ISAACS J. read the following judgment.
In my opinion this appeal must succeed, and out of respect to the learned Chief Justice of Victoria I shall state my reasons.
The defendant received from the Melbourne Ice Skating and Refrigerating Company Limited 2,000 shares paid up to £1 per share, the consideration being services to be rendered by him to the company as its consulting engineer. The services set out in detail were to supply plans and specifications of the necessary refrigeration machinery and to personally supervise the erection of such machinery as might be ordered by the directors without further remuneration other than travelling expenses.
The plaintiff by this action claims these shares (less 250 since arranged for) as his, asserting the defendant to have received them as his trustee or agent, and invokes the equitable assistance of the Court to compel the defendant to transfer them to him.
For this he relies on the well established rule that no agent can be permitted to acquire any personal benefit in the course or by means of his agency. In other words, no agent can lawfully, either within or beyond the actual limits of authority conferred upon him, use, for his own personal advantage, the fiduciary position with which he has been entrusted for his principal's benefit.
The way in which the plaintiff attempts to make out his claim is this: He is a machinery merchant, and alleges that it was part of the defendant's duty as his manager, and also by reason of a special direction, to promote and float the company, to prepare plans and specifications and sell to it refrigerating machinery and plant and to supervise the erection of the machinery and plant when sold. He alleges further that the defendant in the discharge of his duty to the plaintiff did all those things, and secretly received the shares from the company by way of remun- eration for the services rendered as the plaintiff's manager.
The keynote of the plaintiff's claim is that the services for which the shares were given and received were services which the defendant owed to the plaintiff, or, at all events, must be con- sidered in law as rendered on his behalf, SO that the remuneration also must be considered as his.
The work for which, upon the uncontradicted testimony, the