72 F.2d 279 | 2d Cir. | 1934
By this suit, removed from the Supreme Court of Suffolk county, N. Y., the plaintiff sought recovery of certain securities which he alleged he had delivered to the Harriman National Bank & Trust Company of the City of New York for safe-keeping for his account. 1CO°Per’ aF?0:lStedoils1co^servator of the bank pursuant to the Bank Co^ervation Act of March 9 1933 (Stat. 73d Cong., lst Sess, p, 2 [12 USCA §§ 201-211]), was jomed as a defendant, and by subsequent amendment Frederick E. Goess, as receiver of the bank, was also joined. The defendants'admitted receipt by the bank of the securitios in controversy, but alleged that the plaintiff, Dr. Butler, had agreed with J. W. Harriman that the latter might use them and that Harriman had hypothecated them with the bank to secure an indebtedness of Mrs. Harriman to it. After a lengthy hearing the trial judge made a finding that Dr. Butler never gave the bank, by prior consent or subsequent ratification or otherwise, any authority to deal with his securities in any manner other than to make sales and purchases and to hold the securities so received and purchased in safe-keeping for his account and subject to his instructions. If this finding is sustainable, the decree for the plaintiff is \ , , , ,, , n , , coneededly correct; but the defendants eon- , , ,, , I. . 1 tend that the record will not support it.
In December, 1931, Dr. Butler was notified by, the firm of stockbrokers with whom he had long done business that his account was “undermargined” to the extent of $15,-000, and that certain of his bonds might in the near future become unacceptable as collateral. Ho consulted his friend, Mr. J. W. Harriman, then president of the defendant bank, for advice as to the wisdom of selling some of the securities. Mr. Harriman advised him to close his account with the brokers and bring it to the bank. The bank loaned Dr. Butler $126,006 on his unsecured note dated January 8, 1832, and out of this loan paid to the brokers, on January 11th, Dr. Butler’s indebtedness to them of $125,526.50, rceoivjng ^ exchange his securities which -then llad a mar],et valu0 of $217,320. The following day the trust department of the bank sent Dr. Butler a list of the securities it had received “for account of — Sundry Account — Nicholas M. Butler.” Two days later the securities were transferred from the trust to *he loa“- d®Paf'tmen* °£ the ^nk without notice to Dr. Butler. This was donTe uPon orde^ o£ ^ Hamma* on January 14tn pledged them as security for a new loan by the bank to his wife for $150,-000. Mrs. Harrimail was aIso indebted to the bank in some $83,006 upon a prior loan, alld for this loan too the bank claims the right to hold Dr. Butler’s securities as eollaterap
K ig admitted th&t Dr. Butler gave no autIlority for such use of his seeurities, but it is argued that this understanding ^ Ml, Harriman is evidenced by the latter,g letter of Jamiary 8 1932) which is headed „strietl eonñdential” and reads as foljows.
“Gear Dr. Butler:
“Relative to your note of $126,000 dated January 8, 1932, for six months, I hereby guarantee said loan as to the principal puyment.
“I further acknowledge receipt of certain securities, as indicated in the attached sehedule, which I have borrowed temporarily. The interest and dividends received from these securities will, of course, be yours, and will be credited as received to your account with us and notices sent you.
“I sincerely appreciate your action in the above matter.
“Yours very sincerely,
“J. W. Harriman.”
_ _ . Dr. Butler testified tfiat he received this ... T letter on January 11th or 12th, that m his . ,. prior conversations with Mr. Harriman there had been no mention of borrowing his seeurities, and that upon receipt of this letter he
Against the conclusion that Dr. Butler did not give Mr. Harriman prior authority to use his securities nor ratify the unauthorized pledge of them, the appellants urge several considerations:
(1) Although the record discloses that Dr. Butler habitually confirmee! by letter Ms conversations with Austin and with Ilarrimau, ho wrote nothing to negative the statement about borrowing contained in Harriipíii’s loiter of January 8, 1332, but was content to rest upon his oral protest.
(2) On June 6, 1932, Austin, notified Dr. Butler that $1,00!) of New York City 6’s (purchased with pracoedf; of a sale of some of the original securities) “'wore hold in the Loan department, while the balance of $30,-000 are held free in the Trust department for your account.” The $50,000 had been purchased with now money supplied by Dr. Butler. Thus ho was put on notice that the securities substituted by purchase for those originally brought over from the stockbrokers were held by the bank in its “Loan department.” Tie explains this division of his seeurities by saying' that the original securities and substitutos therefor were with the bank on “my loan.” This is inconsistent with the form of the unsecured note he had given the bank, but it must he remembered that Dr. Bntier is not a lawyer. lie testified that he understood that his securities were pledged to the bank as they had been to the brokers.
(3) On July 27, 1932, Dr. Butler wrote Austin requesting him to arrange that “my securities which have been loaned to our friend should bo released.” If this is a reference to an unauthorized loan by the hank of Dr. Butler’s securities to Mr. Harriman, the tone of the letter is surprisingly calm.
(4) On August 18, 1932, after an interview with Mr. Harriman, Dr. Butler wrote: “It was a great pleasure to have a talk with you yesterday, and I was greatly cheered in consequence. I shall drop in again before long.” What was said at the conference is not in evidence, but the friendly tone of the letter seems quite remarkable when one considers that the writer is addressing the man whom he charges with hypothecating without authority more than $200,000 of the writer’s securities.
(5) In connection with each renewal note to the bank, Dr. Butler insisted upon obtaining a new “guaranty” by I (arriman, each of which referred by date to the original Harriman letter of January 8, 1932. When forwarding the first renewal note dated May 2, Dr. Bntier wrote to Austin on April 18, 1932: “You, I take it, wish me to bring in Mr. IXarriman’s letter, as the arrangement now making will require a letter with date and amount changed.” If Harriman had no authority to borrow the securities, there was no consideration to support his “guaranty.” Dr. Bntier testified that he understood Harriman to have given it merely out of the goodness of liis heart.
The foregoing; matters of record militate with some force against the finding of the trial court. • On the other hand, it does not seem probable that Dr. Butler would consent to let Harriman pledge his securities for any purpose whatever and to any amount. He was in no such straits as to impel him to enter into such an arrangement. On January 1, 1932, he liad enough cash in banks, without selling any of his securities, to reduce, his brokers’ loan to about $50-,000, against i which would stand his securities of a market value of more than $200,000: There is every reason to believe Dr. Butler’s testimony that' until he received Mr. Harriman’s letter of January 8, 1932, he did not expect a guaran
Accepting the premise that the pledge was originally unauthorized, we can reverse the decree only if Dr. Butler ratified or acquiesced in the pledge.after learning of it, Not until the end of July, 1932, did he leam of it. He testified that eaeh week thereafter he made vigorous protests to Austin urging him to restore the securities to the safe-keeping account, and that Austin told him they ought not to have been pledged and assured him he would try to secure their release. No denial of this testimony came from Austin. ' There was no ratification or acquiescence by silence, since Dr. Butler was constantly protesting. Austin was an official to whom it was appropriate for Dr. Butler to complain even though Mr. Cooper was then president of the' bank. While it is true that the letters referring to “the loan to our friend” and the letter of August 18th to, Mr. Harriman are scarcely in the tone one would expect, we ought not to impute ratification because Dr. Butler preferred to use persuasion and tact (involving some consideration for Harriman) rather than denunciations and forma] demands. He ■ was pressing for the return of his securities in the way he thought most likely to succeed. Extension of the bank loan in November and the renewal of Harriman’s guaranty are not conclusive of ratification in view of the constant protests to Austin and Dr. Butler’s understanding of the guaranty as independent of any borrowing of his securities by Harriman. Indeed, renewal of the guaranty was a matter in which the bank had no interest
Accordingly, the District Judge’s finding on the subject of ratification must likewise be sustained, and the decree must be affirmed.