42 Cal. 86 | Cal. | 1871
The legal propositions involved in this case are of great practical importance, and, in arriving at a satisfactory solution of them, we have been very much aided by the able and exhaustive briefs of the respective counsel.
In 1863 the Antelope mine, in Esmeralda District, was owned by an incorporated company, established under the laws of the State, and having its principal place of business at San Francisco. The defendant was President of the company, and the plaintiff was Superintendent of the mine. The interests of the respective stockholders in the company were represented by certificates of stock, in the usual form,
The complaint, after averring the ownership of the plaintiff of the Antelope stock, and describing the several certificates, alleges that the plaintiff duly indorsed the certificates, so that the title might pass by delivery, and delivered them to the defendant, to hold the same in trust and as agent for the plaintiff, and if sold to be sold for the account and benefit of the plaintiff, and the proceeds to be paid to the plaintiff; that the defendant afterward sold ten of said shares for the market price of four hundred dollars, in gold coin, per share, and received the money therefor, to
The answer admits that the plaintiff owned the thirty-three and one third shares and delivered the certificates therefor, properly indorsed, to the defendant; but avers that they were delivered solely as collateral security for the advances made by the defendant to the plaintiff, and not upon any trust whatsoever; that the defendant was then and thereafter a large dealer in the stock of said company, having many shares standing in his own name, and holding many certificates for both large and small amounts, issued to other persons, and properly indorsed, so as to pass by delivery; that desiring to make sale of a portion of his own stock in said company, he ordered his broker to sell the same; and in performing the contract of sale he delivered to the purchaser, amongst other certificates, two of those of the plaintiff for five shares each; that he delivered them as his own certificates, and not as those of the plaintiff; that the contract of sale was for his own account and for his own stocks,
The findings are to the effect:
First—That the plaintiff owned the thirty-three and one third shares, for which he held certificates as above stated, which were so numbered as to render them easily capable of identification; and that he also owned one hundred and twelve shares of Real del Monte stock.
Second—That in October, 1862, he made an arrangement: with the defendant by which the defendant agreed to receive, and did receive, the said stocks for sale under the plaintiff’s instructions; and, until the same should be sold, to advance and pay for the plaintiff the assessments levied and to be levied on said stocks, holding the stocks as security for said advances and interest thereon.
Third—That up to February 28th, 1863, the defendant had in this manner advanced for the plaintiff about one thousand dollars, on which day the defendant sold the Real del Monte stock for four thousand four hundred and eighty dollars, which he received; out of which he paid himself his advances and interest; and by agreement with the plaintiff!, held the balance of three thousand three hundred and seventy-eight dollars and ninety-three cents for the account of the plaintiff and
Fourth—That on the 7th of March, 1863, the defendant wrongfully sold ten shares of the plaintiff’s Antelope stock for four thousand dollars in gold coin, which he received and appropriated to his own use; that on the 29th of April, 1863, without the knowledge or authority of the plaintiff, the defendant wrongfully disposed of, to his own use, fifteen other shares of said stock, which was then of the market value of three hundred and forty-five dollars, in gold coin, per share; that on the 19th of February, 1864, without the knowledge or authority of the plaintiff', the defendant wrongfully disposed of, to his own use, five other shares of said stock, which was then of the market value of two hundred dollars per share, in gold coin.
Fifth—That the plaintiff never made any ratification, confirmation, or settlement of said transactions, or any of them; that in March, 1864, the plaintiff required of the defendant that he should return to him his thirty-three and one third shares, and account with him for the moneys in defendant’s hands; that the defendant did not account with the plaintiff for said moneys, or return said stock; but in lieu thereof returned to him only three and one third shares, and delivered to him an order on the Secretary of the company to transfer on the books of the company to the plaintiff thirty shares of the defendant’s stock, on the payment by the plaintiff of seven hundred and fifty dollars in gold coin, being the amount of an assessment alleged by the defendant to be due thereon; and the defendant at the same time handed to the plaintiff three hundred and seventy-one dollars and thirty-nine cents in cash, as and for the balance of the plaintiff’s moneys in his hands, alleging that all the rest of the plaintiff’s money in the defendant’s hands, being three thousand and seven dollars and fifty-four cents, had been applied by
Sixth—That during all the period covered by these transactions the defendant had more than seventy, shares of the Antelope stock standing in his name on the books of the company, and owned by him.
Seventh—That by the custom of brokers in San Francisco one share of stock is considered of no more value than another share of stock in the same corporation, and that stock brokers frequently exchange certificates for the same number of shares in the same corporation; but neither the plaintiff or defendant was a member of the Board of Brokers, nor were said transactions, -or any of them, had with reference to any custom of said Board.
In respect to many of the controlling facts of the case, there is little or no contrariety in the evidence. As to the ten shares of Antelope stock, the only testimony concerning the sale of them by the defendant was to the effect that the defendant, being the owner in his own right of a large amount of the stock of that company, ordered his broker to sell a portion of it; that the broker contracted to sell twenty or more shares to Edward Martin, and in performing the contract of sale the defendant, who was President of the company, delivered to Martin ten shares of the plaintiff’s stock; that in so dealing with these shares the defendant delivered them as his own, and not as the property of the plaintiff; that the sale to Martin was intended by the defendant to be of his own stocks, and not the plaintiff's; and that the defendant, during the whole time, held in his own name more than enough of the stock of the company to replace the ten shares of the plaintiff".
The argument of the counsel for the plaintiff" on this branch of the case is, that inasmuch as the defendant sold these ten shares without the authority of the plaintiff", and against his orders, it was a wrongful conversion of the stock by the defendant to his own use; that it was optional with the plaintiff whether he would repudiate the sale and hold the defendant for the market value of the stock, or, waiving the wrongful conversion, ratify the-sale and demand the proceeds.
There can be no doubt as to the general proposition that, if the bailee of personal property sell it in violation of his authority, the owner may ratify the transaction and demand the proceeds of the sale. If A. intrust to B. a.steamboat, for sale at a limited price, and if B., in violation of his duty, sell it for a less price, A. may acquiesce in the sale and
But we think such certificates stand upton a different footing. Whilst stock in corporations is denominated personal property, and is subject to seizure and sale under execution, and whilst a particular certificate may be capable of complete identification, by its numbers or otherwise, the certificate is but the evidence that the holder of it is entitled to an undivided share in the assets and business of the corporation. The stockholders are the joint owners of the franchise and property of the corporation, each being entitled to an undivided share thereof, and the only office of the certificate is to furnish the evidence of the' quantum of interest held by the owner of the certificate. “ Certificates of stock are not securities for money in any sense; much less are they negotiable securities. They are simply the muniments and evidence of the holder’s title to a given share in the property and franchises of "the corporation of which he is a member.” (Mechanics’ Bank v. New York and New Haven Railroad Company, 13 N. Y. R. 626.)
If a firm, doing business as an ordinary partnership, issue certificates to each of its members, specifying the interests of the respective copartners, such certificates would have no intrinsic value, except as evidence of the quantum of interest of each copartner. The joint interest of the copartner in the property and business of the firm is the substance, of
The general rule is, as we have stated, that the owner of personal property which has been wrongfully converted, is entitled to recover his specific property or its value, and cannot he compelled to accept other property of the same kind and of equal value, in lieu of that which was converted. The reason of the rule is obvious. The owner may have special reasons for desiring to retain that specific chattel; and there may be reasons why he attached a peculiar value to' it beyond the value of other chattels of a precisely similar kind.- If his desire in this respect be the result of mere caprice, he is entitled to he gratified in the exercise of it. Visible, tangible chattels may have secret defects which no vigilance could detect. If two visible objects be apparently precisely similar, one may have infirmities not discoverable on inspection, which would impair or destroy its value. Hence the owner of such chattel cannot be compelled to accept in lieu of it another which appears to be precisely similar and of equal value. He cannot be required to take the risk of secret defects in the substituted article. Other considerations, also, affect the general rule. If a favorite horse, a pet dog, or a family picture be converted by a wrongdoer, he could not escape
But we think the reason of the rule ceases when applied to stocks. It is impossible that any sane person should have centered his affections upon a particular stock certificate, or that any violence could be done to his feelings by requiring him to accept another certificate of precisely similar character, in lieu of it. His own certificate was only the evidence that he owned an undivided interest in the capital and business of the corporation. Another certificate of the same kind, for the same amount of stock, would entitle him to precisely the same rights as the former certificate. Each . would be a precise equivalent of the other, and it is certain he could suffer no pecuniary loss by the transaction; whilst the nature of the property, or rather of his interest in it, forbids the idea that it could be the object of personal attachment, or have a peculiar value in his estimation as contradistinguished from any other equal number of shares in the same company.
For these reasons, we think, a different rule should govern the conversion of a certificate of stock; and if the wrongdoer was at all times ready and willing to transfer to the owner an equivalent number of similar shares in the same company, by a proper and valid certificate, it would present a case for nominal damages only.
Inasmuch as we have been referred to no adjudged case precisely similar to this, and tlxe question involved being one of great practical importance, we propose to notice briefly the authorities relied upon.
Wilson v. Little, 2 Comst. 443, cited by the plaintiff’s counsel, was an action to recover the value of fifty shares of Hew York and Erie Railroad stock, deposited with the defendant as collateral security to secure the payment of a promissory note, with authority to sell the stock on non-payment of the note. The defendant sold the stock before maturity of the
In discussing this branch of the case, the Court say: “ The defendants were bound to restore the identical stock pledged.” And in another part of the opinion: “Although the plaintiff was strictly entitled to a retransfer of the same shares which were pledged, it appears that his broker was willing to receive other stock of the same description and Value,” etc. In the first paragraph quoted we understand the Court to refer to “consolidated,” as contradistinguished from converted stock; but if it be conceded that in strict law the plaintiff was entitled to a retransfer of the same identical shares which were pledged, it by no means follows that he was entitled to any but nominal damages, if the defendant was at all times ready and willing to transfer to him an equal number of shares of the same kind of stock with that which was pledged.
Brookman v. Rothschild, 3 Simmons, 6 Eng. Ch. 153, was a bill in chancery to set aside certain transactions in stocks on the ground of fraud. The defendant was the plaintiff’s agent, and rendered accounts showing large transactions in stocks for the plaintiff’s account. It appeared on the trial that the stocks stood in the name of the defendant, and were never in any manner appropriated or set apart to the plaintiff. The Court held that the stocks never became the prop
Seymour v. Wickoff, 6 Seld. 213, was an action to recover the value of a quantity of pork in Barrels, left with the defendants as commission merchants, for sale, and which was sold at ten dollars per barrel; but the plaintiff was not advised of the sale, and afterwards, on discovering it, brought an action for the proceeds. The defense attempted to be set up was that the pork in question was only a portion of a much larger quantity belonging to the defendant, or consigned to him by others, and which had the same inspection brand, and was stored in the same warehouse, by reason of which it had lost its identity, like wheat mixed in a bin, and that so long as the defendant had on hand an equal quantity of pork of the same brand, he might apply the plaintiff’s ownership to that parcel, and sell it on his account. This defense was held to be insufficient, as it manifestly was. But there is no analogy between pork in barrels, capable of complete identification, and having peculiar qualities, on which its value depends, and certificates of stock, having no value over other similar certificates for the same stock.
In Ford v. Hopkins, 1 Salk. 283, the plaintiff had delivered certain lottery tickets to a goldsmith to collect the money due on them. The goldsmith, having received of the defendant other tickets in the same lottery, and given his note for them, took up his note by delivering the plaintiff ’s tickets to the defendant.
The Court held that the goldsmith had no authority, except to receive the money due on the tickets, and had no power to sell them or exchange them for other tickets; consequently, no title passed to the defendant.
Nourse v. Prime, 4 John. Ch. R. 496, and which was more fully considered in 7 John. Ch. R. 87, is, in some respects, very similar to this ease. The defendants were stock brokers, and had purchased for the plaintiff four hundred and
The defendants ultimately sold the stock at a depreciated price, which was not sufficient to pay the debt, and brought an action at law against the plaintiff for the deficiency. The plaintiff then filed this bill in equity, to enjoin the action at law, on the ground that the defendants were large operators in stocks, and had mingled his stock with their own and other stocks which they held in trust, in such manner that they could not be distinguished; that it was the duty of the defendants to have set apart the plaintiff’s shares in such manner that they could be identified, and not having done so, they were liable for the highest price at which the stock could have been sold.
The defendants relied for their defense on the fact that the plaintiff had never requested them to set apart any particular four hundred and thirty shares, and that the custom was for brokers to keep all stocks of which they had control in their own names, not distinguishing one parcel from another; and that they at all times had enough of the stock of the United States Bank under their control to have replaced the plaintiffs stock, and were at all. times ready and willing to do so on payment of the note. Chancellor Kent, in delivering his opinion in the case, puts it upon the ground that under the contract all that the plaintiff could
“Here the defendant held ¿6990 in South Sea stock, in trust for the plaintiff. The stock stood in his name, and he gave a note declaring the trust. Five hundred pounds of it was afterwards transferred to the plaintiff, and a bill was filed, for an account for the residue, at the then price of stock. The defendant admitted in his answer that he had morgaged ¿61,000 of stock, and sold out all the stock in his own name, except ¿680; but he -had more than enough in another person’s name to have answered the trust, if the plaintiff had insisted upon a transfer; and he offered the residue of stock due to the plaintiff, amounting to ¿6490, with the dividends. Lord Chancellor Parker held that the defendant was accountable only for the stock and dividends,» and not for the price at which the stock was held. He observed that, as ¿6100 South Sea stock was not to be ‘specificated ’ from another, equity will never adjudge a man to have broken his trust in a higher degree when he may with equal reason be admitted to have broken it in a lower, and that the stock mortgaged must be esteemed the stock of the plaintiff, and the stock sold that of the defendant.”
The cases of Horton v. Morgan, 4 Duer, 56, affirmed in 19 New York, 172, Gilpin v. Howell, 5 Penn. St. R. 42, and Allen v. Dykers, 4 Hill, 593, sustain the general proposition decided in Nourse v. Prime.
But in all these cases the stock stood in the name of the bailee, and it is claimed that the eases turned chiefly on this fact, and on the course of dealing between the parties,
We hold, therefore, both upon reason and authority, that by the delivery to Martin of ten shares of the plaintiff’s stock, the defendant, on the facts proved and found, did not become responsible to the plaintiff for the proceeds of the sale.
The same general principle applies to the transfer of the fifteen shares to Donohoe, Ralston & Co., and the loan of five shares to Perry. The defendant was at all times able, and ready, and willing to transfer to the plaintiff the same number of shares of similar stock of the same company, and which had precisely the same value; and it is evident that if the defendant, in these transactions, committed a technical breach of his trust, it presents a case of damnum absque injuria.
“It is a good defense, or rather a good excuse, that the misconduct of the agent has been followed by no loss or damage whatever to the principal; for then the rule applies that, although there is a wrong, yet it is without any damage, and to maintain an action both must occur; for damnum absque injuria and injuria absque damnum are in general equally objections to any recovery.” (Story on Agency, Sec. 236.)
The view we have taken of the case renders it unnecessary for us to discuss the sufficiency of the pleadings to support the judgment, or the question of ratification.
[The foregoing opinion was delivered at the April Term, 1868. A rehearing was granted, and at the October Term, 1871, the following opinion was given:]
The questions of law presented on this appeal are extremely perplexing and difficult of solution. But after a careful reexamination of the points involved we adhere to the views expressed in the opinion heretofore delivered in the cause, which will stand as the opinion of the Court.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.