which no Court can interfere, and over which no Court has any juris-
diction of review or appeal.
The applicants failed to sustain the onus resting upon them, and this appeal should be allowed.
I would add a word. Discussion took place during the argument Co. LTD.
of this appeal as to proxy voting, independently of registration of the transfers. My judgment is entirely free from all consideration of that matter and I neither express, nor must be taken as holding, any formed opinion on the subject.
STARKE J. The appellant is a company limited by shares, and incorporated pursuant to the Companies Act 1863-1896 of Queens- land. One of its objects is to issue policies for life assurance or endowments or annuities, or for assurance against death or injury by accident or against bodily or mental incapacity arising from accident or disease, or against the liability of an employer for an accident to an employee whether at common law or under any statute. The capital of this Company is £100,000, divided into 50,000 shares of £2 each. But the subscribed capital is only £20,000, of which £8,402 10s. has been paid up, and £3,441 5s. has been paid in advance of calls. Art. 21 of the articles of association of the Company provides "The directors may refuse to register any transfer whatsoever of shares without assigning any reason therefor."
As was said in the Court below, "the members of the Company seem to be divided into two opposing sections." One section, which may be called the "directors' section," had control of 4,155 shares; the other, which may be designated the "Ure section," had control of 3,710 shares. But there were, in addition, 1,720 shares registered in the name of Victor Ethelbert Ludlow and Margaret Mary Ludlow. About February 1922 the respondent Mrs. Frances Stephanie Ure purchased these shares, and, pursuant to the Companies Acts and the articles of association of the Company, presented transfers of the same for registration, first, on 22nd February 1922, to herself and her nominees, and again, on 30th October 1922, to her nominees. The directors of the Company refused, on each occasion, to register the transfers, and a motion was then made to the Supreme Court to compel the registration by the Company of the transfers presented