up, the objection referred to by the Court in Lindlar's Case did not exist. It is unnecessary here to say what precisely the true import and effect of the passage referred to may be, as to a company in any case being compelled to register a transfer to a mere trustee for a shareholder. One thing is clear from that case, as from prior cases, namely, that the transfer of property allowed by the Act is not a mere nominal transfer, with nothing of sub- stance behind it. That, in the words of the judgment in that case, is "purporting to do one thing and in fact doing another."
In my opinion the applicants fail at the threshold, because there was no real transfer of the shares at all, and the motive of vote splitting only becomes material as the dominating circum- stance, leading to the conclusion of fact that the transaction was of a merely formal and nominal character, attracting no legal right of enforcement.
The appeal should, therefore, be allowed.
RICH J. The New South Wales Companies Act 1899 (sec. 235), like its model the English Act, gives a free right of dis- position of shares subject to such restrictions and limitations upon its exercise as may be imposed by the articles. Restriction of the power of transfer of shares is often desirable especially in a co-operative company such as this. Chadwyclo Healey, 3rd ed., at p. 90, says:- Again, an owner of shares may distribute them amongst his nominees for the mere purpose of securing votes, and may insist on the registration of the transfers, if there be nothing in the rules of the company to afford a reason for refusing to do SO. In this way meetings may be packed and real majorities overruled. The everyday working of a company con- stantly affords evidence of the desirability of some restriction."
"A member," says Palmer, 11th ed., at p. 704, "is entitled to transfer his shares to nominees, SO as to secure to himself the maximum of voting power, and the directors must register the transfers, unless the articles give them a power to decline, which is applicable in such a case."
The facts of this case appear to me to disclose a transaction not of an out-and-out gift or sale of shares, but a contrivance on