117 Minn. 124 | Minn. | 1912
This action was brought to determine the ownership of shares of stock in the defendant Greene Cananea Copper Company, a corporation of this state. The defendants Hamlin, Nickerson & Company claimed the share certificate evidencing the stock, and denied plaintiff’s right thereto. The trial resulted in findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of plaintiff. Hamlin, Nickerson & Company moved the court for amended findings, and, in case of a denial of such motion, for a new trial. An order denying both motions was made. From the order this appeal was taken.
The facts in the main are these: On May 12, 1909, plaintiff held and owned a share certificate in the Greene Cananea Copper Company, issued in his name and bearing the number A4708. He then borrowed from the First National Bank of Ironwood, Michigan, $700, giving his promissory note, due in four months, to the bank, and as security pledging the certificate in suit and two similar certificates in other corporations. When so pledged, the certificates were indorsed in blank by plaintiff and attached to the note. The note described the certificates pledged, and authorized the president or cashier of the bank, in case of default, to sell and apply the proceeds to the payment of the note. Elvin T. Larson was then cashier of the bank and managed its business, assisted by the other officers thereof.
Plaintiff did not discover that the pledged certificates had passed out of the possession of the pledgee till July 1, 1909, and on the ninth day of that month he notified the Greene Cananea Copper Company and its transfer agent in New York City of the loss. Thereafter plaintiff tendered payment of the note to the receiver of the bank at the proper time and demanded the return of the certificates pledged; but the receiver had neither note nor certificates under his control. The defendants Hamlin, Nickerson & Company, without notice of plaintiff’s rights, bought in open market the certificate involved in this suit, in good faith, and at full market price.
The court also found that the cashier, Larson, stole this certificate from the bank, and that plaintiff’s act in pledging it with the bank, indorsed in blank, was not negligence, nor was he negligent after discovering its loss. And the court' refused to find, as requested by appellants, that the disposal of the certificate was the unauthorized act of the bank itself, or that plaintiff was estopped from asserting title to the certificate.
If the sale of this certificate of stock was the act of the bank, the appellants should prevail; for the weight of authority is that where, by a wrongful or unauthorized act, two innocent persons have been placed in a situation where a loss must be borne by one of them, it falls on the one who first trusted the wrongdoer and put in his hands the means of inflicting the loss. Scollans v. Rollins, 179 Mass. 346,
Larson, prior to May 17, 1909, was a defaulter. He had depleted the funds of the bank by stealing or embezzling large amounts. In an attempt to hide or cover these defalcations, during an expected visit of the bank examiner, these stock certificates were purloined and disposed of by Larson, and the proceeds turned into the bank’s funds. ' The note of plaintiff was not in the bank, but was found at the office of another concern managed by Larson. The broker did not have the transaction in regard to the sale of the certificates at the bank, and did not understand that he acted for the bank. The circumstance that Larson had previously stolen large amounts from the bank, and by the theft of this certificate and a large number of others obtained funds which he caused to be turned over to the bank to cover up the prior thefts, does not change the nature of his last offense. Plaintiff dealt with the bank, not with Larson. He intrusted the certificate to the possession of the bank. He authorized no one but the bank to sell or deliver it on any condition. There is no evidence that the bank would have been in need of funds, bul for Larson’s thefts and defalcation.
The chief contention of appellants is that plaintiff, by pledging the certificate, indorsed in blank, and by the authority given in the note to the cashier to sell in case of default, is now estopped from asserting title as against an innocent good-faith purchaser for value. The only act of plaintiff upon which appellants may claim that they relied in making the purchase is the blank indorsement of the certificate. But the law is that the blank indorsement on a share certificate of stock does not, in itself, estop an owner from claiming it, in a case where it has been stolen from him and has passed into the hands of an innocent holder for value. A certificate representing shares of stock is not negotiable paper in the sense that the title transferred
In tbe present case it is found that, in pledging tbe certificate indorsed in blank with tbe bank, plaintiff was not negligent; hence no estoppel on that ground. Tbe finding cannot well be challenged. Tbe bank was a national bank in good standing. Pledging stock certificates as security for loans at banks is so common and extensive in tbe business world that no one questions tbe care and prudence of tbe one who thus trusts tbe possession of bis property to a .going bank. In order to make such a pledge available, it is customary, and perhaps necessary, to have certificates indorsed. But it is claimed that by pledging tbe certificate plaintiff intrusted its possession to tbe officers of tbe bank, because tbe bank could exercise control over the property only through its officers or servants. Therefore, having placed the certificate in tbe bank, where, of course, its ■cashier had access to it, tbe contention is plaintiff trusted to bis honesty, and, tbe cashier having abused tbis confidence, plaintiff, and not appellants, must bear tbe loss.
We are cited to no case which bolds that, where property of tbis kind has been intrusted to a corporation for safe keeping, theft thereof by any of its officers or servants will estop the owner from asserting title thereto as against tbe title derived through tbe thief by an innocent good-faitb purchaser for value. We have already adverted to tbe fact that plaintiff dealt with and trusted tbe bank — not any of its officers.* And it would seem a reasonable view that, unless the •disposition of such property be tbe act of tbe corporation, tbe officer or agent concerned in such disposition may be regarded as an inter-meddler and outsider.
We do not consider that tbe legal principles announced in tbe
O’Neil v. Wolcott Mining Co., 174 Fed. 527, 98 C. C. A. 309, 27 L.R.A.(N.S.) 200, was a case where a corporation refused to transfer stock upon the claim of Wolcott that thirteen years before he had lost it. The evidence did not tend to show that the certificates of shares plaintiff had bought were the ones Wolcott lost, or that he had lost any.
In Beckwith v. Galice, supra, Beckwith was induced by the deception of one Levy to intrust the possession of stock certificates to a fictitious bank organzied by Levy and others for fraudulent purposes, and the decision was placed on the ground that Beckwith intended to give the so-called bank power to dispose of the certificates; hence possession of the certificates was obtained by fraud, and not by common-law theft, and Beckwith was estopped.
In Shattuck v. American, Shattuck left the certificates of stock in the safe of his clients, a partnership of stockbrokers. One of the partners abstracted and pledged the certificates, and it was held Shattuck was estopped, because, “where one, by his own act, arms another with power to act for him, he who so armed the wrongdoer must suffer for the consequences of the wrongdoing.”
We may add to the authorities already cited, which all appear to sustain plaintiff’s position, Hall v. Wagner, 111 App. Div. 70, 97 N. Y. Supp. 570, and Farmers v. Diebold, 66 Oh. St. 367, 64 N. E. 518, 58 L.R.A. 620, 90 Am. St. 586.
We are also invited to hold, in effect, that share certificates of stock are negotiable instruments, and hence an innocent good-faith purchaser for value takes title as against the true owner, who has been deprived of possession by theft, because it is claimed that there was proven a custom among banks and brokers for certificates of stock with the transfer on the back indorsed in blank to pass from hand to hand without inquiry, the same as negotiable paper. A custom which runs counter to the settled and established law is not to be adopted by the courts. If a crying demand exists in the business
We are of the opinion that the trial court made proper findings, and that there was no error in refusing the motion for amended findings, or in denying a new trial.
The order is affirmed.