The court below found as a fact that “ about March 7, 1898, the plaintiff obtained from the defendant the sum of $6,390, being the then book value of tlie stock, which money was paid over to the Citizens’ National Bank to apply on its indebtedness, and thereupon the said stock certificates were released by said bank and were by the plaintiff transferred, assigned and set over in blank to the defendant, upon an agreement then and there made as a consideration for said transfer that the said stock certificates should and would be retransferred back and returned to the plaintiff upon payment by the latter of the said $6,390 with six per cent interest thereon, less the dividends received by the said defendant on said stock during the time he held the same, with right in the plaintiff to redeem *218the said stock at any time he could raise moneys sufficient to pay the loan.”
The court regarded the transaction as a pledge of the stock for a loan by defendant to plaintiff and this is probably the correct view of what the parties intended, though no agreement of plaintiff to pay is specifically found, and some doubt, therefore, might have arisen as to his obligation for the balance of the debt had the stock been sold without bringing enough to pay the advance in full. But this question is not material, as the transaction, if not a pledge of collateral for a debt, was clearly a conditional sale of the stock, i. e., a sale with an option in the vendor to repurchase on specified terms.
The fact that the time was left indefinite was not fatal. In either view of the transaction, the defendant, whether pledgee or vendee, could bring it to a close by notice to pay or redeem in a reasonable time or be barred: Sitgreaves v. Farmers’, etc., Bank, 49 Pa. 859, quoting 2 Kent’s Com. *582.
The court also found as facts that the stock of the Citizens’ National Bank is limited in amount; that fifty shares, or any part thereof, are not purchasable in the market; that they have no quoted or ascertainable market value; and. that plaintiff held them as an investment having a peculiar value to him greater than the market price at the time of the transfer. Under these circumstances the jurisdiction of equity to enforce a retransfer is well settled: Goodwin Co’s. App., 117 Pa. 514 (534-5) ; Northern Central Ry. Co. v. Walworth, 193 Pa. 207.
Decree affirmed.