142 N.E. 671 | NY | 1924
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *307 Plaintiff, an infant when the action was begun, sued to recover damages for conversion of her stock in defendant United States Steel Corporation. The learned trial court found, in substance, that plaintiff left the stock certificate with defendant Kastel, with an assignment executed in blank; that he sold it, acting as her agent or broker, for $11,000, without authority; that she afterwards ratified the sale, but now disaffirms it. *310 The appellants are brokers doing business as the firm of Johnson Wood who, it is claimed, were parties to the conversion because they, acting for Kastel, sold the stock and guaranteed the signature of the infant, and the steel corporation, which is made a party because it transferred the stock on its books, canceled plaintiff's certificate and issued a new certificate to the purchaser. No claim is made against the ultimate purchaser.
An infant may disaffirm a sale of chattels before majority. (Stafford v. Roof, 9 Cow. 626.) If the sale is void, no disaffirmance before suit is necessary.
The first question is whether the sale of the stock by Kastel as plaintiff's agent was voidable or void. The court below proceeded on the theory that it is the law of this state that an infant's appointment of an agent is void and that it follows that an infant cannot during minority ratify the act of one who assumes to act as her agent. The rule is stated, but by way of dictum only, in Ely v. Ehle (
When the sale of an infant's property is voidable, no tort is committed until after avoidance. The infant may then treat the refusal to deliver back the property or the proceeds as a conversion by those who have kept it intentionally or so intermeddled with it as to interfere with the infant's dominion over it, except: "Where the seller of goods has a voidable title thereto, but his title has not been avoided at the time of the sale, the buyer acquires a good title to the goods, provided he buys them in good faith, for value, and without notice of the seller's defect of title" (Personal Property Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 41], § 105); and, in particular, the rescission of the transfer of a certificate of stock does *312 not invalidate even a subsequent transfer by the transferee in possession to a purchaser for value, in good faith, and without notice. (Personal Property Law, § 169.)
But the conversion does not relate back so as to make the entire transaction void ab initio. This the distinction between void and voidable as applied to infants' contracts forbids. The transfer of plaintiff's certificate by Kastel was valid when made (Personal Property Law, § 162), and is not made void ab initio by rescission. Until the disaffirmance by the infant, the authorized acts of the parties were not wrongful. The fiction of relation whereby, to prevent injustice, an act done at one time is considered to have been done at some antecedent period, should not be utilized to make those who deal with an infant's property tortfeasors as of a time when they did no wrong. The disaffirmance is retroactive only to the extent that thereafter the parties who have taken or intermeddled the infant's property are placed in the same position as if the transaction had not been authorized. They are guilty of conversion if they then refuse or fail to make restitution.
The infant transferred title when she authorized or ratified the delivery of the certificate indorsed in blank (Personal Property Law, § 162), but the right of an infant to disaffirm a transfer of stock is expressly reserved by Personal Property Law (§ 163). Kastel, after disaffirmance, was bound to account to the plaintiff for the conversion of her stock to the extent, at least, of the unpaid portion of the purchase price which was the value of the stock which he retained. Johnson Wood are also liable. They are held, not for a conversion growing out of a retention of the shares after notice of disaffirmance, but for an act of wrongdoing in meddling with and selling the property of another; for an interference with the dominion and right of property of the plaintiff, depriving her permanently of all her rights therein. Plaintiff *313
made no binding representations to them and has not estopped herself from asserting a conversion against them. An infant arrived at years of discretion may be guilty of constructive fraud but plaintiff did not cheat defendant. No fraud in her was found by the trial justice but freedom from fraud was found. Nor was she guilty of negligence in indorsing the certificate to Kastel. Her signature to the assignment in blank of the certificate was nothing more than a voidable consent to the sale, contractual in its nature rather than tortious. Union Trust Co.of Rochester v. Oliver (
The United States Steel Corporation is not in the same position as the defendants who sold the infant's stock on her behalf. When it transferred the stock on its books to the ultimate purchaser and canceled the infant's stock certificate it did a valid act. No statute as in Merriam v. B.C. F.R.R. Co. (
The transfer being voidable only and legal and valid when made, the corporation had no right to refuse a transfer. (Smith v.Railroad,
It follows that the judgment should be reversed as to the United States Steel Corporation and affirmed as to the individual defendants unless as to them plaintiff proceeded erroneously in suing for a conversion based on a rescission without previously giving notice of disaffirmance. It is urged on their behalf that as no tort was committed until disaffirmance, no action should lie without a prior disaffirmance (Gould v. Cayuga County Nat.Bank,
The right of an infant to avoid or rescind contracts made during his minority does not depend on his ability to restore the consideration or otherwise make restitution *315
to the other party (Green v. Green,
The form of the complaint is proper. It was not necessary to plead the evidence of a conversion. The voidable deed of an incompetent person may be avoided in an action of ejectment without resorting to equity, the complaint simply stating that the plaintiff was the owner in fee and entitled to the possession of the real estate therein described, and that the defendant unlawfully withheld possession thereof. (Smith v. Ryan,supra, 459.) The beginning of replevin has also been held to be a sufficient act of rescission (Wise v. Grant,
But the plaintiff should not be dismissed. "The law does not require an idle ceremony." (Gould v. Cayuga Co. Nat. Bank,supra, p. 81.) Tender of benefits was excused. The money she had spent. Kastel's note was worthless. In any event he alone could insist on its return as a condition of disaffirmance (Stevens v. Austin, *316 1 Metc. 557, cited with approval in Gould v. Cayuga CountyNat. Bank, supra), and he does not complain. Notice of rescission where there is nothing to tender back may well be dispensed with where tender of benefits received might otherwise be insisted upon. Plaintiff had received nothing from Johnson and Wood. No substantial right would have been conserved by a prior disaffirmance of the transfer as to them.
The judgment should be reversed as to defendant United States Steel Corporation and complaint dismissed, with costs in all courts, and otherwise affirmed, with costs.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CARDOZO, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.