Court Opinion

ID: 8805311
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 14:46:29.13525+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:04:04.452845
License: Public Domain

WOLVERTON, District Judge
(after stating the facts as above). The plaintiff claims title to the stock, which he avers he acquired through sheriff’s sale on execution issued in the case instituted in the Washington state court. Whether he has a good title depends upon two things, namely, the regularity of the alleged levy and the good faith exercised in closing the contract between Eeland and E. C. Murphy whereby the stock was to be restored to Eeland in exchange for certain real estate which Eeland was to reconvey to Murphy.
[1] It is earnestly insisted by plaintiff that the certificate of stock is personal property within the purview of the laws of the state of Washington, and that it was subject to levy and sale under execution, although the certificate was physically within a state other than that in which the corporation issuing the stock was organized and had its principal place of business. It is declared by the statutes of Washington (chapter on Corporations and Organization Thereof) that the stock of the company shall be deemed personal estate, but that no transfer thereof shall be valid, except between the parties thereto, until the same shall have been entered upon the books of the company in a manner designated. Section 3693 (4261) Rem. & Bal. Ann. Codes and Statutes of Washington. All property, real and personal, is made liable to execution (section 518 [5200]), and it is provided that:
“Property shall be levied on in like manner and with, like effect as similar property is attached.” Section 578 (5269), Id.
It is further provided that personal property capable of manual delivery shall be attached by taking into custody, and stock or shares, or interest in stock or shares, of any corporation, by leaving with the president or other head of the same, etc., a copy of the writ, and a notice stating that the stock or interest of the defendant is attached in pursuance of such writ. Section 659 (5362), Id. Garnishment is provided for, the proceeding for which is practically through an auxiliary action against the garnishee. Section 680 (5390) et seq.
It is hardly necessary to observe that the regulations relating to corporate stock, and the manner of its levy and sale on execution, are local to the state, and have no reference to corporate stock generally. “We,” says the Supreme Court of Washington, “have no law authorizing the sale- of the stock of a foreign corporation.” Daniel v. Gold Hill Mining Co., 28 Wash. 411, 426, 68 Pac. 884, 890. The court was.there speaking of a sale on execution. In the same case a broader assertion is made by the court, as follows:
“Stock in a corporation cannot be seized on execution and sold unless authorized by an express statute, and, where such sale is authorized, the authority extends only to the stock of corporations existing in that state, and not to that of corporations in other states.”
[2] This would seem to preclude plaintiff’s contention, but he argues that certificates of stock may nevertheless be subject to. levy and sale. Some authorities elsewhere support his view. See Simpson v. Jersey City Contracting Co., 165 N. Y. 193, 58 N. E. 896, 55 L. R. A. 796; *106Puget Sound Nat. Bk. of Everett v. Mather et al., 60 Minn. 362, 62 N. W. 396. By these cases garnishment of certificates of stock in the hands of pledgees was upheld, and the basis of the holding is the affirmation that certificates of stock are personal property, and that they are so treated in business relations and by common acceptation, as well as in the -eye of the law; that they are sold in the market, are transferred as collateral security, and are used in various ways as property; they pass by delivery from hand to hand, and are the subject of larceny. The contrary doctrine is concisely stated in Clark and Marshall on Private Corporations, § 378h, as follows:
“Shares of stock cannot be' taken on execution or attachment by levying upon or seizing the certificate oniy, and a court can acquire no jurisdiction over stock by virtue of an attachment merely because the certificate of stock is within its jurisdiction.”
We incline to the view that corporate stock is personal property within the intendment of the Washington statutes on execution and attachment, and is subject to levy and sale, if regularly and properly made and executed. This means that the certificates of stock must be physically within the state, and the levy and sale made in pursuance of the provisions of the local statutes dealing with the subject. If A., being in a state other than the residence of a corporation, has in his possession certificates of stock of such corporation belonging to B., and C. sues B. on a legitimate demand, there seems to be no good reason why C. may not garnishee the stock in the hands of A., under general statutes providing for the attachment by garnishment proceedings of personal property, unless inhibited by express declaration.
[3, 4] But that is not the present case. The evidence shows that, when Eeland and E. C. Murphy were closing up their settlement, and after Murphy had delivered the certificate of stock to Eeland and matters had been adjusted according to agreement, Murphy snatched the certificate away from Eeland. Subsequently the contract between Ee-land and E. C. Murphy was assigned by the latter to John E. Murphy. This assignment was on June 20, 1912. The action by John E. Murphy against Eeland and wife in the state court was filed April 8, 1913. Judgment was entered the same day. John E. Murphy assigned the judgment to A. Coolin April 30, 1913. Execution issued May 1, the supposed levy was made on the same day, and the pretended sale took place May 12, 1913. The record shows, further, that later, to wit, on May 21, 1913, E.- C. Murphy assigned, all his right, title, and interest in the certificate to A. Coolin.
The query is: Where was the certificate of stock at the time of the pretended levy ? Presumably it was in the hands of Coolin, who was then the judgment creditor by assignment of the judgment; E. C. Murphy having, previous to the institution of the action, assigned the contract of John E. Murphy, which would carry all interest in the certificate with it. True, E. C. Murphy assigned to Cooling but this assignment was after the alleged sale, and was only of his interest in the certificate. Pie pretended to Leland that the certificate was lost. Now, if the certificate was in the hands of a person other than the judgment creditor, it could be attached only through gar*107nishment process, and there is no pretense that it was so attached. The only other way that the sheriff could attach the certificate was by taking the same into his possession. The return declares that he levied upon it. Cut this is only a conclusion. It should have stated the manner of the levy. Mitchell says that the certificate was delivered to him at the sale, as he bid it in for Coolin. As to whether it was delivered to him by the sheriff, there is only a bare inference. If so delivered to him, the inquiry is: How and from whom did the sheriff get it? Did Coolin hand it to him?
It is unnecessary to pursue the discussion further. It is manifest, along with the manifold irregularities attending the pretended levy and sale, that the procedure adopted was devised for divesting Iceland of the title to his stock, after Murphy had, by violence and trespass and without right, snatched the possession of it from him, and must be considered and held to be a part of a concerted attempt to despoil Deland of property rightfully his. Parties must not expect relief in equity, unless they come into court with clean hands.
Decree affirmed.