43 Conn. 139 | Conn. | 1875
In October, 1869, the plaintiff loaned to Charles F. Colt the sum of six hundred and twenty-five dollars, and took his note therefor. Said Colt and his wife, Lucie P. Colt, the defendant’s intestate, executed and delivered to the plaintiff a writing as follows:—“ I hereby pledge fifty shares of the stock of the Birmingham Axle Company, .with certificate No. 11 attached hereto, as security for the payment of a certain note drawn by Charles F. Colt in favor of Zenas M. Platt, dated this day, at six months, for six hundred and twenty-five dollars. I pledge also all my possessions, real or personal, now or hereafter, for the payment of said note. Birmingham, Oct. 28,1869.
Lucie P. Colt,
Chas. F. Colt.”
The certificate of stock therein referred to, being in the usual form, was delivered to the plaintiff. The plaintiff never caused the stock to be transferred to himself on the books of the corporation.
On the 9th day of April, 1872, Mrs. Colt was the owner, as appeared by the books of the corporation, of eighty-five shares of said stock, including the fifty shares so pledged to the plaintiff. On that day she sold and transferred to two other parties eighteen shares of the stock, concerning which no question arises. On the same day she transferred to the Birmingham Axle Company fifty-one shares of the stock, in con
The transfer to the company was made on the books of the corporation, but without the return of the certificate delivered to the plaintiff. The officers of the company however believed that Mrs. Colt still had the certificate in her possession, and they had no knowledge of the pledge or attempted pledge to the plaintiff.
The money thus loaned by the company was used by C. F. Colt, and not by Mrs. Colt, although the transaction was regarded as a loan to her. In Platt v. The Birmingham Axle Company, 41 Conn., 255, this court held that the claim of the Birmingham Axle Company upon the stock so pledged to the plaintiff was superior in equity to the claim of the plaintiff.
On the trial in the Court of Common Pleas the plaintiff claimed (hat the transaction of October 28th, 1869, was a sale of the stock to him, or of some interest therein, that the subsequent disposal of it to the corporation was wrongful as between Mrs. Colt and himself, and that he is now entitled to recover of her estate Ihe value of his interest in the stock. The defendant resisted this claim, and insisted that upon the facts stated the plaintiff had no such title to the stock as would enable him to maintain this action. The court sustained the plaintiff’s claim and rendered judgment in his favor.
Other questions were raised on the trial, but the view we take of the one above stated renders them immaterial.
The plaintiff assumes that the transaction of October 28th, 1369, was, in legal effect, a sale of the stock, or of some interest therein, and vested in him the legal title; and that the subsequent disposal of the stock was a wrongful act as against him, and that ho can waive the tort and sue the wife in assumpsit for the money received. This assumption is not well founded.
To what extent the plaintiff acquired an equitable interest as against Mrs. Colt is foreign to our present inquiry. We have no occasion to inquire whether, if the stock had remained in her hands, a court of equity would compel her to complete the title. He had no legal title, and such title as he had he lost by his neglect to give notice to the corporation, and take measures to have the record title transferred to him.
In the second place, there was no promise, express or implied, on which assumpsit can be maintained. There was no promise by Mrs. Colt to pay the plaintiff’s demand in the transaction by which the stock was pledged, and none is claimed; much less was there an agreement that the pledge should bo available, notwithstanding the plaintiff’s want of diligence. Had there been any such promise it is not easy to see how the wife could be bound by it. Nor is any express promise claimed from the transaction of April, 1872. All that can be said of that is that Mrs. Colt wrongfully sold stock, in which she knew the plaintiff had an equitable interest as security for a debt, and for which she received money or its equivalent. That doubtless was morally wrong; and it was
Express promises by a married woman are only binding when made concerning her separate estate, or pursuant to some statute authorizing them. No statute then or now in force would validate the promise claimed even if it had been express. Much less will the law imply and enforce such a contract. Ordinarily where one receives money belonging to another the law will imply a promise to pay it. In this case the money when received by the decedent did not belong to the plaintiff. Whatever title he had to the stock was of so precarious a nature that it was gone the instant the stock was sold and the title vested in the corporation. The money was received subsequently. The law will not continue the vague and inchoate equitable title which he had to the stock, through the sale, and transform it into a perfect legal title to the avails of that sale.
For these reasons we are all satisfied that the judgment of the court below was erroneous.
In this opinion the other judges concurred; except Foster, J., who did not sit.