McFall v. Buckeye Grangers' Warehouse Ass'n
Before: Britt
Synopsis
Justice’s Court—Pleading—Copy op Note—Corporate Capacity op Bank—W aiver of Objection.—In an action by a bank in the justice’s court, a copy of the note of the defendant to the bank, which is sued upon, is a sufficient complaint; and if the hank is in fact a corporation, in the absence of objection to its want of capacity to sue, by demurrer or answer, all objection thereto is waived.
Id.—Judgment—Collateral Attack—Sale under Execution.—A judgment rendered in favor of a bank in the justice’s court, is not void because the record does not affirmatively show its corporate capacity, and it cannot he collaterally attacked on that ground, in order to avoid a sale under execution thereupon.
Pledge of Shares, of Stock—Statute of Frauds—Delivery and Change of Possession—Attachment.—As between the parties a pledge of shares of corporate stock may be effected by indorsement and transfer of the stock certificates, but the transfer, to avail against the creditors of the pledgor, must be accompanied by delivery and continued change of possession; and if the possession of the certificate by the pledgee is only momentary, and they are at once returned to the pledgor, no valid pledge is constituted as against the creditors of the pledgor, and they may be attached and sold under execution against him.
Id.—Execution Sale—Levy—Title of Purchaser.—If shares of stock have been seized and held under attachment, to satisfy the judgment, it seems that no levy of the execution, beyond giving notice of sale, is a necessary step; but, at all events, the title of the purchaser of the stock is not affected by the failure of the officer to show that he levied before selling.
BRITT, C. McFall, the plaintiff in this action, was the purchaser at a sale under execution of fourteen shares of stock in the Buckeye Grangers’ Warehouse Association, a corporation, one of the defendants here; the ultimate question on appeal is whether property in the stock passed by virtue of such sale; the court below held that it did. One Schautz owned the stock originally, and held certificates therefor issued by said Warehouse Association; Schautz was sued in a justice’s court by the Bank of Winters, a corporation, on a promissory note wherein he promised to pay a specified sum of money to “the Bank of Winters, at its office in Winters”—the payee not being further described; the complaint in that action was a copy of such note; the justice issued a writ of attachment, under which the constable of the township attached the said shares of stock as the property of Schautz in the manner prescribed by section 542, subdivision 4, of the Code of Civil Procedure. Afterward, Schautz having made no defense, judgment was rendered in said justice’s court against him and in favor of said bank, and an execution issued for the enforcement thereof; thereunder the constable made the sale which gave rise to the present dispute. At the trial there was evidence that some time before the levy of the said writ of attachment Schautz indorsed the stock certificates—two in number—and delivered them to Michaekon, one of the appellants in this case, “as security for two hundred and fifty dollars.” Michaekon held them in his hand for an instant and returned them to Schautz, and Schautz kept them among his own papers “for Michaekon” until after said attachment, when he delivered them again to Michaekon; forthwith after said indorsement to Michaekon, Schautz gave notice of the fact to the president and secretary of said Warehouse Association, but said he did not want a transfer of the shares to appear on the books, [470]and he continued thereafter to draw dividends on the stock; the secretary, however, without authority from any source, made an entry on the margin of the stubs of the certificates as follows: “C. Michaelson holds as security for money loan.” In his return of the execution the constable did not in terms set forth a levy of the writ, but stated-that after due and legal notice he sold the stock by virtue thereof, and that the property thus sold had been previously hejd under said attachment.
Appellants urge that all proceedings in the justice’s court were void for the reason that the complaint in the action of Bank of Winters v. Schautz—consisting merely of a copy of the note sued on—did not show the plaintiff to he a corporation. It was, however, in fact a corporation; and in a justice’s court a copy of a note “upon which the action is based” is a good complaint by express provision of the statute. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 853.) The defendant in that case, if he deemed that the plaintiff had not legal capacity to sue, or that the complaint was uncertain in that particular, might have presented the objection by demurrer or answer; failing to do so, he waived the right to object, and certainly other persons cannot assert the right in a collateral attack on the judgment. (See Montgomery v. Superior Court, 68 Cal. 407.)
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