TRANSFER AND TRANSMISSION OF SHARES 81 that person then proceeds to obtain within eight days an order of the Court restraining the transfer, the company may pro- ceed to register the transfer in spite of the notice. Forms of notice by the company to the person on whose behalf the notice and affidavit were lodged, and to the person actually lodging them, will be found in Appendix F (Forms 23 and 24). One or two other matters connected with transfers remain Legal Effect to be noticed. The legal effect of a transfer, duly completed of Transfers. by registration, is important. A transferee does not get a full title until the transfer is registered [Société Générale v. Walker (1886), 11 A.C. 20]. The entry of the name of a transferee on the register by a secretary, without authority, before the directors have approved the transfer, gives ‘the transferee no title, and the transferor still remains liable on the shares [Chida Mines v. Anderson (1905), 22 T.L.R. 27]. Till registration the transferee has only an equitable right, which he may lose by the appearance of some person with a superior equity, or by the registration of a later transfer [Moore v. N.W. Bank (1891), 2 Ch. 599; Ireland v. Hart (1902), 1 Ch. 522]. Meanwhile the transferor remains liable to pay calls, but there is an implied contract by the transferee to indemnify him [Loring v. Davis (1886), 32 Ch. D. 625], and, subject to the articles of association, the transferor can enforce the registration. If a shareholder neglects to have the name of the transferee substituted for his own upon the register of shareholders and a winding-up supervenes, his name must remain there, and he is therefore liable to pay up the amount due upon his shares [Walker's Case (1868), 6 Eq. 30], although he would be entitled to indemnity by the transferee. The transferor after registration is not primarily liable as a con- tributory [Hoylake Railway Co. (1874), 9 Ch. App. 257], but remains liable for one year to be placed on the ‘B’ List of contributories (see ss. 175 and 203 of the Act). But even after registration the transferor will be liable to be restored to the register if the transfer was fraudulent, or made without the authority of the transferee, or to a nominee of the company to the knowledge of the transferor; but in the case last men- tioned the transferee may be liable [Cree v. Somervail (1879), 4 A.C. 648]. If the articles provide that a member shall not be entitled to vote whilst any call or other sum is due and payable to the company in respect of any of the shares of such member, it has been held that, although the calls can be recovered from the original holder, even after forfeiture, the person, to whom the shares have been re-sold by the company, takes subject to such disqualification notwithstanding that