Marx v. Parmelee

13 Haw. 438, 1901 Haw. LEXIS 48
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Haw. 438 (Marx v. Parmelee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marx v. Parmelee, 13 Haw. 438, 1901 Haw. LEXIS 48 (haw 1901).

Opinions

[439]*439OPINION OF THE COURT BY

GALBRAITH, J.

(Perry, J., dissenting.)

The facts in these two cases being similar and the law question involved being the same in each case, they were argued and submitted together.

In the first case the pertinent facts as disclosed by the submission are as follows, to wit: That Marx, the plaintiff, is the duly appointed administrator of J. W. "Winter, deceased; that Winter during his lifetime executed and delivered to Hollister and Company, a partnership, his promissory note for $2,000 and deposited with the payee of said note as a pledge and as collateral security for the payment of the amount thereof and interest, Certificate No. 42, for thirty shares of the capital stock of the Hollister Drug Company, Limited, a corporation; that said stock was owned by Winter and the certificate was in his name and was endorsed in blank before delivery to the pledgee; that attached to said note and signed by said Winter was a written power or agreement; that this writing after reciting that said certificate of stock was held by said Hollister & Company for the purpose of securing the payment of said note and interest, provided that if the said note and interest were not paid at maturity, “I hereby irrevocably authorize and empower said Hollister & Company, or their assigns, to sell and dispose of the above described property or any part thereof at public or private sale, with or without previous notice to me of any such sale, and from the proceeds arising therefrom to pay the principal, interest, charges and the costs of sale, and the balance, if any, to pay over to me or my representatives, upon demand.” And also provided that if the principal and interest of the note should be paid that the certificate should be returned to Winter. Hollister & Co. assigned the note to the defendant Parmelee and delivered the same with the power to her and that she is now the owner and holder of the note; that no new certificate was issued nor was any entry or record of the pledge of the stock made in the stock book of the Hollis[440]*440ter Drug Company, Limited; that the note has not been paid and that there is now due thereon the sum of $2406; that her claim for said amount against the estate of said J. W. Winter has been presented to the administrator and allowed; that the estate of said Winter is insolvent and that the administrator now claims the possession of said certificate of stock and the right to sell the same for the benefit of all of the creditors of said estate.

The following questions of law are propounded:

1. “In whom does the legal title to said shares of stock stand?

2. Is the plaintiff, as such administrator, entitled to the possession of said shares of stock, and has he the right to sell the same for the equal benefit of all the creditors?

3. Is the defendant to be regarded as a secured creditor, with the right to sell said collateral security for the satisfaction of her own claim?”

The facts in the second ease are practically the same except that they show that on April 20, 1900, Winter borrowed of Bishop & Co. the sum of $3100 and executed his note therefor due six months thereafter and with said note executed a written contract reading in part as follows: “Be it remembered that I, the subscriber, in consideration of three thousand one hundred dollars loaned to me by Bishop & Company, on the terms stated in the foregoing promissory note, have sold and do hereby sell, assign, transfer and convey to the said Bishop & Co. and their assigns as a pledge sixty shares of the capital stock of the .Hollister Drug Company, Limited, represented by Certificates Nos. 43, 44, 45 and 46, on the terms and for the purposes following, viz., as collateral security for the payment of the above promissory note and all other notes and demands which the said Bishop & Co. hold or may hold against' me so long as they shall hold the said security; and with full authority to the said Bishop & Co. and their assigns to collect, assign or transfer and to sell the said security or any part thereof [441]*441* * * -whenever any snch note or demand shall be overdue and unpaid.” * * *

The said certificates of stock wei’e endorsed in blank before delivery to the pledgee. No new certificates were issued nor was this transaction recorded in the books of the company. The said note has not been paid and there is now due thereon the sum of $3224 and a claim for said amount has been allowed by the administrator.

The same questions of law are presented in this as in the first case.

No claim of fraud is made; nor is it pretended that any one of the parties to either of the transactions did not act in the utmost good faith. It is not denied that Winter had a perfect legal right to pledge the certificates of stock as collateral security for the- payment of money borrowed in the manner he did. Rut it is claimed on behalf of the administrator that the pledgees by their laches and neglect forfeited any claim and right they might have had to- hold said stock by failure to-comply with the terms of a statute of the Territory. That under Section 2016 of the Civil Laws, 1897, each of the pledgees had a right to present the certificates held to the proper officer of the Hollister Drug Company, Limited, and to have new certificates issued in the name of the- pledgee and that failing in this the transfer was void and that the legal title to said stock remained in Winter and at his death passed to and vested in his administrator. And that these pledgees have no standing as secured and preferred creditors but must surrender the securities and take their pro rata of the assets with the other creditors of said estate.

The statute reads as follows: “Whenever the capital stock of any corporation is divided into shares, and the certificates thereof are issued, transfers of the shares may be made by endorsement and delivery of the certificate. The endorsee shall be entitled to a new certificate upon surrendering the old one. And no such transfer shall be valid, except between the parties [442]*442thereto, until such new certificate shall have been obtained, or the transfer shall have been recorded on the books of the corporation so as to show the date of the transfer, the parties thereto, their place of abode, and the number and description of the shares transferred.” Civ. L. Sec. 2016.

It is contended by the administrator that the statute was intended to protect the creditors of the stockholders as well as the creditors of corporations and that the persons extending credit to stockholders had a right to rely on the stock books of the corporation to obtain reliable information as to the amount of stock such person owned. It is possibly sufficient answer to this argument to state that under the law of this Territory the public has no right to inspect or examine or obtain information from the stock books of private corporations, such books, being “open for the inspection of the stockholders and creditors,”— creditors of the corporation and not of individual stockholders. (Civ. L. 1897, Sec. 2021.)

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Bluebook (online)
13 Haw. 438, 1901 Haw. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marx-v-parmelee-haw-1901.