115 Mo. App. 685 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
(after stating the facts). — The petition in this case is in the nature of a bill in equity and the
One of the incidents pertaining to the ownership of shares of stock in an incorporated company is the right to freely sell and dispose of them. This right is rather strictly maintained by the courts against restrictions imposed in the by-laws of corporations; though reasonable by-laws to regulate the mode of transferring shares of stock are not ignored. [The Chouteau Spring Co. v. Harris, 20 Mo. 382; Moore v. Bank of Commerce, 52 Mo. 377; Helliwell, Stock and Stockholders, sec. 164.] An assignee of shares ordinarily has the right to have them transferred into his name on the books of the company, and a new certificate issued to him. [Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. Richards, 6 Mo. App. 454, 74 Mo. 77; Spreckels v. Bank, 113 Calif. 272; Johnston v. Laflin, 103 U. S. 800.] In behalf of all parties concerned, it is desirable that the actual owners of the stock of a company should be shown to be the owners on the books. Officers can thereby readily ascertain to whom the company’s dividends should be paid and notices of corporate meetings given; the business public, any member of which may have occasion to levy process on the shares of a member, may more conveniently learn who owns the stock and the owner himself is given his full rights to vote for directors and receive dividends and is not relieved from the liabilities of a shareholder. The defense to the present action is that Senn is not a bonafide owner of the shares, but holds for DeVoigne pursuant to an assignment made to relieve the shares from
The principles of law we have stated are to be applied to the facts of the case at bar. In making the application, we must remember that the right of an actual owner of stock, whether acquired by purchase or by gift, to have his shares registered, is, from considerations of public policy, very jealously guarded. To defeat the right in a given case it ought to be shown that the pretended owner of the shares is not their real owner; or clearly shown, at least, that he is seeking the transfer for a purpose whose accomplishment is possible and which is so iniquitous that a court of equity will decline to aid it. We have found no instance wherein the court refused to compel a transfer when the petitioner actually owned the stock, on the ground that his object was bad, except when the object was to institute litigation for the benefit of third parties; and-no instance
Therefore, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded with the direction to enter the decree in that form in plaintiff’s favor.