DocketNumber: 1787
Citation Numbers: 123 P. 153, 32 Okla. 700, 1912 OK 293, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 319
Judges: Ames
Filed Date: 4/9/1912
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The only issue presented on this appeal arises out of the conflicting claims of the Farmers' Merchants' Bank of Kiel and Thomas G. Hinton to the twenty shares of stock of the Farmers' Merchants' Bank standing in the name of Ivan G. Conkling, as trustee. For the purpose of deciding this issue, the facts may be very briefly stated, and, as the Bank of Aline is not represented on the appeal, it is unnecessary to review the 750 pages of record, in so far as it affects its claims.
One W. T. Camp owed the Farmers' Merchants' Bank $1,000. One Hill was a stockholder in that bank, and its president. The bank claims that the Camp note evidenced a debt of Hill's and, for the purpose of this decision, that may be taken as true. Hill transferred his stock in the bank to Ivan G. Conkling, as trustee, and the evidence establishes that Conkling acquired this stock, as trustee for the Cherokee Trust Company, in which Hill was also a stockholder and prominent factor. The Farmers' Merchants' Bank recognized this transfer, and issued the stock in Conkling's name, as trustee. Thereafter Conkling sold the stock to Hinton for a valuable consideration, and Hinton sent it to the bank, with the request that it be transferred to his name. This the bank refused to do, on account of its claim that the Camp note was Hill's; that Conkling was trustee for Hill; and it therefore had a lien on the stock, under our statute, which was superior to the rights of Hinton as its purchaser.
It may be conceded that if it was Hill's stock, even though standing in Conkling's name, the bank, under the statute then in force, would have had a lien. The statute provided (Wilson's Rev. Ann. St. 1903, sec. 291): *Page 703
"The shares of stock of an incorporated bank shall be deemed personal property, and shall be transferred on the books of the bank in such manner as the by-laws thereof may direct, but no transfer of stock shall be valid against a bank or any creditor thereof so long as the registered holder thereof shall be liable as principal debtor, surety, or otherwise to the bank for any debt which shall be due and unpaid, nor in such cases shall any dividend, interest or profits be paid on said stock so long as such liabilities continue, but all such dividends, interests or profits shall be retained by the bank and applied to the discharge of such liabilities; and no stock shall be transferred on the books of any banks where the registered holder thereof is in debt to the bank for any matured and unpaid obligations."
But the defect in the position of the bank is that this stock had been transferred to Conkling, as trustee; and it is now too late for the bank to go behind the Conkling transfer to assert a lien that it might have had against the stock, had it remained Hill's property. As previously stated, the evidence shows that Conkling had acquired the stock, for valuable consideration, as trustee for the Cherokee Trust Company, and, as the bank had recognized this transfer and reissued the stock, it waived the lien which it might have asserted prior thereto.
This subject was considered by the Supreme Court of the United States in National Bank v. Watsontown Bank,
"The statute of Pennsylvania (infra, p. 220), declaring that the stock of a bank shall be transferable only on the books in such manner as the by-laws shall ordain, and that no stockholder shall be authorized to transfer his stock until his debt is discharged or secured to the satisfaction of the directors, does not prohibit the bank from waiving its right, nor the cashier from acting for them, by an authority, either express or implied."
Mr. Justice Mathews, in delivering the opinion of the court, at page 222 of 105 U.S. (26 L.Ed. 1039), says:
"A complete transfer of the title to the stock upon the books of the bank, it is not doubted, would have the effect to vest it in the transferee, free from any claim or lien of the bank. The consent of the bank, made necessary to such transfer, is the waiver of its right, as its refusal would be the assertion of it. *Page 704 The transfer, when thus consummated, destroys the relation of membership between the corporation and the old stockholder, with all its incidents, and creates an original relation with the new member, free from all antecedent obligations."
In that case, Jacob Tome acquired the stock of the Watsontown Bank from Powell Co., and had sent it to the cashier for transfer. The certificates were never transferred on the books of the bank; but entries were made on the stock ledger, showing the transaction, and the court held that these entries were sufficient. It will thus be seen that the facts there are not so strong as they are here, as in this case the bank had completed the transfer by canceling the old certificates and issuing new ones in the name of Conkling, as trustee.
Conkling, as trustee, having thus acquired the stock, and being in possession of the certificates, and in position to sell, did sell to Hinton for a valuable consideration; and we do not think the bank can now go behind that transfer and assert a lien that it might have had, had it asserted this claim before the sale to Conkling was completed.
In Ardmore State Bank v. Mason,
It is argued, however, that it was Hinton's duty to inquire of the bank for whom Conkling was acting as trustee, and that if he saw fit to take Conkling's word for it he did so at his peril, and therefore did not acquire any greater rights than he would have acquired, had he known that the bank claimed a lien on the stock. As we have previously stated, however, the evidence showed that Conkling was not trustee for Hill, but for the Cherokee *Page 705 Trust Company; and if we conceded the contention of the bank, and that Hinton did take this stock at his peril, that does not lead us to a different conclusion, when we remember that Hill was not the owner of the stock, but that it was owned by the Cherokee Trust Company.
But counsel argue that Hill was the dominant spirit and largest stockholder of the Cherokee Trust Company, and that therefore, even conceding that the stock belonged to the Trust Company, because of Hill's relation with the Trust Company the stock should still be charged with liability for Hill's debts. No authorities are cited to support this argument; and it is certainly in conflict with the elementary principle that a corporation is a separate and distinct legal entity. There may be, and doubtless are, cases when a corporation is bound by the acts of one owning all of its capital stock; but that situation is not presented here. This stock, therefore, being the property of the Cherokee Trust Company, could not be subjected to the payment of Hill's debts, in the absence of some special facts or circumstances, other than the mere fact that Hill was a large stockholder in the corporation. 1 Clark and Marshall on Corporations, p. 13. Compare Stone v. C., C. St. L. R. Co.,
We think the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered. *Page 706