defendant is attached in pursuance of the writ (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 541, 542, subd. 4). When such stock is sold on execution, the sheriff must give the purchaser a certificate of the sale. "Such certificate conveys to the purchaser all the right which the debtor had in such property on the day the execution or attachment was levied." (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 699.)
The general rule is that a creditor who attaches property for his debt obtains a lien only upon the title or interest which the debtor has in the property at the time of the levy, and that if, at that time, all title and interest therein has passed from the debtor to a third person, the attaching creditor gets nothing by the levy. (Tuohy v. Wingfield,
If this doctrine is correct, the logical result would be that knowledge of the attaching creditor or execution purchaser, at the time of the levy or execution sale, that there had been a prior unregistered transfer for value, would be an immaterial circumstance which would neither protect the holder of the stock, nor vitiate or affect the lien of the attachment or the title conveyed by the execution sale. If the attempted transfer by indorsement and delivery of the certificate, without entry thereof on the books of the company, is wholly void as to the attaching creditor, the levy would create a lien superior to the title of the indorsee. It would operate as if there had been no previous transfer of the certificate by the record holder, and a registration after the levy, or a subsequent notice, would be of no avail to the indorsee. This rule prevails in the case of a levy on goods, after a sale which is void as against creditors, under section
The defendant relies mainly on a prior decision in Weston v.Bear River etc. Co., reported in
The Weston case was an action by Weston to compel the defendant corporation to transfer certain shares of its stock to him on its books. On the first trial of the case the lower court held the unregistered transfers good, and gave judgment against the plaintiff. On appeal the supreme court reversed this judgment. (
Upon the second appeal in the Weston case (
The other decisions heretofore cited contain repeated declarations in approval of the doctrine of the second Weston case. In People v. Elmore, after referring to the Weston and Naglee decisions the court says that it was held in those cases that unregistered transfers of stock "are nevertheless valid as against all the world, except subsequent purchasers in good faith, without notice." This was said to be binding under the rule of stare decisis, if for no other reason. Parrott v. Byers,
Counsel for defendant contend that the precise question here presented was not involved in any of the cases, except the first Weston case, and that the declarations in the subsequent decisions, contrary to that case, should be disregarded as obiterdicta. Even if this were so, since the dicta have been accepted and acted upon for so many years as the established law, they should be adhered to, if possible. But, as we have shown, this rule cannot be sustained without overthrowing the principle *581 upon which the first Weston case rests, and every decision holding that a purchaser for value at an execution sale, with notice of a prior unrecorded transfer, obtains no title against the indorsee and holder of the certificate, in effect, overrules that case. In Farmers' etc. Bank v. Wilson the effect of a mere levy was involved, and the court very properly stated the rule, so that the parties would understand that a future execution purchaser with notice would take only the pledgee's right of redemption. That case is direct authority for the proposition.
It may be remarked further that the reason given, as above stated, in the first Weston case, for the rule there adopted, had no foundation in the law then in force and has none under the present law. It was founded on the notion that "the stock and transfer book" of a corporation is made a public record, accessible to all persons, intended to give notice to everybody of the status and ownership of the title to the stock, and that it is therefore available to the creditors of the stockholders and to persons dealing with them with respect to the stock. This is the law of some of the states where the rule contended for by the defendant prevails, but it is not the law of this state. (Civ. Code, sec. 378) It was not the law with respect to mining corporations at the time the Weston cases were decided. (Stats. 1850, p. 368, sec. 144; Stats. 1853, p. 90, sec. 18.) The creditors of the individual stockholders have no such right of access, and the books could not constitute notice to them. Nor could these books hold any person out to the world as the owner of any stock, since the world could not have access thereto. Stockholders and creditors of the corporation are the only persons who have the right to inspect the books. (Civ. Code, sec. 378)
The authorities of other states having similar statutes differ somewhat in their interpretation thereof. The following cases hold that the levy of an attachment or execution is not, of itself, paramount to the right of a holder of the certificate under a prior unregistered transfer from the attachment or execution debtor: Commonwealth Bank v. Kortright, 22 Wend. 348, [34 Am. Dec. 317]; Lund v. Wheaton,
The contrary construction is adopted in Lyndonville N.B. v.Folsom, 7 N. Mex. 611, [38 P. 253]; Sabin v. Bank,
In several of the states under statutes which do not declare such transfers invalid between the parties, but merely declare that it is transferable only on the books of the corporation, it is held that the mode must be followed in order to pass the title, and that a levy will prevail over a transfer not properly made. In other states the opposite rule is followed. We do not consider it necessary to discuss these cases. The condition of the law is well stated in 2 Cook on Corporations at the end of section 490, as follows: "It may be added in regard to this whole subject that the decisions and statutes of the various states show clearly that public policy and the legitimate demands of trade have gradually caused the courts and legislatures of the various states to establish a rule that a sale or pledge of certificates of stock has precedence over a subsequent attachment levied on that stock for the debt of the vendor or pledgor, and that the failure of the pledgee or purchaser to obtain a registry on the corporation books is not fatal to his interest in the stock." See note 1 to section 488 of Cook for list of states which have changed their statutes to conform to this rule, where the courts had previously adopted the opposite doctrine.
The certificate here in question recited that it was transferable only on the books of the company and on surrender of the certificate. This did not affect the transfer. The right to sell, transfer, or pledge corporation stock is given by statute and it *583 cannot be curtailed by a recital in the certificate. The recital served to give notice of the rights of the corporation under the statute, with respect to transfers, but it did not change the relative rights of the stockholder and third persons, with respect to each other, nor make the unregistered transfer subject to the attachment lien.
The judgment is affirmed.
Angellotti, J., and Sloss, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.