after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
There being but little conflict in the testimony as to the actual facts, the question really is whether the- court should have submitted the case to the jury, or instructed- a verdict for the plaintiff.
. By Rev. Stat. 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;” and by sec. 5234, the receiver may, .upon order of the proper court, enforce this individual liability.
Most of the cases arising under this section have turned upon the question whether defendant was in fact the. owner of the shares, in this connection the following propositions may be considered as settled : ■
1. That liability may be established by allowing one’s name to appear upon the books of the corporation as owner, though in fact he be only a pledgee.
Pullman
v. Upton,
2. Stockholders of record are liable for unpaid installments, though in fact they may have parted with their stock, or held it for others.
Hawkins
v.
Glenn,
3. A mere pledgee, however, who receives from his debtor a ■transfer of shares, surrenders the certificate to the bank and takes out new ones in his own name, in .which he is described as “ pledgee,” and holds them afterwards in good faith, and as
*247
collateral security for the payment of his debt, is not subject. ■to personal liability as a shareholder.
Pauly
v.
State Loan & Trust Co.,
Three, cases in this court are specially pertinent to the one under consideration, and we have little more to' do than to point out the salient facts of each and determine by which one of them this case is controlled.
In
National Bank
v.
Case,
The case is distinguishable from the instant case by the fact that the stock was actually transferred to the bank upon the transfer books of the Crescent City Bank, which thus appeared as owner and that the subsequent transfer to Waldo was merely *248 colorable. There was also the further fact that the Crescent City Bank was in a failing'condition when the transfer to Waldo was made, and there was no reasonable doubt that the defendant Germania Bank knew it, and made the transfer to escape responsibility. In the present case the stock was never transferred to the defendant, and the transfer to Hand took place within two months of the time of the original pledge, when the Keystone Bank was supposed to be perfectly solvent, and remained so for more than a year thereafter when the assessment of twenty-five per cent was made, the bank continuing in business until June 29, 1897, more than six years after the transfer to Hand.
In
Anderson
v.
Philadelphia Warehouse Co.,
In
Pauly
v.
State Loan & Trust Co.,
There.is no doubt whatever that the defendant originally took blank transfers of the certificates of stock in question as security for its loan to the Delamaters; that-at that time the stock was worth its face value, $23,000; had paid dividends for twenty-seven years prior thereto, and was in good credit. To charge the defendant with liability as a shareholder it must be made to appear that it had either become the owner of the shares in fact, or had held itself out to be the owner, and thereby estopped itself to deny its liability as such. .
The first change in its attitude toward the stock took place within two months after the original pledge, and was caused by the failure of the Delamaters, which occurred within twenty days after the loan was made. ' The change consisted in sending back, January 10, 1891, the original certificates, and requesting the bank to transfer the shares to Hand, which was *250 done. Defendant evidently did not then intend to become the owner of the stock, as immediately after receiving notice of the failure of the Delamaters the vice president of -the company addressed a note to them, or their assignees, calling attention to the note and the pledge of the stock, and saying that if they were prepared to anticipate the payment of the-note and have the collateral returned, they would be glad to so arrange it; and in a further letter of May 5, 1891, to the Delamaters, he notified them that the note was secured by the Keystone Bank stock, and “if we cannot secure payment for the note and interest, I have to notify you that we shall proceed to sell the collateral at auction.” It also appears that on July 7, 1892, the vice president of the company addressed a letter to the auditor of the Delamater estate, notifying him of their claim against that estate upon the note for $15,000, and stating that the company held the shares of the Keystone Bank as collateral for the loan. Thereafter, and on March 30, 1893, the company received a dividend of $795.60, to which it was undoubtedly entitled as pledgee.
Even so late as 1894 the vice president of the defendant company addressed a note to the Keystone Bank, • requesting information regarding their business; -whether there had been any sales of the stock arid at what price, and saying that “ as we have a loan of $22,000 depending upon the value of 172J shares, we desire the above information.” It is true that the defendant in 1892 paid an assessment of $5750 upon this stock, but the amount was charged to the Delamaters as an additional advance, and was evidently paid to save its interest in the stock from forfeiture. Rev. Stat. sec. 5205 as amended in 1876, 19 Stat. 64. It is not easy to see how the defendant could have done otherwise than it did without prejudice to its own rights, as well as to the rights of the assignees of the pledgors. -
It is also evident that the assignees of the Delamaters treated the interest of the defendant in the stock as a mere pledge, since in their account filed in the Court of Common Pleas of Crawford County, July 13,1896, they charge themselves in the account as follows : “Equities in stocks and bonds, pledged as collateral on loan unadjusted, as follows : (a) $23,000, stock of *251 the Keystone National Bank of Erie, pledged for a loan of $15,000, appraised at $8000.” Proof was offered that in this •account the assignees had made another entry, “ said stock having been converted by the holder of • the note, and said stock having been assessed to the amount of 25 per cent of its face value, did not sell for enough to pay the debt for which it was pledged.” This memorandum was excluded, and properly so, by the court below, inasmuch as it was a mere assertion of fact made by these assignees without the knowledge of the defendant. The company could not be bound by a statement thus made by these assignees without its knowledge or acquiescence. Again, it was obviously untrue, as the stock had never been sold. Evidently all that was intended by the word “ converted” was that the stock was not worth enough “ to pay the debt for which it was pledged.” There can be no doubt that defendant would have been willing at any time to surrender the stock upon payment of the debt, and that it retained it simply because it was forced to do so.
It is also true that a number of letters were written during the time the defendant held possession of its certificates, in which it made inquiries as to the value of the stock, the number of sales made, and spoke of itself as holding or owning the stock which it desired to sell, and that Hand • once or twice voted the shares by proxy; but the. bank clearly could not have been misled, as the nature of such ownership was shown in the letter of April 4, 1894, in which they , spoke of a loan of $22,000 depending upon the value of 1Y2| shares, and repeatedly thereafter, and as late as April, 189Y, said they were anxious to sell this stock “ to close an account ” for which it was collateral.
If . such representations had been made either by a formal éntry upon the books of the bank or to the public, or to any one who could have been prejudiced by them, defendant might be held to be estopped, but as they were made to officers of the bank, who understood perfectly the. capacity in which the defendant retained the.stock, it was properly held to be a question for the jury.
Plaintiff also offered to show in the stock ledger of the *252 bank over the name .of W. W. Hand, in an account opened with him at the request of the defendant, a pencil memorandum at the top of the page in these words: “ Fidelity Trust and Safe Deposit Company, Philadelphia.” As it does not appear who made this memorandum, when or for what purpose it was made, or what it was intended, to indicate, it was properly excluded from the consideration of the jury. It was probably explanatory of the fact that correspondence with regard to Hand’s account was kept up with the defendant company. It had no tendency, however, to show anything inconsistent with' defendant’s position as pledgee of the --stock. As the stock stood in Hand’s name, the entry had no tendency to prove ownership in another. Carey v. Williams, 79 Fed. Rep. 906; Sigua Iron Co. v. Greene, 104 Fed. Rep. 854.
The fact that the certificates were put in the name of Hand, though calculated upon its face to awaken suspicion, wrought no material change in the situation. If defendant were in fact the owner of the shares, it could not avoid liability by listing them in the name of another.
National Bank
v.
Case,
The case then really turned upon the actual ownership of the shares, and this question was properly left to the jury as one of fact. Although the construction of written instruments is one
*253
for the court, where the case turns upon the proper conclusions' to be drawn from a series of letters, particularly of a commercial character, • taken in connection with other facts and circumstances, it is one which is properly referred to a jury.
Brown
v.
McGran,
This case could only have been withdrawn from the jury upon the theory that, taking all the testimony together, there could be but one reasonable interpretation put upon the conduct of the defendant with respect to these certificates. Such, in our opinion, is not the case. The fact undoubtedly was that the *254 defendant did not intend to impose upon itself the statutory-liability of a shareholder, and considering that it had not only lost its original debt of $15,000 (less a small dividend) by the failure of the Delamaters, as well as the additional assessment of $5750 paid to save the shares from forfeiture, that there was no evidence of fraud or double dealing in its conduct,, and that its liability was purely a technical one, it was not unnatural for the jury to require that such liability- should be clearly established, before imposing upon it an additional burden of $17,250, for which it had received no possible consideration.'
Some stress is laid by the plaintiff upon the fact that neither the Delamaters nor their assignees ever. gave their consent to the transfer of the stock to Hand, but as the power of attorney originally given upon the deposit of the stock expressly authorized such transfer, and the rights of the defendant could only be protected in that way, there is no force in the-objection, particularly in view of the fact that neither the Delamaters nor their assignees complained of such transfer. Being an act which it was authorized to take as pledgee, it cannot be made reponsible’as owner therefor. .
There was no error in the action of the Court of Appeals, and its judgment is therefore
Affirmed.
