On the third of July, 1891, the plaintiff was the owner of ten shares of stock of the par value of $1,000 of the defendant bank. He Was also a depositor in said bank. He kept his stock certificate in a safe in his office. One Breese, who was plaintiff’s clerk at the time, stole this certificate from plaintiff’s safe, caused plaintiff’s name to be forged to the blank assignment thereon and sold the certificate to the defendant Wollman, a stock broker, for $1,000, under circumstances hereinafter more fully stated. Breese' fraudulently pretended to act for the plaintiff in this transaction. Wollman refused to consummate the purchase unless the certificate was first surrendered to the bank, and a new certificate was issued in his, Wollman’s,.name. Breese and Wollman thereupon went to the bank, where either Wollman, or Breese-, pretending to act by plaintiff’s authority surrendered the certificate to the bank and obtained a new certificate in Wollman’s name. Wollman thereupon delivered to Breese in payment of the stock his check on another bank for $1,000 payable to the order of plaintiff. Breese caused plaintiff’s name to be forged on the reverse side of this check, and also caused plaintiff’s signature to be forged to a letter requesting Wollman to aid him in cashing the check. Wollman thereupon went with *476Breese to his own bank and aided him in cashing the check; All these forgeries were very skillfully executed by transferring plaintiff’s genuine signature by means of a tissue paper tracing to the various documents in a manner designed to avoid the detection of the forgery even by close scrutiny. As soon as Breese obtained the money he fled, but was captured within a few days in Charleston, Missouri, with $665, part proceeds of Wollman’s check, upon his person. This money the plaintiff and his partner deposited as a special fund for the benefit of whomsoever should be entitled thereto. The bank which had claims against Breese for money fraudulently obtained from it on other forgeries, attached this money by garnishments. Upon these garnishments such proceedings were had that the bank obtained judgments, and the residue of the money after deducting certain expenses for securing it and also the amount of $30 due the plaintiff from Breese, was paid over to the bank. The amount thus paid over amounted to $487.16, less costs, or to a net amount of $367.84. Besides this amount the sum of $100 given by Breese to a courtesan in Kansas City was also recovered, and attached by the bank. Touching the foregoing facts there is no controversy.
The plaintiff upon discovering the loss of his certificate, and the manner in which it was brought about, filed this bill in equity against the bank and Wollman. The bill states the larceny of plaintiff’s certificate, its fraudulent surrender to the bank and the issue of the new certificate to Wollman. It prays for the cancellation of the' second certificate, and for a re-issue of plaintiff’s certificate to himself. The bank answered averring its own good faith in the transaction, and concluding that it did not know whether under the circumstances Wollman or the .plaintiff was entitled to the stock, but that so far as it was *477concerned it was ready and willing to cancel the second certificate, and to issue a new one to plaintiff, or to any person whom the court might find to be the owner of the shares. The answer and cross bill of Wollman states in substance that he bought the stock on condition that a new certificate should be issued to him. That the plaintiff was not only a stockholder but also a depositor in the bank, that the latter was therefore presumed to know his signature, and that he did not pay to Breese the $1,000 until after the bank had issued a new certificate to him (Wollman) and had accepted the surrender from Breese, whom the bank well knew, while he was a stranger to him (Wollman). The answer further states, that the plaintiff with a full knowledge of Breese’s transactions, thereafter received' from him $800 of the identical money which Wollman had paid for the stock to Breese as plaintiff’s agent. The answer then states that the defendant bank instituted a number of attachment suits against Breese, and garnished the plaintiff from whom it received the sum of about $700, although the bank, before it brought the suits against Breese, and before it garnished Trimble, and when it obtained the judgment aforesaid and collected the same, had full knowledge that all the money in the hands of Trimble was part of the identical money paid by the defendant Wollman to Breese for the shares of stock. The answer prayed that the defendant Wollman might be decreed to be the true and lawful owner of such shares, and for other and further relief.
To this answer and cross bill the bank filed a reply, the reply stated in substance that the old certificate was in the possession of Wollman prior to its surrender; that he brought it to the bank and represented to its officers that he had bought it for its full market value of $112 per share, whereas he had paid *478only the par value thereof; that this was done for the purpose of deceiving the bank officers and throwing them off their guard; that if they had known that Wollman had paid only par for the shares, their suspicions would have been aroused and they would not have canceled the certificate and that hence Wollman. was estopped from holding the bank responsible for the loss caused by his own negligence. The reply further stated that after the bank had attached the money in the plaintiff’s hands, Wollman was notified to assert his claim thereto if' he had any, but that he persistently refused to assert any claim to it, in consequence whereof the magistrate adjudged that the money belonged to Breese, and rendered judgment-accordingly, which judgment resulted in the bank receiving $367.80 of said money and no more. The reply further averred that the bank did not know whether the money thus attached was the money of Wollman or the money of Breese and that the proceedings touching the attachment of the money taken from the courtesan were still pending.
Decree. On the issue thus framed, the trial court heard evidence and decreed that the cancellation by the bank of the plaintiff’s certificate be vacated; that the certificate issued by the bank to Wollman be can- . celed; that the plaintiff recover from the bank certain dividends declared on the stock, and Wollman recover of the bank the sum of $1,138.05, being the amount paid for the stock with interest. The ’court also adjudged all the costs against the bank. The bank thereupon sued out a writ of error, and assigns for error that the decree is unsupported by the evidence and contrary to equity.
*479Ctransfe^Tof0sw<iu: fmgery :iia*478An eminent text writer states the law governing the rights of parties where shares in corporations-are transferred under forged powers, to be as follows: The *479■corporation incurs an alternative liability to the original stockholder for a conversion of his shares, or to a Iona fide subtransferee who has purchased the shares on the faith of the new certificate, fat it does not incur a liability to the first purchaser of the forged certificate because it was his duty primarily to see that the transfer to him was genuine. In such a case the rightful stockholder may maintain a bill in equity to compel the corporation to issue to him a new certificate and to pay to him the dividends accrued on his shares. Thompson on Corporations, secs. 2555-2567. This statement of the law is in conformity with the decisions in England and America, and as far as the rights of the first shareholder are concerned has been sanctioned in Telegraph Company v. Davenport, 97 U. S. 369. The judgment rendered herein, therefore, as far as plaintiff’s rights are concerned, is the only judgment that could be rendered, and the plaintiff in error has no just cause to complain of the same.
¡üy! estoppel' On the other hand the judgment, so far as Wall-man is concerned, would be clearly wrong, provided he was the purchaser of the forged certificate, for two reasons: First, because he would have parted with his money on the faith of the forged certificate, and not on the faith of the issue of the new certificate, and hence the issue of the new certificate would not be the primary cause of his loss, and, next, because, as the author properly says, it would have been Wollman’s duty to see that the transfer to him was genuine. Another text writer of authority says: Such a registered transferee has a right of action against the corporation by reason of its rescission of his registry, although the rule may be different if he purchased by reason of the fact that he was allowed such registry on the corporate boohs. Morse on *480Banking, sec. 364. In the ease last stated the corporation in effect declares to the transferee, I have been duly authorized to issue these shares to you, and if the transferee parts with his money on faith of this implied declaration, the ease is governed by the ordinary rules of estoppel, and the corporation can not as against the transferee deny its own authority, because where one by his word or conduct willfully causes another to believe in the existence of a certain state of facts, and induced him to act on that belief, or to alter his own previous position the former is concluded from averring against the latter a different state of things as existing at the time. Pickard v. Sears et al., 6 Ad. & Ell., loc. cit. 474.
It will thus be seen that in all cases where such a question arose the liability of the corporation was not made dependent on the fact whether the person in whose favor the registry of the shares was changed was a transferee or a subtransferee, but on the question whether he parted with value on the faith of the new registry, under circumstances which gave rise to an estoppel on part of the corporation. The cases of Balkins Cons. Co. v. Tompkinson, 1 App. C. Law Rep. (1893) 396; Hart v. Frontino, etc., Co., 5 Ex. Law Rep. 111; and In Re The Bahia, etc., R. Co., 3 Q. B. Law Rep. (1868) 584, in England, and the case of Metropolitan Savings Bank v. Mayor, etc., of Baltimore, 63 Md. 6, in the United States, furnish apt illustrations of the rule and its limitations.
In the case last mentioned the plaintiff had advanced $3,500 on a certificate of stock, the indorsement whereon was forged. Upon a request to advance $6,000 more the plaintiff agreed to do so provided a new certificate was made out in its own name for $10,000. The new certificate was thereupon thus made out by the corporation, at the request of the forger, but with*481out any active intervention by word or act on part of the plaintiff., and the plaintiff on faith of the new certificate advanced the additional $6,000. It was held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover from the corporation the $6,000 advanced on the faith of the new certificate, but not the $3,500 previously advanced. The case would be identical with the one at bar b.ut for the element which is contained in the sentence italicized above. As the case seems to be decided on correct lines, it would be decisive of the case at bar but for the element mentioned.
*482^rSfScred¡?:’ mfamy. gmit. *481It thus becomes important to determine from the evidence whether Wollman, in the case at bar, has by his own acts and conduct deprived himself of the benefit of the estoppel which he otherwise would have been entitled to invoke against the bank. If the proper inference from the evidence is that the new certificate was issued by the bank at his request, and that the officers of the bank were justified by his conduct to believe that the request came from him, he can not invoke an estoppel because in that event it was his duty primarily to determine the genuineness of the plaintiff’s signature. If, on the other hand, Wollman’s conduct in the matter was merely passive and the new certificate was not issued at his request but at the request of Breese purporting to act as plaintiff’s agent, then the duty to determine the genuineness of plaintiff’s signature rested primarily with the bank, and it is estopped as against Wollman to dispute the validity of the- new certificate. The evidence on this subject is conflicting. As far as there is any conflict in the evidence between that of Wollman and Breese that conflict must be solved in favor of Wollman. Mere interest should not be permitted to undermine the credit due to a witness to the same extent as moral infamy. Breese was not *482legally infamous until after sentence, henee ' he was a competent witness, but he was a(jmi^e(jiy morally infamous by his plea of guilty, and that moral infamy necessarily destroyed the credit due to his testimony to a great extent. On the other hand the conflict between the testimony of 'Wollman and Lewis, the cashier of the bank, must be solved'in favor of the latter, because the former is a party and highly interested witness, while the latter, as far as shown, has no pecuniary interest in the suit. • There is nothing in the surrounding circumstances which makes the evidence of Lewis improbable.
All the evidence concedes that Wollman and Breese went jointly to the bank to have the transfer effected. What passed at the bank after they came there is testified to by Lewis as follows: “It was after dinner; about, I should say, 2 o’clock or between 2 and 3. Mr. Wollman came into the bank with Breese. Mr. Wollman came to my desk and he says, Mr. Lewis, I am a partner here now, and I want you to transfer this stock, and he took it out of his pocket and handed it to me like that. I asked him if he could wait a little while, and get the stock when he came to see about the exchange. He says: No, I am in a hurry-and I want it now. I said: Yery well, if you will wait a moment I will transfer it. So I went back to fill it out. I took the stock book and issued the new stock, and gave it to Mr. Bea’ls and Mr. Beals took it back to his desk and signed it. I put the seal of the bank on after he signed it, and filled it up and handed it to Mr. Wollman.’7
UQ. Did you have any conversation with Mr. Wollman at any time in regard to the price he paid for the stock? A. I asked him and he said 112.”
“Q. What did you say to him? A. I asked him the price of the stock and he said 112. Breese came *483up and I said, ‘Dick, what did the judge get for the stock?’ and he said 112.”
“Q. To whom did you refer when you said the judge? A■. Judge Trimble.”
On cross-examination the witness stated that he examined the signature on the certificate with the same care as usual, but knowing Wollman as well as he did, and the stock coming through the channel it did, his suspicions were not aroused.
Corporations: • transferee;stoc^* estoppel. Wollman had at that time paid nothing for the stock, but had bargained to buy the stock from Breese at par. The stock was at that time selling from 105 to 108 and was quoted at 112. He was of course under 110 obligation fro disclose at what figure he was buying the stock, but if he chose to give that information.it was his duty to speak the truth. Finding that the stock was transferred at his request, that he told the cashier that he had bought the stock and had paid for it, and had paid for it at its highest market value, he can not now invoke an estoppel against the bank on the theory that he bought the stock on the faith of the new certificate. The bank was justified by Wollman’s acts and conduct to treat the transaction as one where the apparent transferee asserted the genuineness of the signature, by claiming rights under the transfer and under such circumstances was under no duty to Wollman to discover a forgery which, as above stated, was a perfect imitation of the genuine signature. The judgment, therefore, in favor of Wollman against the bank for the . amount lost by him in the transaction can not be supported.
Counsel for Wollman claim that if he is entitled to no relief against the bank for the recovery of the money he parted with in the purchase, he should obtain relief to the extent of his money having subsequently been *484converted by the bank to its own use. Counsel suggest that even if the judgment is reversed as to Wollman it should be reversed with directions to afford him that relief. In reply to this argument counsel for the bank say that Wollman having insisted throughout that the issue of the certificate to him was a valid issue, and having throughout disclaimed any title or interest in the money which he had paid on account of the certificate, is not now in a position to claim that the bank illegally converted his money. In brief, that Wollman is concluded by his election. Counsel for the bank further assert that such relief would not be warranted under any of the allegations in Woilman’s cross bill, and that the necessary parties for making such a disposition of the case are not before the court.
E^!Splete p^ad?ngsfapfpellate practice. This is a case in equity, and if a complete disposition can be made of the entire controversy between the parties, which will do complete equity between them, it is the duty of the court to do so. The fact that the pleadings do , t • i not warrant it, is no obstacle, since the decree must necessarily be reversed, and may be reversed with directions to permit such an amendment of the pleadings as would warrant a decree in conformity with equity and good conscience, provided always that Wollman is not concluded by his election; that the necessary parties for making a complete disposition of the case are before the court, and that the evidence warrants such a disposition.
*485- — ¡•election: jurisdiction °f justice. *484As hereinabove stated, when Breese was arrested $665 in money were found on his person. This money was attached by the bank as soon as it reached Kansas City. That was part of the identical money obtained by Breese on Wollman’s check, and it appeared that *485the bank knew this to be the fact shortly after the attachment. The additional sum of $100 recovered from the courtesan and constituting part of the money drawn on Woll man’s check by Breese was also attached by the bank. After- the money was thus attached, Wollman was- asked whether he claimed it as his money, and replied he claimed that the stock was his and that he did not then set up any claim to the money. It is but just, however, to him to state that he offered to take the money and surrender the stock certificate provided the loss resulting from the difference between what he paid and the amount recovered would be borne in equal proportions between himself, the plaintiff, apd the bank. To this extent he was willing to do equity, but the bank was not. The bank claimed the right to proceed against the money, without admitting its liability for the stock. The position of both parties was inconsistent; that of Wollman in claiming that part of the loss should fall oh the plaintiff, who was conceded to be innocent, and on the bank who is now adjudged to be innocent; that of the bank, however, was not only inconsistent but inequitable, because it insisted that Wollman should lose both his stock and money.
The plaintiff, after he was garnished, set up in his answer the circumstances under which he came into possession of the money, and invoked the protection of the court. The justice ordered Wollman to inter-plead for the money, which Wollman declined to do. As the order of the justice was not one within the jurisdiction of the court, Wollman can not of course be precluded by not availing himself of it, unless under the circumstances he can be held to have made his conclusive election by his acts. On this branch of the case I find that Wollman can not be debarred of relief on the ground that his acts manifest a conclusive elec*486tion. Although there is some diversity of opinion on the subject as to what will amount to such an election, the rule in this state is settled that an election is in the nature of an estoppel, and unless it is shown by the record of a final judgment, or contains the elements of an estoppel in pais owing to intervening rights, it will not conclude the party against whom it is invoked. Anchor Milling Company v. Walsh, 20 Mo. App. 106; Lapp v. Ryan, 23 Mo. App. 436; Enterprise Soap Company v. Sayres, 51 Mo. App. 310; Johnson-Brinkman Co.v. Central Bank, 116 Mo. 558; Johnson-Brinkman Co. v. Railroad, 126 Mo. 344. Other courts of high authority have taken the same view. Boston Miner Co. v. Stokes, 82 Md. 50; Wiggins Ferry Co. v. Railway, 142 U. S. 396, 415. Other cases d'raw the distinction between election and mistake of remedies, and. hold that an attempt to avail himself of a remedy which he never had can not be treated as an election by any party.
CwnTof1!°biii¿x' The further inquiry, however, necessarily arises: To what extent may Wollman hold the bank liable for the conversion of the funds'? Is it to the extent of the entire fund attached or only to the extent of as much of the fund as was converted by the action °f the bank to its own use*? For so much of the fund as was turned over to the plaintiff: the bank clearly can not be held responsible, nor can Wollman, as to that, have any relief in this action. That payment is not traceable to any direct action on the part of the bank. For the residue, however, amounting to the sum of $487.16, there is no reason why Wollman should not be entitled to recover. The conversion of that amount is the direct result of the action of the bank, and the funds thus converted are unquestionably the funds of Wollman.
All the parties necessary to a final decree are before the court. The attachment for the $100 is still *487pending, and no reason is apparent why Wollman should not interplead in that suit even now, and obtain the money which is clearly his. Or, if the statute of limitations is likely to be interposed to such a plea, there is no reason why the garnishees should not amend their answer reciting the facts and stating that the money is the money of Wollman. Hence no disposition need be made of that action. The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the lower court to permit the defendant Wollman so to amend his cross bill as to pray for the relief herein indicated, and upon his cross bill being thus amended to enter judgment against the bank in his favor for the sum of $487.16, with interest from October 6, 1891. Warrant for such an amendment is found in Hardin v. Boyd, 113 U. S. 756, and Wiggins Ferry Co. v. Railroad, 142 U. S., on p. 415. As this is a suit in equity wherein the adjudication of the costs is within the discretion of the court it is further orderec], that the entire costs of this proceeding be adjudged against Wollman and the bank, to be borne by them share and share alike.
This disposition of the case is made with the concurrence of Judge Smith, who agrees to' all parts of the opinion. Judge G-ill concurs in the first part thereof, which disposes of the main controversy, but dissents from that part, which determines Wollman’s equities in this proceeding.