Court Opinion

ID: 6434635
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:11:23.406299+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:20.240359
License: Public Domain

De Courcy, J.
In May, 1902, the Medford National Bank held two promissory notes which purported to be signed by Susan M. Stuart, and also thirty-one shares of the stock of the Boston Tow Boat Company, standing in her name, as collateral security for the payment of the notes, accompanied by a blank transfer and power of attorney. In compliance with an order purporting to be signed by Mrs. Stuart, the bank sent the certificates of stock to its brokers to be sold, and they in turn sent them to Francis Henshaw and Company whose business it was to sell unlisted stocks at auction. Later the certificates for the thirty-one shares and the transfer and power of attorney with the names of the purchasers inserted were presented to the plaintiff, the Boston Tow Boat Company, and were cancelled and new certificates were issued in the names of the purchasers. Afterwards it was discovered that the signatures of Susan M. Stuart to the notes, the transfer and the order were forged; and she brought a bill in equity against the Boston Tow Boat Company. A decree was entered in her favor for $6,000, which was paid in April,, 1915. See Pratt v. Taunton Copper Manuf. Co. 123 Mass. 110. The Medford National Bank had been notified to defend that suit. The Medford Trust Company in 1908 succeeded to the business of the Medford National Bank, taking over its assets and assuming its liabilities.
The first of these proceedings is a suit brought by the Boston Tow Boat Company to compel the bank and the trust company to refund the money it paid in satisfaction of Mrs. Stuart’s- execution, and the expenses incurred in defending her suit. It came before the *40full court in October, 1917; but the reservation was discharged for the reason that the Boston Tow Boat Company had been dissolved by St. 1913, c. 277, and no decree could be entered in favor of or against it. Boston Tow Boat Co. v. Medford National Bank, 228 Mass. 484.
Subsequently a petition was brought by the trustees of the Massachusetts Gas Companies, owners of all the stock of the Boston Tow Boa>t Company, asking for the appointment of a receiver for the latter company under St. 1903, c. 437, § 53, as amended by St. 1905, c. 156. The petition was allowed. Later a motion by the banks to vacate the decree was denied; and the receiver was substituted for the Boston Tow Boat Company as plaintiff in the original suit. Both proceedings are now before us for consideration.
Assuming, but not deciding, that the receiver has succeeded to. all the rights of the Boston Tów Boat Company to enforce in his own name the alleged liability incurred by the Medford National Bank; that Francis Henshaw and Company were acting as agents of the bank in having the stock transferred to the purchasers; and that all preliminary questions are established in his favor, nevertheless we are of opinion that the statute of limitations has barred his right of recovery.
When a purchaser of stock presents to the corporation a transfer of shares accompanied by the certificate, and demands a new certificate in exchange, he impliedly represents that the transfer is valid. Even though the forged transfer and power of attorney purporting to be signed by Susan M. Stuart were presented in good faith, the Boston Tow Boat Company which issued new certificates upon the faith of them had a right of action on the implied warranty. Boston & Albany Railroad v. Richardson, 135 Mass. 473. That warranty was made in 1902, and the breach of it was discovered the same year, when Mrs. Stuart brought her suit against the Boston Tow Boat Company for a new certificate. Accordingly the plaintiff’s right of action was barred when the present suit was brought in April, 1915, unless the statute of limitations commenced •to run, not at the time of the breach of warranty, or even when the breach was discovered, but at the time when the Boston Tow Boat Company sustained damages in consequence thereof by the payment of the Stuart execution.
*41Admittedly the general rule in cases of breach of contract is, that the statute begins to run from the time of the breach. Perkins v. Whelan, 116 Mass. 542. See cases collected in 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 156, note. The contention of the plaintiff is that in such a transaction as the present, the implied representation that the signature was genuine constitutes not merely an implied warranty, but a contract of indemnification against loss or damage, and that accordingly the statute did not begin to run until the damage actually occurred. The case of Boston & Albany Railroad v. Richardson, supra, on which he largely relies, does not support this contention. In that case it was held that one who surrendered a share certificate bearing a forged indorsement, and obtained in exchange a new certificate, in ignorance of the forgery, was liable upon an implied warranty of the genuineness of the signature to the transfer. His liability was based upon the analogies of the implied warranty of title in a sale of chattels, and the implied warranty of genuineness of the previous signatures by the seller of a promissory note. There was no suggestion that the implied contract is one of indemnification. Hartley v. Rotman, 200 Mass. 372. Cabot Bank v. Morton, 4 Gray, 156. Merriam v. Wolcott, 3 Allen, 258. See Allen v. South Boston Railroad, 150 Mass. 200, 204. Oliver v. Bank of England, [1901] 1 Ch. 652, affirmed £1902] 1 Ch. 610, and sub nom. Starkey v. Bank of England, [1903] A. C. 114, cited by the plaintiff, seems to have proceeded on the same principle. It was held that Starkey, by inducing the corporation to allow him to transfer stock on its books under a forged power of attorney, thereby represented that he had authority to make the transfer, and impliedly warranted that he had that authority. See articles in 17 Harv. Law Rev. 373 and 543. It is true that in Sheffield Corp. v. Barclay, [1905] A. C. 392, a case similar in material particulars to Starkey’s case, the House of Lords went further, Lord Davey saying, “I can see no legal reason why, in circumstances like those of the present case, it should not be held, if necessary, that the true contract to be implied from those circumstances is not only a warranty of the title, but also an agreement to keep the person in the position of the appellants indemnified against any loss resulting to them from the transaction.” But we find no warrant in the Richardson case, or in our decisions on which it was based, for implying such an indefinite and protracted *42contract of indemnity from the innocent presentation of a forged transfer by the purchaser of stock. See, also; Perkins v. Whelan, ubi supra. The precise question under consideration arose in Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co. v. Blakeslee, 189 Penn. St. 13, where the defendant, a broker, in good faith guaranteed in writing the signature to a power of attorney to transfer stock. It was held that the implied promise of the guarantor was broken as soon as made, and that the right of action accrued and the statute of limitations began to run at that time. That the statute is also available to the corporation see St. Romes v. Levee Steam Cotton Press Co. 127 U. S. 614; Yeager v. Bank of Kentucky, 127 Ky. 751; Glover v. National Bank of Commerce, 156 App. Div. (N. Y.) 247.
Regardless of the other grounds of defence, the statute of limitations is an effective bar to the plaintiff’s recovery; and the entry must be

Bill dismissed.