143 Wis. 427 | Wis. | 1910
Sec. 1751, Stats. (1898), provides that “The delivery of a stock certificate of a corporation to a bona fide purchaser or pledgee for value, together with a written transfer of the same signed by the owner of the certificate, his attorney or legal representative shall be a sufficient delivery to transfer the title as against all persons,” subject to some restriction, not material to this case. See. 1752 provides that, upon its appearing to the court, “by affidavit or otherwise, that the secretary or other proper officer of any corporation has, upon proper demand, neglected or refused for two days to transfer on the stock books of” a “corporation any stock which it is his duty to transfer,” proceedings to determine the right of the matter shall be had as indicated, and that unless the alleged defaulting officer shall satisfy the court that the stock should not be transferred, it “shall order such transfer to be made by said secretary.”
It will be seen from the foregoing, in connection with the statement of facts, that respondent’s affidavit required the court to cite appellant, as was done, to show cause why he should not transfer the stock, and if his affidavit did not cleai'ly state facts justifying him in his refusal to make the transfer, the order coercing him to that end necessarily followed.
It is suggested that the affidavit on the one side was in the nature of a complaint and the affidavit upon the other in the nature of an answer, and that, since the latter put the material allegations of the former in issue, it was error for the court to decide in respondent’s favor in the absence of evidence other than her affidavit.
The statute does not prescribe any method of trying such a controversy. It simply provides a method of making a case by affidavit on the one side and that it shall prevail, unless satisfactorily disproved by the adverse party. Doubtless the court was competent to decide the matter upon the affidavits or to receive evidence from either side, had any been offered,
The statute contemplates that the opposing affidavit shall be viewed in the nature of a pleading and as evidence as well and ■that tbe court shall weigh the probabilities appearing thereby •and decide accordingly, the burden of proof being on the one 'refusing to transfer the stock.
Doubtless if appellant had offered to support his -affidavit by evidence the court would have permitted it. He did not take that course. He submitted the case on the two affidavits.
From.the foregoing it appears that the decision of the trial ■court must be sustained, if there was any reasonable ground for holding that appellant’s affidavit did not satisfactorily meet the case made by respondent’s affidavit. The allegations in the latter were positive and ample. At the very best, if the .allegations of appellant’s affidavit had beén likewise positive and ample, there would have been merely the oath of one per-son opposed to that of another, with still, perhaps, some opportunity in the surrounding circumstances to hold that the showing on appellant’s part was not satisfactory. But the affidavit of appellant was in fact evasive. -While it contained words of denial as to some of the things having occurred, mentioned in respondent’s affidavit, precisely as alleged, it left room for belief at some points, and suggested very .strongly in others, that the very things referred to did occur substantially as claimed and that it was the duty of appellant "to make the formal transfer of the stock on the corporate "books.
The idea is conveyed by appellant’s affidavit that if there were a refusal to transfer the stock, it wks justifiable because he was absent from where the stock books were kept; that it 'was therefore not convenient to then act in the matter; and for 'the further reasons that the president was absent and it was necessary to have him sign the new certificate. But there is no showing that any such excuse was made to respondent.
On the whole, there was ample room, it seems, from the-character of appellant’s affidavit, for the court to believe that the allegations of respondent’s affidavit were true; that a demand for a transfer at the corporate office, where the books were at hand, was. unnecessary, since appellant was bent on obstructing respondent’s purpose to have the transfer made till he could secure a levy on the stock for his own private purposes.
Doubtless appellant thought that if he could obtain the levy before an actual transfer of the stock on the corporate books was made, the sale of the stock to respondent, if one had occurred, would thereby be superseded. That seems to have been his state of mind and to explain his movements consistent with everything having been done as respondent claims,, entitling her to have the stock transferred;
As we have seen, when respondent obtained possession of' the stock certificates for value, duly assigned to her in writing, she was the owner as against any claim of an attaching creditor of her assignor. If she had not obtained such possession before the first visit but did before the last one and prior to-the attachment, that was sufficient. The mere fact that the-levy antedated the second visit was not of itself any justification for refusing to make the transfer. It follows that the-order appealed from must be affirmed.
By the Gowrt. — So ordered.