Georgia Casualty Co. v. McRitchie

166 S.E. 49, 45 Ga. App. 697, 1932 Ga. App. LEXIS 661
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 21, 1932
Docket21929
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 166 S.E. 49 (Georgia Casualty Co. v. McRitchie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia Casualty Co. v. McRitchie, 166 S.E. 49, 45 Ga. App. 697, 1932 Ga. App. LEXIS 661 (Ga. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Jenkins, P. J.

This was a suit in trover, brought in two counts, by a married woman against a corporation, for the recovery of certain shares of the capital stock of the defendant. The first count sought to recover 300 shares of stock which it was alleged the corporation had transferred upon its books to her husband upon a tran$[699]*699fer by the wife to the husband of the stock certificate, it being alleged that the corporation then knew of the relationship of husband and wife, but not that it knew that the wife, a resident of a different county, had failed to obtain an order from the superior court in the county of her residence, authorizing the sale to her husband. It was alleged that no such order was in fact obtained, and that the sale for that reason was void. It appears from the petition that the husband, after receiving the new certificate, transferred it to an innocent third person, who acquired a good title thereto as against any claim of the plaintiff; and that several years thereafter the plaintiff demanded of the defendant the return of the stock, which had then already depreciated fifty per cent, in value. The evidence does not disclose what value the stock might have had at the time of the trial. The second count of the petition was based on a transaction entirely separate from that sued on in the first count. It seems to be conceded by both sides that the plaintiff was entitled to recover on the second count, and in the amount represented by the verdict. The jury found for the plaintiff on the first count in the amount of the value of the 200 shares of stock at the time of its transfer on the defendant’s books. The defendant excepted to the order overruling its motion for a new trial, and assigned error on the antecedent ruling of the court refusing to strike the first count on demurrer.

“Except as against the claims of the corporation, a transfer of stock does not require a transfer on the books of the company.” Civil Code (1910), § 2219. In the instant case it is not made to appear that the charter or by-laws of the corporation required that a transfer of its stock could be made only on its books. Even in a case “where the stock of a corporation is, by the terms of its charter or by-laws, transferable only on its books, the purchaser who receives the certificate, with power of attornejr, gets the entire title, legal and equitable, as between himself and his seller, with all the rights the latter possessed; and as between himself and the corporation, he acquires only an equitable title, which they are bound to recognize and permit to be ripened into a legal title, when he presents himself, before any effective transfer on the books has been made, to do the acts required by the charter or by-laws, in order to make a transfer.” Witham v. Cohen, 100 Ga. 670, 674 (28 S. E. 505). Thus it is the general rule that a transfer and assign[700]*700ment of a certificate of stock in a corporation passes title to the vendee thereof, irrespective of whether or not the charter or bylaws of the corporation require a transfer on its own books, except in so far as the claims of the corporation arising from any lien held by it on the stock may be involved. After such an assignment the corporation may, in a proper equitable proceeding, be required to make a transfer of the stock on its books. Scott v. Flint River Pecan Co., 159 Ga. 668 (126 S. E. 769); Massengale v. Hodgson, 148 Ga. 97 (95 S. E. 275); Hardman v. Barrow, 147 Ga. 617 (95 S. E. 209). While it has been held that a sale by a wife to her husband of her separate propertjq without an order of the superior court authorizing the same being first obtained, is void (Hood v. Perry, 75 Ga. 310; Fulgham v. Pate, 77 Ga. 454; Stonecipher v. Kear, 131 Ga. 688, 63 S. E. 215, 127 Am. St. R. 248; Buchanan v. James, 135 Ga. 392, 69 S. E. 543; Echols v. Green, 140 Ga. 678 (3), 79 S. E. 557), it has also been ruled by the Supreme Court in Scaife v. Scaife, 134 Ga. 1 (67 S. E. 408), that‘"the right to assail its validity on this ground is personal to the wife and her privies in blood or estate, and can not be asserted by a stranger to her title.” This ruling in the Scaife case has been upheld and followed in Munroe v. Baldwin, 145 Ga. 215 (3) (88 S. E. 947); Williams v. Rhodes, 149 Ga. 170 (99 S. E. 531); McArthur v. Ryals, 162 Ga. 413 (5), 417 (134 S. E. 76); Royster Guano Co. v. Odum, 167 Ga. 655 (146 S. E. 475). In the instant case a sale of corporate stock to the husband was attempted by the wife, and, as it now appears, without an order authorizing the same having been first obtained. With respect to the wife and her privies in blood or estate, this omission rendered the sale subject to repudiation whenever they might see proper to exercise such right, unless and until the rights of third parties should prevent; but the impotent act of the corporation in making the entry on its books as directed by the wife neither weakened nor strengthened, added to, or took from the validity or invalidity of the purported sale as between the wife and the husband, and was wholly unnecessary to the completion of the transaction attempted by them. Not only is it the rule that the transaction’is completed whenever the transfer of the stock certificate is made, but the transferee in this case himself could just as well have assigned the original certificate to an innocent third person so as to carry the full and complete title, both legal and equitable, as against the claims of all persons, including the wife.

[701]*701 While it appears from the petition that the corporation knew that the relation of husband and wife existed between the nonresident parties to the sale, which might be taken to put it on notice, as a matter of law, that an order of court was necessary, this is not a fact or circumstance even tending to indicate that this nonresident plaintiff had failed to do that which the law required of her. In the first case decided by our Supreme Court, Truluck v. Peeples, 1 Ga. 3, 5, it was said that “it is presumed, until the contrary is proved, that every man obeys the mandates of the law, and performs all his official and social duties.” If the wife, as in some jurisdictions, could not sell her property without her husband joining in the conveyance, or in the case of an infant, or lunatic, known to be such, who could not contract at all, the rule as to this particular phase of the case might be different. While there is authority (summarized in 14 C. J. 772, 773) to the effect that a corporation is in a sense a trustee for its stockholders for the purpose of protecting their shares against forged or unauthorized transfers, with the result that it may be held responsible to stockholders for loss or injury sustained by negligence or misconduct of its officers or agents in this regard, and while this rule has been applied to cases where a corporation negligently permits a transfer under a power of attorney executed by a person under legal disability, such as an infant, or a lunatic, 'or a married woman, it would not seem that this doctrine, which necessarily rests upon the legal inability of such a stockholder to contract, could be applied in a case where under our law no such absolute disability existed.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.E. 49, 45 Ga. App. 697, 1932 Ga. App. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgia-casualty-co-v-mcritchie-gactapp-1932.