2018 New Mexico Statutes
Chapter 55 - Uniform Commercial Code
Article 8 - Investment Securities
Section 55-8-205 - Effect of unauthorized signature on security certificate.

Universal Citation: NM Stat § 55-8-205 (2018)
55-8-205. Effect of unauthorized signature on security certificate.

An unauthorized signature placed on a security certificate before or in the course of issue is ineffective, but the signature is effective in favor of a purchaser for value of the certificated security if the purchaser is without notice of the lack of authority and the signing has been done by:

(1) an authenticating trustee, registrar, transfer agent or other person entrusted by the issuer with the signing of the security certificate or of similar security certificates or the immediate preparation for signing of any of them; or

(2) an employee of the issuer or of any of the persons listed in Paragraph (1), entrusted with responsible handling of the security certificate.

History: 1978 Comp., § 55-8-205, enacted by Laws 1996, ch. 47, § 25.

ANNOTATIONS

OFFICIAL COMMENTS

UCC Official Comments by ALI & the NCCUSL. Reproduced with permission of the PEB for the UCC. All rights reserved.

1. The problem of forged or unauthorized signatures may arise where an employee of the issuer, transfer agent, or registrar has access to securities which the employee is required to prepare for issue by affixing the corporate seal or by adding a signature necessary for issue. This section is based upon the issuer's duty to avoid the negligent entrusting of securities to such persons. Issuers have long been held responsible for signatures placed upon securities by parties whom they have held out to the public as authorized to prepare such securities. See Fifth Avenue Bank of New York v. The Forty-Second & Grand Street Ferry Railroad Co., 137 N.Y. 231, 33 N.E. 378, 19 L.R.A. 331, 33 Am.St.Rep. 712 (1893); Jarvis v. Manhattan Beach Co., 148 N.Y. 652, 43 N.E. 68, 31 L.R.A. 776, 51 Am.St.Rep. 727 (1896). The "apparent authority" concept of some of the case-law, however, is here extended and this section expressly rejects the technical distinction, made by courts reluctant to recognize forged signatures, between cases where forgers sign signatures they are authorized to sign under proper circumstances and those in which they sign signatures they are never authorized to sign. Citizens' & Southern National Bank v. Trust Co. of Georgia, 50 Ga.App. 681, 179 S.E. 278 (1935). Normally the purchaser is not in a position to determine which signature a forger, entrusted with the preparation of securities, has "apparent authority" to sign. The issuer, on the other hand, can protect itself against such fraud by the careful selection and bonding of agents and employees, or by action over against transfer agents and registrars who in turn may bond their personnel.

2. The issuer cannot be held liable for the honesty of employees not entrusted, directly or indirectly, with the signing, preparation, or responsible handling of similar securities and whose possible commission of forgery it has no reason to anticipate. The result in such cases as Hudson Trust Co. v. American Linseed Co., 232 N.Y. 350, 134 N.E. 178 (1922), and Dollar Savings Fund & Trust Co. v. Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., 213 Pa. 307, 62 A. 916, 5 Ann.Cas. 248 (1906) is here adopted.

3. This section is not concerned with forged or unauthorized indorsements, but only with unauthorized signatures of issuers, transfer agents, etc., placed upon security certificates during the course of their issue. The protection here stated is available to all purchasers for value without notice and not merely to subsequent purchasers.

"Certificated security" Section 8-102(a)(4) [55-8-102 NMSA 1978]

"Issuer" Section 8-201 [55-8-201 NMSA 1978]

"Notice" Section 1-201(25) [55-1-201 NMSA 1978]

"Purchaser" Sections 1-201(33) & 8-116 [55-8-116 NMSA 1978]

"Security certificate" Section 8-102(a)(14)

"Unauthorized signature" Section 1-201(43)

Repeals and reenactments.Laws 1996, ch. 47, § 25 repealed former 55-8-205 NMSA 1978, as amended by Laws 1987, ch. 248 § 14, relating to the effect of an unauthorized signature on certificated security or initial transaction statement, and enacted a new section, effective May 15, 1996. For provisions of former section, see the 1995 NMSA 1978 on NMOneSource.com.

Am. Jur. 2d, A.L.R. and C.J.S. references. — Issuance of stock certificate to joint tenants as creating gift inter vivos, 5 A.L.R.4th 373.

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