48 Ind. App. 309 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1911
Appellant was defendant and appellee plaintiff in the court below. The suit was brought in equity to cancel a transfer of 750 shares of stock of appellant corporation, certificates of which, numbered nineteen, twenty-seven, thirty-five, thirty-nine, forty-five and forty-eight, were assigned by Charles H. Reed, former trustee of the township, to John C. Davie, attorney, delivered by Reed to Nathan G. Swails for said Davie, or for M. E. Ingalls, and afterwards were surrendered to appellant, whereupon new certificates were issued and the shares transferred on the books of the corporation to J. D. Layng. Besides asking that said assignment be declared invalid, appellee also prayed that appellant be ordered to re-register said shares on its books in the name of appellee, and to issue new certificates therefor. The sum of $150 received by Reed as part consideration for the assignment was paid into court. Appellee offered to pay to appellant $10, alleged to be the balance of said consideration.
The original complaint was filed in the Decatur Circuit Court with Charles H. Reed, Dwight W. Pardee, John C. Davie and Nathan B. Swails joined with appellant as parties defendant. Before the cause was put at issue John C. Davie perfected a change of venue to the Bartholomew Circuit Court, where all the proceedings on which error is assigned took place. The complaint was thrice amended, and as it finally stands in the record appellant is the only defendant.
A demurrer to the amended complaint was filed, which assigns the following statutory grounds: (1) The plaintiff has not legal capacity to sue. (2) There is a defect of parties plaintiff. (3) Said amended complaint does not
Said demurrer was overruled, an answer in denial was filed, and upon a trial by the court a finding was made for appellee.
A decree was entered that appellee is the owner of said 750 shares of stock as represented by certificates numbered nineteen, twenty-seven, thirty-five, thirty-nine, forty-five and forty-eight; that appellant, by its secretary, assign and deliver said certificates to appellee, and register the stock in its books in the name of appellee; that appellee recover costs; that upon compliance by appellant with the judgment, as aforesaid, appellee pay to appellant $10 for its school supplies, and that the clerk of the court pay to appellant the sum of $150, now held as a tender.
The errors assigned are the overruling of the demurrer to the amended complaint, and of appellant’s motion for a new trial. The second of these has been waived by failure to discuss it.
The third and fourth grounds for demurrer have been argued, and, better to consider them, we set forth the complaint in full, omitting the caption.
"The plaintiff, for amended complaint, says: That said plaintiff is a political division of said State for township purposes; that defendant is a corporation organized and existing under and pursuant to the laws of the State of Indiana for railroad purposes, and domiciled therein, with a line of railroad extending from the town of Yernon, into and through the city of Greensburg, in the county of Decatur and State aforesaid, to the city of Rushville, in said State, with the principal office at Greensburg; that said company held its last annual election of officers in said city; that William W. Hamilton is one of the directors of said company, and resides in Decatur county, Indiana; that Dwight W. Pardee is the duly acting secretary of said cor
Appellant, in arguing that the complaint does not contain facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, first announces the elementary propositions that where relief is sought in a court of equity, the complaint must contain facts showing that equity has jurisdiction, and that equity will not relieve if there is an adequate remedy at law. It then claims that in cases where shares of stock have been wrongfully or negligently transferred by a corporation, the injured stockholder has an adequate remedy at law. It further urges that nothing appears in appellee’s amended complaint to indicate that the stock sought to be recovered has any value whatever, and that if the shares are worthless appellee ought not to recover, for equity does not concern itself with trifles.
The Indiana case most resembling the present one, is that of Weyer v. Second Nat. Bank (1877), 57 Ind. 198, and appellee’s counsel inform the court that on the complaint in that ease the complaint in the present case is based. In that ease an executor had made a void sale of shares of stock in a bank. After his removal for insolvency, his successor brought suit against the bank and the purchaser to have such sale and transfer set aside, and to compel the issuance to him, as executor, of a certificate of such stock, or to recover the value thereof. The complaint was held sufficient as stating a cause of action against each defendant. There is substantially but one difference between the complaint in the case cited and this one. The complaint in the case cited contained a prayer asking for the reissuance of a certificate, or, if that could not be done, for a judgment for the value of the stock. The prayer in the present case is for cancelation of the assignment and reissuance of the certificate.
Thompson, in his work on corporations, states that “Shares of stock, when the subject of litigation, differ in so far as injunctive relief is concerned from ordinary personal property, that the equitable remedy is regarded as more beneficial and complete than any the law can give. When the proper officers refuse on demand to issue a certificate of stock to a person entitled thereto, he may enforce the issue and delivery of such certificates by a suit in equity. * * * The owner of stock sold under a void order has his remedy in equity to have the certificates issued under such void sale surrendered and canceled. * * * A transferee whose demand for a transfer upon the books of the corporation has been refused, has the choice of either of two remedies. If he prefers to have an interest in the corporation and hold his stock as an investment he may * * * proceed by a suit in equity to compel a. transfer on the books of the
In the case of Westminster Nat. Bank v. New England Electrical Works (1906), 73 N. H. 465, 62 Atl. 971, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 551, 111 Am. St. 637, the court said in words applicable to the present ease: “To deny him relief by specific performance, upon the ground that he could recover damages at law, would be, in effect, to compel him to sell what he already owns at such a price as a jury might think it was worth.”
Additional reasons why such circumstances call for equitable relief are that shares of stock in a certain corporation are frequently not so easily obtained on the market that money damages can be said to be an adequate remedy where the possession of the shares is desired, and that shares often have a peculiar value to certain persons who wish them for the power they will give in controlling a corporation. These different considerations have influenced the courts, until the weight of authority holds that a suit in equity will lie against a corporation for the transfer of stock on its books.
In the present case there is yet stronger ground for equitable relief than if appellee had purchased stock, and the corporation had refused to transfer it on its books, for in this case the title of the property has never passed from appellee; but by a wrongful act of its agent it was deprived of the possession of property which it had held for a long time. These circumstances afford reasons why appellee, if it desires possession of its property, should not be compelled to accept money damages for its injury.
The court in the case of Read v. Cumberland Tel., etc. Co. (1894), 93 Tenn. 482, 27 S. W. 660, holds that if a corpo
This contention is effectually disposed of by the case of Walker v. Bement (1911), — Ind. —. The court said: “The only objection seriously urged against the complaint is that it does not contain any averment that the stock described in
The averment of the par value of the stock in the case at bar is a sufficient averment of value.
The complaint is sufficient, and no other error having been relied on for reversal of the cause, the judgment is affirmed.