S. F. Bowser & Co. v. State ex rel. Hines

137 N.E. 57, 192 Ind. 462, 1922 Ind. LEXIS 84
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1922
DocketNo. 23,914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 137 N.E. 57 (S. F. Bowser & Co. v. State ex rel. Hines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. F. Bowser & Co. v. State ex rel. Hines, 137 N.E. 57, 192 Ind. 462, 1922 Ind. LEXIS 84 (Ind. 1922).

Opinion

Ewbank, J.

Appellee relator filed his complaint on April 10, 1920, alleging that he was the owner of two shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, free from all equity or interest of others, and that during business hours, on March 12, 1920, he had applied at the office of the appellant company to its secretary, the appellant Grosvenor, for permission to examine its stock book, and to make a copy of extracts from its list of stockholders, but had been refused; that such demand was made by his agent authorized to make such examination on his behalf. The court was asked to grant a writ of mandamus to enforce his right to such inspection.

Appellants filed an answer of five paragraphs: First, a denial. Fourth, that the two shares of stock issued in appellee’s name were preferred stock, subject to redemption at par, with interest at six per cent, per annum, on the first day of January or July of any year, [465]*465after six months’ notice, and that such notice had been given in December, 1919, of redemption to be made July 1, 1920, and that on March 16, 1920, before suit was begun, the appellant company had tendered to the relator the redemption money for such stock, in gold.

A demurrer to said fourth paragraph of answer was overruled, but demurrers were sustained to each of the second, third and fifth paragraphs, and appellants excepted. A paragraph of denial and also a second and third paragraph of affirmative reply were filed to the fourth paragraph of answer. The second alleged that in June, 1920, after this action was commenced, the appellant company did certain acts relied on as constituting a waiver of its right to redeem appellee’s shares of stock under the notice given. A demurrer to this paragraph of reply was overruled, and appellants excepted, while a demurrer to the third paragraph of reply was sustained.

Upon proper request the court made a special finding, on which it stated conclusions of law, to each of which appellants excepted. It then rendered a judgment commanding appellants to submit the stock books and lists of stockholders to appellee or his authorized agent for inspection and copying, and that appellants should pay the costs. A motion for a new trial by appellants was overruled and they excepted.

The first alleged errors complained of are sustaining appellees’ demurrers to each of the second and third paragraphs of answer. The substance of each of these answers was that the stock for which appellee held the certificate, and which he claimed to own, really belonged to another man living in Massachusetts, who transferred it into the name of appellee without consideration, and to whom appellee reassigned the stock certificate, and that appellee had no interest in the stock, [466]*466but held it as a bare trustee for such other person, and was not the real party in interest in this action.

1,2. If appellee really did not own any stock, but the two shares which were registered in his name belonged to his employer or another to whom he had assigned them, then his assignee, and not appellee, would be the real party in interest, entitled to inspect the stock book and take extracts from it. Murray v. Walker (1913), 156 Ky. 536, 161 S. W. 512.

3. The assignee, to whom the entire beneficial interest in the shares had been transferred by an equitable assignment which needed only a presentation of the certificate to the corporation for transfer in order to convey the legal title, was the real party in interest in an action with relation to the stock so assigned. Board v. Jameson (1882), 86 Ind. 154, 165.

Every action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest, with certain exceptions which do not embrace appellee, under the facts alleged. §251 Burns 1914, §251 R. S. 1881. Even in California, where the statute originally enacted was construed as giving the right of inspection to a mere trustee, it has been found necessary by an amendment of the statute to limit the right to bona fide owners of stock. Webster v. Bartlett Estate Co. (1917), 35 Cal. App. 283, 169 Pac. 702.

It was error to sustain the demurrer to each of the second and third paragraphs of answer.

4. Appellants next complain of the ruling by which a demurrer was sustained to the fifth paragraph of answer. The substance of this paragraph was that a certificate for two shares of stock had been issued to “John A. Hines,” and was sent by mail to him at Lynn, Massachusetts; that appellants and the officers of appellant company did not know him personally, nor know his handwriting, nor have any means of identify[467]*467ing the same, and his alleged agents who demanded leave to inspect the books admitted to appellants that they did not know him nor his signature, and that they had no personal knowledge as to the relator owning any stock, and did not know of their own knowledge that the person who had authorized them to make the demand for inspection was such owner; that appellants sent their attorneys to Boston, where they called upon the Mr. Hines on whose behalf the demand was made, and inquired of him about the certificate of stock, when he told them he had nothing to do with it, but that his employer had charge of the matter; that said employer, on inquiry of him, said that he did not have the stock certificate but his attorneys did, and' that they then called on said attorneys, who were unable to produce the stock certificate, and did not do so; that by reason thereof the relator did not identify himself sufficiently as the owner of the stock, entitled to inspect the books. This paragraph is not a model of good pleading. But when appellee’s alleged agent came to the office of the corporation, asking to inspect its list of stockholders, the corporation and its secretary had the right to insist upon the principal being identified as a stockholder. And the mere fact that one “John A. Hines,” of Lynn, held a certificate of stock, and that the person claiming to be his agent had credentials purporting to bear the signature of “John A. Hines,” of Boston, was not a sufficient identification, where neither the secretary nor any other officer of appellant corporation, nor the one assuming to represent the stockholder, was acquainted with such stockholder nor with his handwriting. And where appellee, though a stranger living in a distant state, on being questioned, did not produce his stock certificate, nor account for it in a manner that could be verified on inquiry, appellants did not lay themselves [468]*468liable to an action and the payment of costs by refusing to exhibit the stock book until appellee should be shown, by reasonable identification, to be a stockholder.

The statute requires only that the list of stockholders shall be kept “subjéct to the inspection of creditors, stockholders, or their representatives, who shall be permitted to take extracts from the same.” §4054 Burns 1914, §3010 R. S. 1881.

The secretary of the corporation could not be required, under the statute, to open its books for inspection until reasonably assured that the person asking to inspect them represented an owner of stock or an actual creditor. .

Another section of the act above cited (§4055 Burns 1914, §3011 R. S.

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.E. 57, 192 Ind. 462, 1922 Ind. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-f-bowser-co-v-state-ex-rel-hines-ind-1922.