Capitol Hill Undertaking Co. v. Render

1931 OK 71, 299 P. 854, 149 Okla. 132, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 10, 1931
Docket19828
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1931 OK 71 (Capitol Hill Undertaking Co. v. Render) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capitol Hill Undertaking Co. v. Render, 1931 OK 71, 299 P. 854, 149 Okla. 132, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 201 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

ANDREWS, J.

The defendant in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, recovered a judgment in the district court of Oklahoma county against the plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as defendant, to the effect that the defendant, within ten days from the date of the judgment, “* * * issue and deliver to the plaintiff a certificate for. 28 shares of its capital stock- out of the unissued portion of such capital stock and deliver the same to plaintiff, and in the event that defendant fails, refuses or neglects to issue said certificate for 23 shares of capital stock and deliver same to plaintiff within ten days from March 20, 192g, then it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that plaintiff do have and recover of defendant the sum of $2,300 with interest thereon from the 11th day of April, 1927, at 6 per cent, per annum, for which let execution issue.” By permission of the court in the order overruling defendant’s motion for new trial the defendant was permitted to deposit with the court clerk a certificate for 23 shares of its capital stock, the same to abide the result of the appeal of the defendant from the judgment.

The plaintiff was the wife of S. P. Render, who, it is admitted, was her agent. She was the owner of 23 shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation which was represented by stock certificates held by her. Printed on the backs of those certificates were forms of assignment and power of attorney similar to those commonly used for the transfer of shares of stock.

S. P. Render signed those blanks “S. P. Render” for his wife, the plaintiff, and delivered the certificates of shares with the blanks thereon so signed, together with certain certificates of shares of his own, to C. P. Beauchamp. G. P. Beauchamp completed the assignments and powers of attorney by filling them out in his or u name. He then caused the certificates of shares to be canceled by the corporation and new certificates to be issued to him in his own name.

*134 Thereafter the plaintiff demanded of the defendant that the certificates delivered by1 S. P. Render be canceled and that new certificates be executed and delivered to her. The corporation refused to, comply with that demand and thereupon the plaintiff instituted this suit. I

The defendant was compelled -to rely largely upon books and records of the corporation, as it was deprived of the testimony of Beauchamp by reason of his disappearance. The’ testimony of the plaintiff and her husband, S. R. Render, was largely as to transactions with O. R Beauchamp. The officers of the defendant found the certificates originally issued to the plaintiff either in the stock book or in a drawer with the stock book and across the back of each of them at that time there was marked “transferred.” The minutes of the meeting of the corporation on the 1st- day of February, '1924, with reference to, the stock'Certificates shows that the stock in question was assigned by J. T. Render to O. R Beauchamp.

S. P; Render testified that he contracted in writing- with C. P. Beauchamp to deliver him 46 shares of stock for $5,000, but that the sale was not consummated. He then testified that he told Mr. Beauchamp. “I will leave these stock certificates in the stock book and you people may vote them”that he indorsed the certificates in blank and delivered them to Beauchamp; that “that was with the intention of having them re-issue it,,” and that was the understanding between him and Beauchamp. He testified that Beauchamp acted in the transaction as secretary of the corporation and that the stock certificates were left with him, as secretary of the corporation, to be re-issued on demand.

The witness to the Signature of S. P. Render on the stock certificates testified that Mr. Render told Mr: Beauchamp “to take the stock and do the best he could with it and if he succeeded, he could pSy him, and.if he didn’t there was nothing else.”

N. I. Sommers, president of the defendant corporation, testified that in the early part of 1926, Mr. Render attended a- meeting of the stockholders at which he said, “I have turned over to Mr. Beauchamp my stock and he is handling it and I have nothing in the world to do with it.”

Under the provisions of section 5318, O. O. S. 1921, shares or certificates of the capital stock of a corporation are personal property and may. be transferred by indorsement by the signature of the proprietor, or his attorney.or legal representative, and delivery of the certificates. Such a transfer is valid between the parties thereto.

“Where, however, there is nothing on the face of the certificate to indicate that it is held in trust, a good faith purchaser will ordinarily be protected, though.it is in fact trust .property.” Thompson on Corporations (3rd Ed.) section 4050, and cases therein cited.

The same rule is stated in Cook on Corporations (6th Ed.) section 434.

“If the trustee appears on the books of the corporation as the absolute owner of the shares, and the transferee has no notice, actual or constructive, that he holds the title in trust,, he certainly acquires a good title.” Fletcher, Cyclopedia Corporations, section 3837, and cases therein cited.

We quote from 14 Corpus Juris, page 785, as follows :

“Where a person holds stock in trust, a purchaser and transferee from him, if he has actual or constructive notice of the trust, takes subject to the equitable rights of-the cestui que trust, and is liable to • the latter in the full amount of the stock. But a bona fide purchaser without knowledge of the trust will be protected, although the trans-ferrer violates his trust' in making the transfer and even though .the cestui quo trust is an infant at the time of the transfer.”

Under that rule the transfer of the certificates of shares from C. P. Beauchamp to Street & Draper was valid and passed the title, unless Street & Draper had actual ox-constructive notice of the invalidity of the title of O. P. Beauchamp. There is nothing in the record tending to cast suspicion upon the bona tides of the transfer of the certificates from C. P. Beauchamp to ' Street &' Draper and they were purchasers thereof for value. Upon their surrender of the certificates for cancellation they were entitled to have new certificates issued to them in lieu of those surrendered. Litchfield v. Henson Oil Co., 53 Okla. 550, 157 Pac. 137. The corporation, upon the demand of Street & Draper and the surrender of the certificates, canceled the Beauchamp certificates delivered to Street & Draper and issued new certificates to Street & Draper. The corporation could do nothing else under the law, and there could be no liability upon the part of the corporation for having performed its ministerial duty in issuing the new certificates upon the performance of the conditions as aforesaid. Had it refused, it could have been compelled to do so by a court of equity. The liability, if any, of the plaintiff to the *135 defendant did not arise out of the issuance of the certificates to Street & Draper.

The question is then presented, whether the defendant corporation is liable in damages for issuing the new certificates to G. P. Beauchamp.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 71, 299 P. 854, 149 Okla. 132, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capitol-hill-undertaking-co-v-render-okla-1931.