171 A.D. 486 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
The relation of customer and brokers existed between appellant and the firm of Beers & Owens. At the time of the assignment the brokers held for appellant, and as security for any balance of account owing to them, 300 shares of Inter-borough Metropolitan common stock. There is, and can be, no doubt that the petitioner is entitled to the return of the stock on payment of the balance of account, for the certificates have been identified as belonging to petitioner, and no one else claims them. (Gorman v. Littlefield, 229 U. S. 19.) The sole question presented by the appeal is, what is the balance of account owing by appellant, upon payment of which he is entitled to the return of the stock %
Appellant contends that such balance on the 9th day of September, 1915, when the assignment was filed, was $1,006.95; but the court held that it was $3,806.95, and the order under review directs the assignee to deliver the stock upon payment of that amount and interest thereon from September 9, 1915. The correct debit balance of the appellant with the brokers depends upon transactions concerning 100 shares of common stock in the Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company. Prior to the 17th day of July, 1915, appellant ordered the brokers to sell 100 shares of common stock in the Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company at nineteen dollars per share for his account. He had the stock and intended tti deliver it if they executed the order, but they evidently supposed it was a short sale. On the morning of July seventeenth he telephoned the brokers, with a view to canceling the order, and so stated to one of them, and was informed that it was then above twenty dollars per share and was very active, and that while a report had not been received on his order “it must have” been executed, and he received notice from the brokers by mail that they had executed the order
That view, I think, is erroneous. When appellant notified the brokers on Saturday, July 17, 1915, that he wished to cancel the order, the stock had not been sold, but they led him to believe that his order to sell at nineteen had been executed, and they confirmed that belief by mailing a false report of the
We agree with the learned court at Special Term that appellant was entitled to set off his claim for damages for the breach of the contract against the general balance owing by him to the brokers (Debtor and Creditor Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 12; Laws of 1909, chap. 17], § 13, as added by Laws of 1914, chap. 360. See, also, Wood v. Fisk, 215 N. Y. 238, 239); but, for the reasons herein stated, a wrong rule of damages was applied, evidently on the erroneous theory that the customer should have repurchased the stock. (Burhorn v. Lockwood, supra, 304.)
Clarke, P. J., McLaughlin, Scott and Page, J J., concurred. -
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted as stated in opinion. Order to be settled on notice.