The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
The present plaintiffs are the legal owners of the two shares on which the dividend is claimed. They were original subscribers and have a right to the dividend, unless the bank can show a right to retain it and appropriate it to their own use. They set up such a right under the statute incorporating the bank, and under a by-law made by the corporation. The general objection under the statute is grounded on the provision contained in it, "that the cap~taI stock of said bank shall not be sold or transferred, but shall be holden by the original subscribers thereto, for and during the period of one year from the time of passing this act." It appearing in the case that the plaintiffs had made a transfer of their two shares to Ball & Davis before the expiration of the year, and that Ball & Davis had assigned the same to the Provident Institution for Savings also within the year, for whose benefit this action is brought, it was considered by the Court of Common Pleas that both these transfers are void, and so that the action could not be maintained, notwithstanding the defendants had so far admitted the assignment to the Provident Institution as to receive of their agent the last instalment of 25 dollars on each share ; intimating to them only, that the transfer would not be valid for two or three months to come from the time this instalment was paid in ; which was on the 28th of September, 1825, the year not expiring until the 26th of February, 1826.
Certainly the transfers were not valid in law when they were made, and the bank could not legally then have issued certificates to the assignees, or have admitted them to be the owners on the books ; but we cannot discern why the assign inent did not equitably pass the property, as well as the indorsement of any paper not negotiable by law, the object of the legislature being to prevent a change of responsibility to the bank or the public, and to prevent speculation in the stock for a limited period; not to lock up this property against the creditors of stockholders, or to deprive them of the power of voluntarily paying their debts with it. The transfer, as we understand the statute, is not made null and void ; it is merely inoperative during the prohibited period ; so that the original
What fair or legal objection then can be made to the plaintiffs’ recovery of the dividends upon their shares, to the use of those to whom they have been equitably transferred ? There is no objection to the capacity of the plaintiffs, for they are the legal owners of the shares. Have the bank any lien or equitable interest to set up in defence ? They do in truth claim to hold these shares and the product of them, on account of a loan made to the plaintiffs of a sum beyond the value of the shares, by virtue of a by-law which subjects to a lien the stock of all members who shall owe any thing to the bank. We need not, in order to decide this case, go into the consideration of the validity of this by-law against any creditors of a stockholder, though it may be worth inquiry by the corporation, whether such a by-law can be of any avail except between them and the debtor.
But admitting the by-law to be operative under common circumstances, we think it ought not to avail in the present instance. The loan was made after notice by the Provident Institution of their claim to the shares, and after the defend
For the foregoing reasons we are all clear that the verdict must be set aside, and a new trial granted at the bar of this court.
See Sargent v. Essex Marine Railway Corp. 9 Pick. 204
See Plymouth Bank v. Bank of Norfolk, 10 Pick. 454.
