1-440.19. Levy on stock in corporation.
(a) The sheriff may levy, as on tangible property, on a share of stock in a corporation by seizing the certificate of stock
(1) When the certificate is in the possession of the defendant, and
(2) When, by the law of the state in which the corporation is incorporated, the property interest of the stockholder is embodied in the certificate of stock, as is provided by the Uniform Stock Transfer Act or similar legislation.
(b) The sheriff may levy on a share of stock in a corporation by delivery of copies of the garnishment process to the proper officer or agent of such corporation, as set out in G.S. 1-440.26,
(1) When, by the law of the state in which the corporation is incorporated, the property interest of the stockholder is not embodied in the certificate of stock, or
(2) When, by the law of the state in which the corporation is incorporated, the property interest of the stockholder is embodied in the certificate of the stock, as is provided by the Uniform Stock Transfer Act or similar legislation, and
a. Such certificate has been surrendered to the corporation which issued it, or
b. The transfer of such certificate by the holder thereof has been restrained or enjoined.
(c) A restraining order or injunction against the transfer of a certificate of stock, when proper in an attachment proceeding, may be granted by the clerk or judge pursuant to a motion in the cause to which the attachment is ancillary. (1947, c. 693, s. 1.)
Structure North Carolina General Statutes
North Carolina General Statutes
§ 1-440 - Superseded by Session Laws 1947, c693, codified as § 1- 440.1 et seq.
§ 1-440.1 - Nature of attachment.
§ 1-440.2 - Actions in which attachment may be had.
§ 1-440.3 - Grounds for attachment.
§ 1-440.4 - Property subject to attachment.
§ 1-440.5 - By whom order issued; when and where; filing of bond and affidavit.
§ 1-440.6 - Time of issuance with reference to summons or service by publication.
§ 1-440.7 - Time within which service of summons or service by publication must be had.
§ 1-440.8 - General provisions relative to bonds.
§ 1-440.9 - Authority of court to fix procedural details.
§ 1-440.10 - Bond for attachment.
§ 1-440.11 - Affidavit for attachment; amendment.
§ 1-440.12 - Order of attachment; form and contents.
§ 1-440.13 - Additional orders of attachment at time of original order; alias and pluries orders.
§ 1-440.14 - Notice of issuance of order of attachment when no personal service.
§ 1-440.15 - Method of execution.
§ 1-440.16 - Sheriff's return.
§ 1-440.17 - Levy on real property.
§ 1-440.18 - Levy on tangible personal property in defendant's possession.
§ 1-440.19 - Levy on stock in corporation.
§ 1-440.20 - Levy on goods in warehouses.
§ 1-440.21 - Nature of garnishment.
§ 1-440.22 - Issuance of summons to garnishee.
§ 1-440.23 - Form of summons to garnishee.
§ 1-440.24 - Form of notice of levy in garnishment proceeding.
§ 1-440.25 - Levy upon debt owed by, or property in possession of, the garnishee.
§ 1-440.26 - To whom garnishment process may be delivered when garnishee is corporation.
§ 1-440.27 - Failure of garnishee to appear.
§ 1-440.28 - Admission by garnishee; setoff; lien.
§ 1-440.29 - Denial of claim by garnishee; issues of fact.
§ 1-440.30 - Time of jury trial.
§ 1-440.31 - Payment to defendant by garnishee.
§ 1-440.32 - Execution against garnishee.
§ 1-440.33 - When lien of attachment begins; priority of liens.
§ 1-440.34 - Effect of defendant's death after levy.
§ 1-440.35 - Sheriff's liability for care of attached property; expense of care.
§ 1-440.36 - Dissolution of the order of attachment.
§ 1-440.37 - Modification of the order of attachment.
§ 1-440.38 - Stay of order dissolving or modifying an order of attachment.
§ 1-440.39 - Discharge of attachment upon giving bond.
§ 1-440.40 - Defendant's objection to bond or surety.
§ 1-440.41 - Defendant's remedies not exclusive.
§ 1-440.43 - Remedies of third person claiming attached property or interest therein.
§ 1-440.44 - When attached property to be sold before judgment.
§ 1-440.45 - When defendant prevails in principal action.