delivered the opinion of the court.
This wаs an action to recover the amount of an assessment made on the shareholders of a national banking association in the hands of a receiver.
Is the defendant in error, the State Loan and Trust Company-, a “shareholder” of the California National Bank of San Diego within the meaning of the statute relating to national *608 banking associations? That is the sole question presented by the pleadings.
By the Bevised Statutes of the United States it is provided —
“Sec. 5139. The capital stock of each association shall; be divided into shares of one hundred dollars- each, and be-deemed personal property, and transferable.on the books.of. the association in such manner as may be prescribed in the> by-laws or articles of аssociation. Every person becoming-a shareholder by such transfer shall, in proportion to his-shares, succeed to all the rights and liabilities of the’ prior-holder of such shares; and no change shall be made in the-articles of association by which the rights, r&medies or security of the existing creditors of the assoeiation shall be-, impaired.”
“Sec. 5151. The ’ shareholders of every national banking, association shall be held individually responsible, equally and' ratably, and not one for another, for all contracts', debts and engagements of such association, to-the extent of the amount-of their stock therein, at the par value thereof, in addition to-the amount invested in such shares. ...
“ Sec: 5152. Persons holding stock as executors, administra.tors, guardians or trustees shall not. be. personally subject to-any liabilities as stockholders; but’ the" estates and funds in their hands shall be liable in like mañner and to the same extent as the testator, ’ intestate,- ward or person interested • in such funds would be, if living and competent to act and hold-, the stock in his own name.”
“Sec., 5210. The president and cashier of every national banking association shall cause to be kept at all times a full and correct list of the names and residences of all the sharp-holders in the association, and. the number of shares held by each, in the office where its business is transacted. Such list shall be subject to the inspection of all the shareholders and creditors of the association, and the officers authorized to assess taxes under state authority, during business hours of each day in which business may be legally transacted. A copy of such list, on the first Monday of ’July, of each year, *609 verified by the oath of such president or cashier, shall be. transmitted to the Comptroller of the Currency.”
The Comptroller of the Currency appointed the plaintiff in error receiver' of the California National Bank of San Diego, California. Bev.- Stat. § 5234. He gave bond as required by law, and thereafter entered upon the discharge of the duties of his trust.
In virtue of the authority conferred upon him by law,, the Comptroller made an assessment on the shareholders of the-bank for five hundred thousand dollars, to be paid by them on or before the 18th day of June, 1892. The assessment was equally and ratably upon shareholders to the аmount of one hundred- per centum of the par value of the shares of the capital stock of the bank held and owned by them respectively at the time of its failure or suspension,, and the receiver Was required by an order .of the Comptroller to. institute suits to enforce against each shareholder his personal liability to that extent. • J
The receiver gave due notice of the assessment, in writing, to the. State Loan and Trust. Company — which is a corporation of California, having its principal place of business at the city of Los Angeles in that State —and made demand upon it therefor, but the company did not pay the same or any part thereof.
The facts upon which the claim against the defendant company is based arе these: S. G. Havermale and J. W. Collins, owners and holders respectively of certificates numbered 286 and 297 issued to them for one hundred shares, each, of the capital stock of the California National Bank of San Diego, were indebted to the State Loan and Trust Company upon their promissory note for $12,500, besides interest. These certificates having been endorsed by the respective holders by writing their names across the back thereof, were transferred ■and delivered to the State Loan and Trust Company as collateral- security for the payment of the above note, and, so endorsed, were, in ordinary course of mail, transmitted and surrendered to the California National Bank of San Diego. New certificates, numbered 308 and 309, respectively, were *610 thereupon, issued to the State Loan arid Trust Company of Los Angeles, as “ pledgee,” in lieu of certificates 2S6 and .297.
Each of the .new certificates showed upon its face that it was issued to the “ State Loan, and Trust Company of Los Angeles, pledgee,” and each purp'dr^d to be for- qp® hundred shares of the capital stock of the California National Bank of San Diego.
The defendant, after receiving certificates 308 and 309, held them “ as pledgee, and as collateral security for the payment of said note, arid for the unpaid balance of the debt thereby represented.”
Otherwise than as just stated, the State Loan and Trust Company of Los Angeles never had owned or held any shares of the capital stock of the Cаlifornia National Bank of San Diego, and never was entitled to hold the usual stock certificate as such shareholder to the amount of two hundred shares or to any other amount.
Except as pledgee of the stock represented by/ certificates 308 and 309, respectively, the name of the State Loan and Trust Company never appeared upon or in the stock or other corporate books of the California National Bank of San Diego as a shareholder. The entries in the books of the bank showed that the new certificates were issued to the State Loan and Trust Company as pledgee, and not otherwise.
A jury having been waived by the parties in writing, the cáse was tried in the Circuit Court, and judgment was rendered for the defеndant. 56 Fed.'Rep. 430. Upon, appeal to the Circuit Court, of Appeals that-- judgment was affirmed. 15 U. S. App. 259.
Is one who does not appear upon the official list of ¿he names and residences of the shareholders of a national' banking association otherwise than as “pledgee” of a given number of-shares of the capital stock of such association — nothing else appearing.— liable as a'“shareholder” of such association under section 5151 of the Revised Statutes of the United States declaring that “ the shareholders of every national banking association shall be held individually responsible, equally and ratably, and not one for another, for all contracts, debts *611 and engagements of such association, to th,e аmount of their stock • therein, at the par value thereof, in addition to the amount invested in such shares”?
As both sides contend that their respective positions are in harmony with decisions heretofore' rendered in this court, it will be necessary to refer to some of the cases cited by counsel.
In
Pullman
v.
Upton,
In
National Bank
v.
Case,
It may be here observed that in Pullman v. Upton the person who sought to .escape liability as a shareholder, appeared on the books of the insolvent insurance company as the owner of the stock; and that in National Bank v. Case the Germania National Bank, after the original transfer under the power of. attorney executed by its debtor, appeared oh the books of the other bank as the owner of the stock, and that, the liability arising therefrom could not be defeated or avoided by a transfer, however regular in form, to another who acquired .no -beneficial interest in it, and was to hold the- stock simply for its benefit. Nothing appeared upon the stock list, in either case, to indicate that the person or corporation -who appеared on such list as a shareholder was not, in fact, the actual owner. .
*614
In
Bowden
v.
Johnson,
But tbe case to which our .attention- has been particularly called is
Anderson
v.
Philadelphia Warehouse
Company,
This court in that case recognized it to be Avell settled that
*616
one who allows himself to appear on the books.of a national bank as аn “ owner ” of its stock is liable to creditors as' a shareholder, whether he- be, in fact, the absolute owner or only a pledgee, and that, if a registered owner, acting in bad faith, transfers his stock in a failing bank to an irresponsible' person, for the purpose of escaping'liability, or if his transfer is colorable only, the transaction is.yoid as to creditors — citing
National Bank
v.
Case,
It appeared, аccording to'the opinion in that case, that there was no evidence of actual fraud or bad faith; thjfct the Warehouse Company never was the owner of the stock in question, and never held itself out as such ; that the transfer of Kern and Blumer & Co. was only by way of pledge, and the company was bound to return the stock whenever the debt, for which it was held, .was.paid'; that the company never consented to a transfer of the stock to its name on the books, or to that of its president, and that for seven years before the failure of- the bank, and at least five years before its embarrassments were known to the company or the public, the stock, with the assent of Kern, Blumer & Co. and the officers of the bank, stood in the namp of McCloskеy or Ferris; that during all that time neither the registered holders nor. the Warehouse Company claimed dividends or in any way acted as- shareholders ; that either Kern or Blumer & Co. took the dividends as they were paid, and to all intents and purposes controlled the stock; that there was no concealment on the part of tjie Warehouse Company, and no effort to deceive; that it had possession of the certificates representing the stock, with full power to control them for all the purposes of its security, but never -was or pretended, to be anything else than a mere pledgee; that those who examined the list of shareholders' *617 would have found the name of McCloskey or of Ferris as the ■registered holder of. four hundred'and fifty sharеs; there was nothing oh the books of the bank to-connect them,- oweither of them, with the Warehouse Company, and, therefore, no credit could have been given on account, of the apparent liability of the company as a shareholder.'
“ If,” the court said, “ inquiries had been made and all the facts-ascertained, it would have been found that either Kern or Blumer & Có. were always the real owners of the stock, and that it had been placed in the name of the personsbvho appeared on the registry, not to shield any owner from liability, but to protect the title of the company as pledgee. •Blumer & Co. and the bank were fully advised who McCloskey was, .and of, his probable responsibility, when they allowed the transfer to be made to him, and they undoubtedly knew who -Fferris was when the stock was put in his name after Mc-Closkey’s death. The avowed purpose of' both transfers was to give the company the control of the stock for the purposes of its security, without making it liable as a registered shareholder. To our minds there was neither fraud nor illegality in this. The company perfected its security as.pledgee, without making itself liable as an apparent owner.. Kern or Blumer ■& Co. still remained thfe owners'of the stock, though registered in the name of others, and pledged as collateral security for their debt. They consented to the transfer, not to escape liability as shareholders, but to save the company from a liability it was Unwilling to assume, and at the same tiine to perfeсt the security it required for the credit to be given. As between Blumer & Co. and the Warehouse Company, Blumer & Co. or Kern were the owners of the stock ..and the company the pledgee. As between the company and the bank, or its creditors, the company was a pledgee of the stock and liable only as such. The creditors were put in no worse position by the transfers that were made than they would have been if the stock had remained in the name of Kern of Blumer & Co., who were always the real owners. •To our minds the fact that the stock stood-registered'in the .name of Henry, President, from^Hecember 27th.to January *618 10th, is, under the circumstances of this case, of no importance. The Warehouse Company promptly declined to allow itself to stand as a' registered sharehоlder, because it was unwilling to incur the liability such a registry would impose. It asked that the transfer might be made to McCloskey. To this the owners of the stock and the bank assented, and from that time the case stood precisely as it would if the transfer had originally been made to McCloskey instead of Henry, President, or if Henry had retransferred .to Kern or Blumer & Co., and they had at the request of the company made another •transfer to McCloskey. The security of the Warehouse Company was perfected without imposing on the companya-share-holder’s liability. All this was done in good faith, when the bank was in good credit'and paying large dividends, and years before its failure or even its embarrassment. So far as the company was concerned, the transfer was nоt made to escape an impending calamity, but to avoid incurring a liability it was unwilling to assume, and which it was at perfect liberty to shun.” • ’
Another of the eases referred to, although it did not relate to the liability of the shareholders of national banking associations, is
Easton
v.
German-American Bank,
It is apparent that the precise questiоn before us was not involved in any of the above cases, although the principles announced in them bear upon the issue here presented.
From those cases the following rules relating to the liability of shareholders of national banking associations may be deduced:
That the real owner of the shares of the capital stock of a national banking association may, in every case, be treated as a shareholder within the meaning of section 5151;
That if the owner transfers his shares to another person as collateral security for a debt due to the latter from such owner, and if, by the direction or with the knowledge of the pledgee, the shares are placed on the books of the association in such way as to imply that the pledgee is the real owner, then the'pledgee may be treated as a shareholder within the meaning of section 5151 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, and therefore liable upon the basis prescribed by that section for the contracts, debts and engagements of the association;
That if the real owner of the shares transfers them to another person, or causes them to be placed on the books of the association in the name of another person, with the intent simply to evade the responsibility imposed by section 5151 on shareholders of national banking associations, such owner may be treated, for the purposes of that section, as a shareholder, and liable as therein prescribed;
That if one receives shares of the stock of a national banking association as collateral security to him for a debt due from the owner, with power of attorney authorizing him to transfer the same on the books of the association, and being-unwilling to incur the responsibilities of a shareholder as prescribed by the statute, causes the shares to be transferred on such books to another, under an agreement that they are to be held as security for the debt due from the real owner to his creditor — the latter acting in good faith and for the pur- *620 posé only of securing, the payment of that debt without incurring the responsibility- of "a shareholder — he, the creditor, will not,.although the real owner may, be treated as a shareholder within the meаning of section 5151; and,
That the pledgee of personal property occupies towards the pledgor somewhat of a fiduciary relation, by virtue of which, lie- being a trustee to sell, it becomes his duty to exercise his right of sale for the benefit of the pledgor.
The present case differs from those cited in the important particular that the stock list of the bank gave information to all who examined it that the-State Loan and Trust Company was not the real or absolute owner of the shares in question, but held them only as “ pledgee ”; that there was no “ out and put” transfer of the stock, whereby the transferrer, as between him'and the transferee, parted with his interest; and that the real ownership remained with the pledgor, the pledgee aсquiring only a lien upon the stock to secure its debt.
In the case of
Finn
v. Brown,
Does the statute, in letter or spirit, require that the word “ pledgee,” appended to the name of the party to whom certificates 308 and 309 were issued, should be entirely ignored ? Is the holder of such certificates in no better, condition, in respect of liability as a shareholder, than if such list had imported absolute ownership in the transferee? The statute requires that there shall be kept, at all times, in th¿ office where the business of a national banking association is transacted, and subject, during business hours, to the inspection of shareholders and creditors of the association, as .well as of officers authorized to assess taxes under state authority., a full and correct list of the names and residences of .all the shareholders of the association, and of the number of shares held by each. Section 5210. Manifestly, one, if not the principal, object of this requirement, was to give creditors of the association, as well as state authorities, information as to the shareholders upon whom, if the association becomes insolvent, will rest the individual liability for its contracts, debts and engagements. Referring to this provision this court said, in
Waite
v.
Dowley,
It is true that'o'ne who does not in'fact invest his money in ■such shares, but who, although receiving them simply as collateral .security for debts or obligations, hdlds himself out on the books of the association as truе'owner, may be treated as the owner, and therefore liable to assessment, when the association becomes insolvent and goes into the hands of a-receiver. Bút •this is upon the ground that by allowing his name to appear upon the stock list as owner he represents that he is such owner; and he will not be permitted,' after the bank fails and when an assessment'^ made, to assume any "other position as against creditors. If, as between. creditors and the person assessed', -the latter is not held bound by that representation, the list of shareholders required to be kept for the inspection of creditors and others would lose most of its value.
•But this rule can have 'no just application when, as in this case, the creditors were informed- by that list that thе party to whom certificates were issued was not in fact, and did not assume to be, the owner of the shares represented by thenq but was and assumed to be only a pledgee having .no general property in- the thing pledged, but only a right, upon default, to sell in satisfaction of the pledgor’s obligation. Upon inspecting' the stock registry or any list of shareholders or of transfers, kept by the bank, creditors will know that they cannot regard a pledgee as the actual owner. If the certificates in question had been extended so as to give the name of the pledgor, it' would not be supposed. that, upon any principle- of justice," or upon grounds of public policy, the pledgee could have been held to the'liability imposed by section 5151 uрon shareholders. Bpt the liability-' being purely statutory, the result ought not to be different because of the circumstance' that the name of the pledgor was omitted from the certificates, since that which'did appear in them was sufficient to inform creditors that the State Loan and Trust' Company was only a pledgee, and by slight-diligence they could have ascertained the name of the pledgor.
It may be suggested .that if the pledgee is not held liable *623 as a shareholder, in respect of the shares of stock standing in its name as pledgee, then no one is liable.tq assessment as fhe owner of such stock. But it is a mistake to suppose that Haverinale and Collins ceased to be shareholders for the purposes of the liability imposed by section 5151. They remained, ■notwithstanding the pledge, the actual owners of the sto'clc, a right which they would have promptly asserted if the pledgee'had assumed to be the owner and had sold the stock, appropriating to itself all the proceeds of sale. The object-of the statute is not to be defeated by the mere forms of transactions between shareholders and their creditors. The courts will look at the relations of parties as'they actually are, or as, by reason of tlieir conduct, they must be assumed,to be for the protection of creditors. Congress did not say 'that those only should be regarded as shareholders, liable'for ■ the contracts, debts and engagements of the banking association, whose names appear on the stock, list, distinctly as shareholders. A mistake оr erron in keeping the official list of shareholders would not prevent creditors from holding liable all who were, in fact, the real owners of the stock, and as, such had invested money in the shares'of the association, As already indicated, those may be treated as shareholders, within the meaning'of section 5151, who are the real owners. of the stock, or who hold themselves out, or allow themselves to be held out, as owners in such way and under such circumstances as, upon principles- of fair dealing, will estop them, as against creditors, fro.nl claiming that they were not, in fact, owners.
It was under this- construction of the- statute that one was held liable as a shareholder who, in the belief that the bank was about to fail, and whose liability as a sharehоlder had’; equitably attached, colluslvely transferred his stock to an 'irresponsible person, in order to escape responsibility as a. shareholder. This was held to be a fraud upon the statute, and the transferrer was held, as between him and the creditors, as the real owner of the stock,, arid, therefore, liable, .although the transferee appeared on the stock registry as. the' shareholder. Bowden v. Johnson, above cited. Under the *624 same interpretation a corporation was treated as a shareholder. who held shares of stock only as collateral security, but who allowed its name to appear and remain on. the stock registry of the insolvent national bank association as owner, without anything indicating that it held such stock as collateral security. National Bank v. Case, abovе cited. So, in another case, it was held that the transferrers “ remained the owners of the stock, though registered in the name of' others, and pledged as collateral security for their debt.” Anderson v. Philadelphia Warehouse Co., above cited.
Our conclusion is that the. defendant in error cannot be regarded otherwise than as a pledgee of the stock in question, is not a shareholder within the meaning of section 5151. of the Revised Statutes, and is not, therefore, subject to the liability imposed upon- the shareholders of national banking associations by that section.
This view of the case makes it unnecessary to consider whether the State Loan and Trust Company, being a pledgee of the stock, was a “ trustee’’.within the meaning of section 5152, providing that “persons holding stock as executors, administrators, guardians or trustees shall not be personally subject to any liabilities as stockholders.”
The judgment is
Affirmed.
