v.
D. B. Lyons, W. F. Stotts, New England Syndicate and the Vermont Syndicate, and The Brattleboro Savings Bank, Intervener and
In addition to the issues set forth in the foregoing statement of the case, the intervener charged the plaintiff with actual knowledge of the transfer of the stock to it long before the commencement of this action, and. charged that the attachment was issued and levied by agreement, collusion, and conspiracy entered into between the plainitiff and Mr. Lyons with the intent to steal away the intervener’s stock.
[*196]
IY. The uncontradicted evidence shows that from some time prior to May, 1896, up> to the timie of the plaintiff’s levy upon the New England certificate of stock No. 88, the stub of that certificate bore the following pencil notation: “With Brattleboro S. B., as collateral.” At the time of the levy there was attached to said. stub the memorandum in writing dated June 23, 1896, which is set out fully in the statement preceding this opinion. This was attached to the stub' on the twenty-third day of June, 1896, in Boston, Mass., at the request of Mr. Harris. Prior to the stockholders’ meeting of this syndicate in May, 1896, Mr. Treat was its secretary. His residence was in Des Moines, where he kept the stock book containing the stub in question. At the May meeting, 1896, Mr. Cushman was elected secretary. His home was in Boston, Mass. He returned ta Boston soon after his election as secretary, and took the stock book with him, where it remained until after plaintiff’s levy. This stock book was marked upon the inside of the cover, “Stock Certificate Book and Register of the New England Syndicate.” The stub in question reads as [*199] follows: “No. 88, for 50 shares. Issued to D. B. Lyons-Dated Aug. 16th, A. D. 1895.” There also appeared on it the pencil notation which we have heretofore noticed. It is conceded by counsel for appellant that the memorandum of June 23, 1896, would have been a. good transfer, under the rule announced in Moore v. Opera-House Co., 81 Iowa, 45, if the stock book had been kept in the syndicate's office in. Des Moines, but he contends that the memorandum placed upon a book kept in the state of Massachusetts did not operate as a transfer on the books, as against the plaintiff. There is great force in this position. One of the provisions of section 1078 of the Code reads as follows: “The books of the company must be so kept as to show intelligibly the original stockholders, their respective interests, the amount paid on. their shares; and all transfers thereof; and such books, or a correct copy thereof, so far as the items mentioned in this section are concerned, shall be subject to the inspection of any person desiring the same.” This statute relates to corporations organized under the laws of this state, and doing business herein. It must have been the intention of the legislature to require the books of the corporation to be, also, kept where they could be, inspected. It would be idle to require books to be kept as above provided, and then permit them to be kept in a distant state, one thousand five hundred miles from its principal place of business. In Ft. Madison Lumber Co. v. Batavian Bank, 71 Iowa, 270, the court, in construing this same statute, said: “It is.contended by the appellee that the provision for a record, designed to show who the stockholders are at any given time, is for the sole benefit of the corporation itself. But there is nothing in the provision that calls for such construction. Besides, nothing can be clearer than that the record is for the benefit of any one who may desire to inspect it, because it is expressly pro* vided for such.” We conclude, then, that this statute, by necessary implication, required the books of the corporation to be kept at its principal place of business in this state [*200] (State v. Milwaukee, L. S. & W. Ry Co., 45 Wis. 579), and that the memorandum attached thereto' in Boston, Mass., did not, for this reason, furnish the record of the transfer required by the statute. We next come to the question of whether the pencil memorandum on the stub of the stock book was a sufficient transfer, under the statute. The stub itself showed to whom the stock had been originally issued, and the fact that it bore no other indorsement than the pencil one mentioned would indicate that it had been transferred by Mr. Lyons, the person to whom issued. The stub itself also gave the number of the shares-It appears from the record that the plaintiff knew Mi-Harris, and knew that he was the treasurer pf the Brattleboro Savings Bank, and it is to be presumed that he knew where the bank was- located. This being true, would not the pencil notation on the- stub of the New England Syndicate stock book, “With Brattleboro S. B., as collateral,” convey all the additional information required by the statute ? Every requirement was present, except the date; and w© do not think that was of great importance in this case, because the indorsement had been of long standing when the levy was made-We think the pencil notation a sufficient transfer, under the statute. Moore v. Opera-House Co., 81 Iowa, 45. See, also, American Nat. Bank v. Oriental Mills, 17 R. I. 551 (23 Atl. Rep. 795), Fisher v. Jones, 82 Ala. 117 (3 South. Rep. 13); Bank v. Cutler, 52 Me. 509.
There was no error in trying the case .in equity. The» judgment of the district court is affirmed on both appeals.— Affirmed.