Nat. Bank Etc. v. Western Pac. Ry. Co.

108 P. 676, 157 Cal. 573, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 294
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1910
DocketS.F. No. 5323.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 108 P. 676 (Nat. Bank Etc. v. Western Pac. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nat. Bank Etc. v. Western Pac. Ry. Co., 108 P. 676, 157 Cal. 573, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 294 (Cal. 1910).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

A general demurrer to the complaint was overruled. The defendant refused to answer and judgment was given for plaintiff upon the facts stated in the complaint. The defendant appeals.

On June 15, 1908, the plaintiff became the owner of one thousand shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, previously belonging to J. Dalzell Brown. The certificate for these shares was duly indorsed by Brown and delivered "to the plaintiff. The consideration paid for the stock by the plaintiff was twenty-five thousand dollars. Brown was indebted to the defendant in a sum exceeding fifty thousand dollars. On July 28, 1908, the defendant began an action against Brown to recover said debt and caused a writ of attachment to be issued therein, which on July 29, 1908, was levied on Brown’s interest in said stock. The action is still pending. At the time the attachment was levied, the transfer-of the stock from Brown to the plaintiff had not been entered on the books of the defendant corporation, as required by section 324 of the Civil Code, and the defendant had no notice or-knowledge of said transfer. This condition continued until March 11, 1909, when the plaintiff presented its certificate of' stock to the defendant and demanded that the transfer from Brown to plaintiff be duly entered upon the defendant’s books. Defendant refused to comply with the demand, basing its refusal on the claim that, by virtue of the levy of said attachment, it had a lien upon said stock prior and paramount to the right and title of plaintiff thereto. This action was thereupon begun to compel the defendant to enter the transfer on its. books and issue to the plaintiff a new certificate for the stock, free from the lien of the attachment. The judgment directed that this be done.

Section 324 of the Civil Code declares that shares of stock in a corporation are personal property and that they may be-transferred by indorsement and delivery of the certificate. It, further provides that “such transfer is not valid, except as to the parties thereto, until the same is so entered upon the books, *576 of the corporation as to show the names of the parties by whom and to whom transferred,- the number of the certificate, the number or designation of the shares, and the date of transfer.”

“The rights or shares which a defendant may have in the stock of any corporation” may be attached by leaving with the proper officer of the corporation a copy of the writ and a notice that the stock or interest of the defendant is attached in pursuance of the writ (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 541, 542, subd. 4). When such stock is sold on execution, the sheriff must give the purchaser a certificate of the sale. “Such certificate conveys to the purchaser all the right which the debtor had in such property on the day the execution or attachment was levied.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 699.)

The general rule is that a creditor who attaches property for his debt obtains a lien only upon the title or interest which the debtor has in the property at the time of the levy, and that if, at that time, all title and interest therein has passed from the debtor to a third person, the attaching creditor gets nothing by the levy. (Tuohy v. Wingfield, 52 Cal. 319; Howell v. Foster, 65 Cal. 173, [3 Pac. 647]; Ward v. Waterman, 85 Cal. 508, [34 Pac. 930].) Where a statute declares a previous transfer of title void as to creditors of the transferrer, there is an "exception to. this rule. The exception is of course founded upon the theory that as the law makes the transfer void as to the creditor, there is, as to him, no transfer at all, and the title to the property, for his benefit, remains in the debtor, notwithstanding a previous legal transfer good as against all other parties. Examples of this are found in the case of transfers tainted with actual fraud, and transfers of personal property in good faith not followed by immediate delivery and actual and continued change of possession. The latter are conclusively presumed to be fraudulent. All such transfers are expressly declared to be void as to the creditors of the person making the transfer. (Civ. Code, secs. 3439, 3440.) Another example is that of a chattel mortgage not executed and recorded in the prescribed mode, which the statute declares to be absolutely void as against other creditors of the mortgagor, regardless of the good faith of the transaction (Civ. Code, sec. 2957). The contention of the defendant is that the provisions in section 324, declaring that a transfer of *577 corporate stock is not valid, except as to the parties, until it is ■duly entered on the corporation books, is intended for the benefit of the creditors of stockholders, and, therefore, that its ■effect is to make an unregistered transfer absolutely void and ■subject to any attachment or execution against the previous •owner.

If this doctrine is correct, the logical result would be that knowledge of the attaching creditor or execution purchaser, at the time of the levy or execution sale, that there had been a prior unregistered transfer for value, would be an immaterial circumstance which would neither protect the holder of the stock, nor vitiate or affect the lien of the attachment or the title conveyed by the execution sale. If the attempted transfer by indorsement and delivery of the certificate, without entry thereof on the books of the company, is wholly void as to the attaching creditor, the levy would create a lien superior to the title of the indorsee. It would operate as if there had been no previous transfer of the certificate by the record holder, and a registration after the levy, or a subsequent notice, would be of no avail to the indorsee. This rule prevails in the case of a levy on goods, after a sale which is void as against creditors, under section 3440 of the Civil Code. Notice to the creditor, or to an intending purchaser, in such a case, that the third person holds the title, whether given before or after the levy, does not affect the attachment, nor invalidate the title of the execution purchaser. The defendant does not contend that this strict rule applies to corporate stock but is willing to concede that a holder thereof for value, by a previous unregistered transfer in good faith, would prevail against an attaching creditor or execution purchaser with notice of the transfer. The decisions in this state on this point uniformly hold that the law is in accordance with this concession. (Weston v. Bear River etc. Co., 6 Cal. 425; People ex rel. Mead v. Elmore, 35 Cal. 653; Farmers’ National Gold Bank v. Wilson, 58 Cal. 600; Blakeman v. Puget S. I. Co., 72 Cal. 321, [13 Pac. 872] ; Spreckels v. Nevada Bank, 113 Cal. 272, [54 Am. St. Rep. 348, 45 Pac. 329].)

The defendant relies mainly on a prior decision in Weston v. Bear River etc. Co., reported in 5 Cal. 186, [63 Am. Dec. 117], and on the decisions in Strout v. Natoma W. Co., 9 Cal. 78, and Naglee v. Pacific Wharf Co., 20 Cal. 529.

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Bluebook (online)
108 P. 676, 157 Cal. 573, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nat-bank-etc-v-western-pac-ry-co-cal-1910.