118 So. 2d 867 | Miss. | 1960
Mrs. Willie E. Smith, a resident of Grenada County, Mississippi, died testate in June, 1958. The beneficiaries under her will are the appellants here and are referred
After Mrs. Smith died in June 1958, and on August 1, 1958, Miss Evans died testate and her will was probated in Hot Springs, Arkansas.
An issue was made up in the estate proceedings of the Smith estate to determine ownership of the certificates of stock. The beneficiaries under the Smith will contended that the certificates were the property of Mrs. Smith at the time of her death. The executor of the Evans’ estate and the beneficiary under the Evans’ will contended that Miss Evans owned the certificates.
The chancellor rendered an able opinion in which he analyzed the evidence and found that Miss Evans had not parted with title to the certificates of
The chancellor was amply supported by the proof in his finding that Miss Evans never intended to part with title to the stock certificates and that Mrs. Smith recognized the title of Miss Evans.
Appellants, the beneficiaries under the Smith will, contend that under the Uniform Stock Transfer Act, Section 5359-01, et seq., Mississippi Code of 1942, the possession of the certificates by Mrs. Smith with Miss Evans ’ endorsements thereon in blank constituted a complete and valid transfer of title.
The Uniform Stock Transfer Act was enacted in this State in 1946 as Chapter 222, Laws of 1946. The Act was titled, “An Act to make uniform the law for transfer of shares of stock in a corporation.” We have no decisions construing the Act. A helpful collection of cases from other states construing identical or similar acts is found in Uniform Laws Annotated, Volume 6. In addition to the matter of uniformity, the main purposes of the Uniform Stock Transfer Act are: (1) To make certificates of stock stand as the physical representative of the stock itself to the fullest extent possible, and not as mere evidence of stock. Mills v. Jacobs, 333 Pa. 231, 4 A. 2d 152; Fuller v. Ostruske, 48 Wash. 2d 802, 296 P.
When Miss Evans entrusted Mrs. Smith with the certificates of stock with the former’s endorsement thereon in blank, Mrs Smith was clothed with such indicia of ownership under the Uniform Stock Transfer Act that an unauthorized sale of such certificates to an innocent purchaser for value would have bound Miss Evans as between her and the innocent purchaser. There are no innocent purchasers involved in this case. The Act does not determine any right as between a transferor and a transferee of certificates of stock where no innocent purchaser is involved. The Act does not purport to make bare possession of the certificate endorsed in blank legal ownership for all purposes. Leff v. Kaufman’s (Pa.), 20 A. 2d 786. Equities in favor of the transferor are undisturbed by the Act save where the rights of innocent purchasers intervene. Cf. Conrad v. Olds (Ind.), 37 N. E. 2d 297; Pardy v. Mayerstein (Ind.), 47 N. E. 2d 315; Manna v. Pirozzi (N. J.), 130 A. 2d 55.
We conclude that the Uniform Stock Transfer Act has no application to this case.
Affirmed.