Weaver v. . Barden

49 N.Y. 286, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 169
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 30, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by97 cases

This text of 49 N.Y. 286 (Weaver v. . Barden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weaver v. . Barden, 49 N.Y. 286, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 169 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinions

The plaintiff furnished the consideration for the transfer of the shares of stock from Finch, the original owner, the same having been made in satisfaction of a debt due him from the assignor. The stock was transferred into the name of a son of the plaintiff, who was also a son-in-law of the defendant, without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, who had no knowledge that the transfer had been made in that form until some time in 1864, long after the transfer by the son to the defendant. The son, at the time of the transfer by Finch, was, in the language of the report of the referee, "to some extent the agent of the plaintiff in New York." *Page 288

The stock was transferred by the son of the plaintiff to the defendant in January, 1860, "in part payment of an indebtedness from said Llewellyn (the son) to defendant of over $2,500;" and "the defendant at the same time sold and delivered to said Llewellyn 280 pounds of butter, at twenty cents per pound, amounting to seventy dollars, which was a part of said indebtedness, paid in part as aforesaid." "Such purchases of said stock were made by defendant's son, acting as his agent; and the sum of $520, the amount agreed upon as the value of said stock, was, by the defendant, credited upon the indebtedness of said Llewellyn by the defendant."

The evidence is that the butter was sold to the assignor of the stock on the third of January, 1860, and the stock was transferred the day following.

The account between the defendant and Llewellyn Weaver was made an exhibit by the defendant, and discloses a long account, commencing in 1852; the last item on the debtor side of which is the charge of seventy dollars for the butter; and the first item on the credit side is the sum of $520 for the shares of stock.

The transaction was simply a transfer of the shares of stock by Llewellyn Weaver, and a subsequent entry by the defendant, in his books, of the credit for the purchase-price. No security was surrendered, and no voucher given.

The defendant parted with nothing as a consideration for the transfer.

The capital stock of an incorporated company is personal property; and it has not, neither has the certificate or other evidence of title or ownership, any of the qualities of commercial or negotiable paper.

As a rule, the purchaser or assignee of shares of the capital stock in a corporation acquires no other or better title than the seller or assignor has, and takes it subject to the legal and equitable rights of third persons. The rightful owner may be estopped by his own acts from asserting his title, as he may be in respect to other property of a like character. If he has invested another with the usual evidence of title, *Page 289 or an apparent authority to dispose of it, he will not be allowed to make claim against an innocent purchaser dealing upon the faith of such apparent ownership and jus disponendi. (Dustin v. Livingston, 9 J.R., 96; Howe v. Starkweather,17 Mass., 244; McNeil v. Tenth Nat. Bank, lately decided in this court and not reported [46 N.Y., 325 — Rep.]; Arnold v. Ruggles,1 R.I., 165.) The plaintiff, the owner in fact of the stock in controversy, did not give to another the external evidence of authority to dispose of it, and did not assent to placing the property, or the evidence of property, with his son.

Whatever was done in the way of divesting the plaintiff of his property, was done in fraud of his rights and without his consent.

An unauthorized sale, although for a valuable consideration and without notice, vests no higher title in the vendee than was possessed by the vendor. (Prescott v. Deforest, 16 J.R., 159;Wheelwright v. Depeyster, 1 id., 471; Williams v. Merle, 11 W.R., 80; Brower v. Peabody, 3 Ker., 121; Covill v.Hill, 4 Den., 323). The property in the capital stock of a corporation is not distinguishable from other personal property; and the owner cannot be divested of his property except by his own voluntary act and consent, or by some act which would be effectual to give title as against him to other movable property and choses in action.

The plaintiff is not estopped, as against the defendant, upon the evidence or the findings of the referee, from asserting his title to the stock and the dividends upon it. The original title of the plaintiff is conceded, and the defendant seeks to make title under one who had no legal title or authority to transfer, but the evidence of title acquired by fraud and without the authority or assent express or implied of the plaintiff. Such a title cannot avail against the rightful owner. (Pollock v.National Bank, 3 Seld., 274.) The only doubt or difficulty as to the right of the plaintiff to recover, conceding all that is claimed in behalf of the defendant, to wit, that he is a bonafide purchaser for value, *Page 290 without notice of the title and claim of the plaintiff, grows out of the fact that the legal evidences of title never were in the plaintiff, the title having been transferred without fault of the corporation directly from Finch to Llewellyn Weaver, and from the latter to the defendant. It is not the case of a transfer under a forged power of attorney or by a person of the same name as the rightful holder of the stock. A party could not be divested of the title to his property by such means, and would have a remedy over against the corporation permitting the transfer, or might follow his stock and reclaim it from the transferee. (See Davis v. Bank of England, 2 Bing., 393; Sewall v. Boston WaterPower Company, 4 Allen, 277; Duncan v. Luntley, 2 McN. G., 30.

The plaintiff here has no remedy against the corporation for permitting the transfer and issuing the new certificates to the son of the plaintiff. The corporation was not careless or negligent in the transaction, aud no wrongful act was commited by its officers.

At the time of the transfer to the defendant his assignor was insolvent and continued so until his death. The only remedy, therefore, of the plaintiff is to follow his stock into the hands of the defendant, and reclaim it, with the dividends, upon the strength of his superior title, and he is entitled to recover unless the defendant is a purchaser for a valuable consideration and in good faith. In Crocker v. Crocker, 31 N.Y., 507, the claimant and rightful owner of the stock had conferred the apparent right of property in bank stock upon a third party who had abused his confidence, and yet was allowed to recover except as against a purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration for an advance made on the faith and security of the stock.

The referee, upon the facts found, held that the defendant was the owner of the shares in good faith and for a valuable consideration paid by him therefor, and the complaint was dismissed on that ground.

The plaintiff was defeated on the ground that the defendant had acquired a title superior in equity to that of the plaintiff *Page 291 by a purchase in good faith without notice of the claim or of any defect in the title and for a valuable consideration paid.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.Y. 286, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-barden-ny-1872.