Bird v. Real Estate Trust Co.

2 Balt. C. Rep. 27
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedApril 19, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Balt. C. Rep. 27 (Bird v. Real Estate Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bird v. Real Estate Trust Co., 2 Balt. C. Rep. 27 (Md. Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

STOCKBRIDGE, J.—

This case presents three questions for determination. The first of these is, was tlie plaintiff entitled to have transferred to him the certificate for fifty shares of the defendant company on the 10th day of January, of this year, when the request therefor was made by him? The defendant professes its willingness to make the transfer as of the jjresent time, but denies the right of the plaintiff to have an assignment as of that date. Mr. Brooks, the original subscriber for the stock, paid the first assessment of fifty per cent, i hereon about the 1st day of December, and had received from the company a certificate, which, upon its face, declared that lie was entitled to fifty shares of its stock, paid, and that the remainder should he payable at such times and on such conditions as the Board of Directors might prescribe, and that upon such payment being made a full paid certificate would be issued. Then follows a separate sentence in these words; “Transferable only on the books of the company.”

[28]*28Apparently the company had no bylaws regulating the transferability of its stock, at any rate, none are mentioned in the evidence, and there is nothing upon the face of the certificate to suggest that there were any such. In behalf of the company it is urged that the certificate in question was not a negotiable instrument and that there was some understanding among the organizers or directors of the company that the certificates that they had issued should not be transferable. The evidence does not bear out this contention. All that is shown is that there had been an agreement between somebody, that “no transfer should be made except under the wording of the certificate” (testimony J. H. Ferguson, 3 Ans.).

It only remains therefore to pass upon the wording of the certificate itself. It is true that the certificates of stock are generally spoken of as non-negotiable, but they are often characterized as quasi negotiable, as has been done by our Court of Appeals in Brandt vs. Ehlen, 59 Md. 25.

Exactly what may be a correct definition of the expression “quasi negotiable,” is not easy to say, but from the adjudicated cases it would seem that as to certificates of stock which have been lost or stolen, the law of negotiable instruments has no application, but that in all, or practically all other respects, certificates of stock are deemed negotiable, unless otherwise specified upon the paper itself. The status is clearly stated by Justice Dwight, in the case of Holbrook vs. The New Jersey Zinc Co., 57 N. Y. 22, when he says: “It cannot now be denied that if a corporation having power to issue stock certificates does in fact issue such certificates, in which it affirms that a designated person is entitled to a certain number of shares of stock, it thereby holds out to persons who deal in good faith with the person named in the certificate, that he is an owner, and has capacity to transfer its shares. This proposition does not rest on any view of the negotiability of stock, but on general principles. The certificate itself must be regarded as a continuing affirmation of the ownership in the person therein named, and his power over the stock until it is withdrawn in some manner recognized by law.”

In the present case there was nothing upon the certificate to suggest that the stock was not transferable or assignable'; on the contrary, it was distinctly stated that it was transferable on the books of the company, thus holding out to all the world that there was no bar in the way of its free transmission by any holder at any time he saw fit. Now, while Courts have always upheld any reasonable regulation affecting the transferability of stock, that has never been extended so as to embrace an arbitrary refusal to transfer on the books of the company. Had it been the design or intention of the stockholders or directors of this company that the stock should not have been transferable until it was fully paid up, or within certain specified times, as, for exaanple, a limited time preceding a date when dividends, if any, were to be declared, it would have been perfectly simple to have accomplished that result by apt words on the face of the certificate, but no such language anywhere appears.

The stock in question had been purchased by Mr. Bird from Mr. Brooks, through a stock broker, in the usual method, for full value on the 10th of December, and an assignment of it in blank had been endorsed thereon at the place provided by the company, and on the 10th of January, after ineffectual attempt had been made by the broker to have the transfer made upon the books of the company, Mr. Bird, the assignee, called in person upon the president of the company, and made his verbal demand for the transfer which was refused. This appears from the correspondence, filed as exhibits in this case. He subsequently made a formal written demand foi the transfer on the 20th, and was agair refused. .This was, however, unnecessary, as the prior verbal demand was sufficient, and the stock should have been transferred upon that date. The plaintiff is therefore entitled to maintain this bill, and to have the stock represented by said certificate No. 25 transferred to him, as of the date of January 10th, 1899.

The second question presented is: What rights, if any, accrued to the plaintiff by reason of his purchase of the fifty shares, in connection with the increase of the stock, which was agreed to by the stockholders of the company on the 20th of January?

[29]*29As to what was the effect of the assignment in blank upon the certificate, there is some difference in opinion. In New York, in the case of McNeil vs. 10th National Bank, 46 N. Y. 325, it is held that the assignment and delivery of the certificate transferred not only the equitable, but the full legal title, and that the assignee is entitled to all rights and subject to all liabilities incident to the ownership. Other Courts, however, take the view that the full legal title to the stock does not become vested until transfer actually made upon the books of the corporation. The cases which adopt this doctrine agree, however, that the entire equitable title is vested in the assignee, and that the transfer on the books is simply the vesting of a legal title in that, the beneficial title to which was already vested in the assignee. Under this class of cases had Mr. Bird made no application for the transfer of the stock prior to the 20th of January, a condition would be presented which does not arise in this case. He had made a request for the transfer as early as January 10th and was refused, and the corporation can not be heard to set up its own tortious refusal to transfer the stock as a bar to the assertion by Mr. Bird of his rights as owner of that of which he had the entire equitable title, and only failed of having a legal title because of the wrongful act of the company. But it is suggested that by reason of a waiver to any rights in any increase in the stock of the company which might be made, there had arisen an equity as between Mr. Brooks and the company, which extended to any vendee • of his, which would operate to exclude the plaintiff from claiming those rights.

The supposed waiver of Mr. Brooks was signed about the 1st of November. At that date Mr. Brooks was not the owner of any stock in the defendant company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Balt. C. Rep. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bird-v-real-estate-trust-co-mdcirctctbalt-1899.