Brickley v. Wrenn

252 Mass. 16 | Mass. | 1925

Carroll, J.

Earnest E. Smith and Company, hereinafter called Smith, and the defendants were stockbrokers. The plaintiff is Smith’s trustee in bankruptcy. The defendants’ firm, as well as Smith’s, each had members who were members of the stock exchanges in Boston and in New York. Smith was insolvent January 17,1921; the defendants had knowledge of this fact. January 18, Smith filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the United States District Court, in Boston. On that date he owed the defendants on overdue promissory notes for money borrowed, $150,019.06; he also owed the defendants $307,699.34 for stock purchased on margin account, called long stocks. On the same account he owed the defendants $100,750.30 for stock sold and delivered for Smith, which he had not furnished; these were known as shorts, the sum of $100,750.30 being the price paid to cover the shorts. The indebtedness of Smith was further increased by taxes and other items in the sum of $2,543.32, making the total indebtedness on the margin account $410,-992.96. Prior to the close of business, January 17, the defendants kept the $150,019.06 loan on one account and the purchases and sales of stock on another account which showed a debit balance of $307,699.34, as the shorts had not at that time been covered.

On the morning of January 18, 1921, the insolvency of Smith was announced on the floors of the New York and Boston stock exchanges, shortly after their opening. The defendants proceeded, as soon as possible, to close out the margin account of Smith by selling the long stocks and buying the shorts. They also transferred to the margin account the note account, as found by the trial judge, by entering on the note account a credit for the balance due from Smith, and charging Smith on the margin account with a similar sum.

*19The first two counts of the declaration are in contract, the first being for money had and received as “specified in the second count;” the second alleging that the defendants applied the money received for Smith’s stock exchange account to the payment of the notes of $150,019.06, without first resorting to the collateral for this loan; that this application was, in effect, to enable the defendants to obtain a greater percentage of their debt than other creditors. The third count is in tort, the plaintiff alleging in substance that the defendants had no right to continue to dispose of Smith’s stocks after the defendants received sufficient proceeds to pay the indebtedness of Smith on the margin account, and had bought the stocks which Smith, was under contract to deliver to the defendants; that the defendants converted the stocks disposed of in excess of the margin indebtedness. The fourth count also averred a conversion of the stocks sold in excess of the margin account.

The trial judge found for the defendants but refused certain requests made by them, to the effect that the defendants, according to the rules of the stock exchange, had the right to close the entire account of Smith by purchase and sale; that Smith’s notes of $150,000, with interest, were contracts subject to the constitution and rules of the stock exchange.

The contention of the plaintiff, briefly stated, is that the defendants had no right to dispose of Smith’s stock in excess of the amount due on the long and short stocks in the margin account; and that the sum of $117,810.11 and interest, this being the sum received after Smith’s shorts had been covered and his margin debt paid, could not be applied to the $150,000 loan, and that the defendants could not make this set-off.

The rules of the stock exchanges of New York and Boston, of which Smith’s firm and the defendants’ firm were members, provided that “All contracts” between members of the exchanges, “for the purchase, [or] sale . . . of securities, or . . . payment of money, whether occurring upon the floor of the Exchange or elsewhere, are contracts subject to the rules of the Exchange.” Another rule provided that when the insolvency of a member is announced to the exchange, “members having contracts subject to the rules of the Ex*20change with the member or firm shall without unnecessary delay proceed to close the same.” If the securities quoted on the exchanges are involved in the contract, “the closing must be in the Exchange, either officially by the Chairman, or by personal purchase or sale.” Smith and the defendants were bound by these rules. They were a part of their contracts with each other. See Furber v. Dane, 203 Mass. 108. When the insolvency of Smith was announced on the floors of the New York and Boston exchanges January 18, it was the duty of the defendants to close all their contracts with Smith. The transactions between them on the margin account were not one contract. Each transaction for the sale or purchase of stock was a separate contract, and the rule required the closing of all contracts;not merely the selling of the amount of stock necessary to cover the sum Smith owed the defendants on the account. Whatever may have been the reasons for the rule, whether it was the protection of the insolvent’s creditors, to stop further speculation, or to facilitate the winding up of the debtor’s affairs and the settlement of all accounts between members according to the method of the stock exchange, the rule did require that all of the debtor’s contracts with another member should be closed, and the contract for long stock could not be closed within the meaning of that term, until the stock had been appropriated and delivered to the purchaser, or had been sold.

Another rule of the Boston exchange required a member owing a balance to the insolvent member to pay such balance within five days to the treasurer. Contracts between members were to be concluded “without unnecessary delay,” and they could not be closed until cash was realized, or the contracts had been converted into some definite form of indebtedness, so that the cash could be used by the exchange, in accordance with its rules, and to adjust the remaining debts or credits of the insolvent member. The closing of the contracts did not mean that sufficient stock should be sold to cover the indebtedness of Smith on the margin account. The defendants had the right under the rule governing their contracts with Smith, to reduce the contracts into money and to clean up all the contracts and close them.

*21The defendants had the right to set off against the overdue notes their obligation to Smith on the margin account. In this Commonwealth a defendant may allege in defence, any facts which would entitle him in equity to be absolutely relieved against the plaintiff’s claim. G. L. c. 231, § 31; and this equitable right is not limited to a set-off permitted at law. Cromwell v. Parsons, 219 Mass. 299. See Phelps v. Rice, 10 Met. 128; Morgan v. Wordell, 178 Mass. 350, 355.

The defendants’ notes were overdue. The debt was provable when the bankruptcy proceedings began, and could be set off. Morgan v. Wordell, supra. Studley v. Boylston National Bank, 229 U. S. 523. The set-off could be made by the defendants as well as by the bankruptcy court. “. . . the defendant, to avoid a circuity of action, may interpose his mutual claim by way of defence . . . . Such counterclaims can be asserted as a defense or by the voluntary act of the parties, because it is grounded on the absurdity of making A pay B when B owes A. If this set-off of mutual debts has been lawfully made by the parties before the petition is filed, there is no necessity of the Trustee doing so. If it has not been done by the parties, then, under command of the statute, it must be done by the Trustee. But there is nothing in § 68a which prevents the parties from voluntarily doing, before the petition is filed, what the law itself requires to be done after proceedings in bankruptcy are instituted.” Studley v. Boylston National Bank, supra, page 528. By § 68a of the bankruptcy statute, mutual debts and mutual credits may be set off against each other. By §" 1, paragraph (11), debts include any debt, demand or claim provable in bankruptcy. By § 63 (4) claims provable in bankruptcy comprise those “founded upon an open account, or upon a contract expressed or implied,” including such as are unliquidated but capable of liquidation. A claim against a broker, growing out of a marginal account, is a provable claim. Crawford v. Burke, 195 U. S. 176, 187. No trust existed between Smith and the defendants. Their relation was purely contractual. The title to the stocks bought by the defendants and carried in the margin account, belonged to them. The title was not *22in Smith. Crehan v. Megargel, 235 Mass. 279. Brown v. Rushton, 223 Mass. 80. Cases where the pledgee violates the terms of the pledge, or there is a breach of trust, have no application to the case at bar.

The defendants had the right to close all of Smith’s contracts under the rules of the stock exchange, and also had the right to set off against the notes the proceeds of the margin account by applying the proceeds of the account to the notes. We have not, therefore, considered it necessary to discuss the cases relied on by the plaintiff, dealing with the question of set-off. The defendants did not hold any stocks of Smith on the margin account, in pledge or under a power of sale. See Tallman v. New Bedford Five Cents Savings Bank, 138 Mass. 330. Brown v. New Bedford Institution for Savings, 137 Mass. 262. We find nothing in G. L. c. 137, § 4, in conflict with this conclusion. In the view which we take of this case, it is not important to pass on the question whether the plaintiff, in any event under the pleadings, could recover under the contract counts, the defendants contending that no money was received by the defendants to Smith’s use. See Hawks v. Hawks, 124 Mass. 457. Nor is it necessary to consider the question of the plaintiff’s right to recover upon the counts in tort, based on a conversion of the plaintiff’s property. See Crehan v. Megargel, supra. Rice v. Winslow, 180 Mass. 500, 502. There was no preference under the bankruptcy statute. The judge was right in ruling that a valid set-off was no preference. None of the debtor’s property was delivered to the creditor. “To constitute a preferential transfer within the meaning of the bankruptcy act there must be a parting with the bankrupt’s property for the benefit of the creditor and a consequent diminution of the bankrupt’s estate.” Continental & Commercial Trust & Savings Bank v. Chicago Title & Trust Co. 229 U. S. 435, 443. See Morgan v. Wordell, supra. King v. Cram, 185 Mass. 103, 104.

As we construe the record, it was agreed that the stocks held as collateral for the overdue notes “were not to be considered in the determination of this controversy.” Even if we are wrong in this construction, the defendants were not *23obliged to realize on the collateral before enforcing the principal debt. Real Estate & Building Co. v. Tufts, 127 Mass. 391. Burtis v. Bradford, 122 Mass. 129.

It follows that the defendants’ exceptions, to the refusal to give their requests numbered 14 and 19, must be sustained. The plaintiff’s exceptions are overruled. Judgment for the . defendants is to stand.

So ordered.

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