259 Mass. 515 | Mass. | 1927
These are two suits whereby the plaintiff seeks to recover one hundred and ninety shares in the University Associates, an unincorporated association having transferable shares of beneficial interest and managed by three trustees, of whom he was one. He seeks to recover in the first suit one hundred and sixty-five of these shares from the Old. Colony Trust Company, which claims to hold them as collateral security for indebtedness to it of one Burroughs, now deceased, and in the second suit twenty-five shares from the State Street Trust Company, which claims to hold them as collateral security for indebtedness to it of said Burroughs. The administrator of Burroughs is a party defendant in each suit. The cases were referred to a master. They come before this court on appeals from interlocutory decrees overruling the plaintiff’s objections to and confirming the master’s report, and from a final decree in each case dismissing the bill.
There is no report of the evidence. Therefore the findings of fact made by the master must stand and be accepted as true and final unless upon the face of the report they are mutually inconsistent and contradictory. They are not subject to revision. Those here made are not open to legal objection. Glover v. Waltham Laundry Co. 235 Mass. 330, 334. Goldband v. Commissioner of Banks, 245 Mass. 143, 146. Porter v. Spring, 250 Mass. 83. Simpkins v. Old Colony Trust Co. 254 Mass. 576, 580.
Requests for findings of fact were made to the master by the plaintiff. The rule to the master was in the usual form and directed him “to find the facts, and report the same.” Therefore these requests for findings of fact present nothing for our consideration at this time. Warfield v. Adams, 215 Mass. 506, 519, 520. Smith v. Lloyd, 224 Mass. 173, 175. Tuttle v. Corey, 245 Mass. 196, 203.
The material facts thus found by the master are that in 1925 the plaintiff decided to buy shares in the University Associates. He knew one Burroughs, a leading specialist dealing in this class of property, whose reputation at that time was unblemished. To an agent of Burroughs he said that he was in the market to buy all or any part of three hundred shares of the University Associates. A price of $75 per share was agreed upon, Burroughs to look after himself as to compensation and no questions to be asked. Thus Burroughs was enabled to buy at the lowest price at which he could obtain the shares and to make as profit for himself the difference between that price and the $75 per share to be paid to him by the plaintiff. On April 28, Burroughs sent to the plaintiff notification of this tenor: “We have this day sold to you 90 shares University Associates at $75. per share.” On the following day the plaintiff sent to Burroughs his check in full payment for these shares; on the next day Burroughs bought ninety shares in the University Associates from trustees who were owners of the same. On May 1, the plaintiff received from Burroughs similar notification of sale to him of seventy-five such shares; on the following day he paid for the same, and on the next day Burroughs bought that number of shares from other trustee owners. The plaintiff subsequently was notified that Burroughs had found a twenty-five share lot, but that the plaintiff must pay $76 per share for it. The plaintiff agreed. On May 21, notification similar to the others was sent to the plaintiff to the effect that Burroughs had sold him twenty-five shares at $76 per share. On the same day the plaintiff paid Burroughs in full for these shares, and on the next day Burroughs bought of still other trustee owners the twenty-five shares. In each instance Burroughs paid for the stock by check on his own bank account and, from the state of his balances, it is plain that he could not have paid in full but for the deposit to his account of the plaintiff’s check. At this time Burroughs was a heavy borrower at the Old Colony Trust Com-
At this time Burroughs was also a heavy borrower at the State Street Trust Company and had deposited various securities with it as collateral for his notes. His custom with this trust company as to withdrawals of collateral and the substitution therefor of other securities was similar to that already described with the Old Colony Trust Company. When Burroughs got the certificate for twenty-five shares of the University Associates, he presented it to the State Street Trust Company and asked to substitute it for other securities held by that trust company as collateral to his indebtedness to it. The papers finally were in substantially the same form as those already described as having been deposited with the Old Colony Trust Company. They were accepted by the State Street Trust Company in substitution for other collateral thereupon released to Burroughs.
Burroughs died shortly after these transactions without delivery of any certificates to the plaintiff or the repayment of his money. When Burroughs died he was heavily indebted to each of these trust companies, which then held and now holds the certificates heretofore described as delivered to each as part collateral for a loan still unliquidated.
Upon the point whether Burroughs acted in these transactions as broker or dealer, the master made these findings: Burroughs had for some years prior to this time conducted the greatest part of his business not as a broker but as a dealer. If one of his customers wanted one of the real estate stocks in which Burroughs specialized, he quoted a price, intended to be sufficiently above the price at which he could buy to insure himself a satisfactory profit. When his customer accepted the price quoted, Burroughs then went into the market and bought the stock as cheap as he could and kept the difference. If he could not get the stock at a price that gave him a profit, he would go back to the buyer and get him to raise his bid. When a customer wanted to sell, the method was reversed. The practice was to get as wide a spread as possible between the bid and asked prices and to conceal from each customer the price paid or received by the other. In only rare cases was stock bought or sold on a commission basis. The relation between Burroughs and his customers was that between buyer and seller or debtor and creditor. The transactions with the plaintiff were of this class. There was nothing in the circumstances of these transactions that should have given the plaintiff any warning of what was to happen. He acted with reasonable prudence and did what careful business men do many times each day. The stock at issue in this case was doubtless bought by
The nature of property in a voluntary unincorporated association having transferable shares representing the beneficial interest and managed by trustees has been held to be equitable. Peabody v. Treasurer & Receiver General, 215 Mass. 129. Baker v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation, 253 Mass. 130, 138. See Kennedy v. Hodges, 215 Mass. 112. It is not the same as shares in a corporation. Such a trust is not a corporation and it is not organized under the laws of this Commonwealth. Williams v. Boston, 208 Mass. 397. Williams v. Milton, 215 Mass. 1. Bouchard v. First People’s Trust, 253 Mass. 351, 355, and cases there reviewed. See Hecht v. Malley, 265 U. S. 144.
The finding by the master is direct and unequivocal to the effect that the relation between the plaintiff and Burroughs was that of buyer and seller or debtor and creditor. The rights of the parties rest on that foundation. When the contract for purchase and sale in each instance was made, the shares were not then ascertained. The contracts did not call for any particular shares. Burroughs might have procured them from any or several sources and delivered any shares he desired. Plainly no title passed at that time to the plaintiff. Burroughs had no title to pass to the plaintiff. It is an elementary principle of the common law as to sales that one cannot transfer title to property in which he has no title or interest. “To be able to sell property, he must have a vested interest in it at the time of the sale.” Low v. Pew, 108 Mass. 347. Taylor v. Barton Child Co. 228 Mass. 126. When the plaintiff received the statements of sale from Burroughs and paid him, the latter had no title whatever to the shares. They were in each instance then
It follows from what has been said that on the facts found no trust relation was created by the transactions between the plaintiff and Burroughs, which stands in the way of the rights of the trust companies. Cases like Briggs v. Sanford, 219 Mass. 572, are not pertinent. The trust companies took the shares in good faith for a valuable consideration from the one appearing on the face of the papers to be the owner, who in fact was the owner, and they are entitled to hold them.
Interlocutory and final decrees affirmed in each case with costs of these appeals.