171 F. 641 | 3rd Cir. | 1909
In the court below Arthur K. Brown, receiver of the American Alkali Company, filed a bill of discovery against William G. Huey and George Farquhar. From a final decree ordering discovery respondents took this appeal.
Messrs. Huey & Farquhar were stockbrokers, and as such, and as agents for a principal whose name they are now required by decree of the court below to disclose, they purchased, on August 7, 1899, 300 shares of the preferred stock of the American Alkali Company. At the time of the purchase that stock was, and still is, assessable. It was then registered in the name of George W. Mactague and James Allen, both of whom were then, and are now, insolvent. The new purchaser, instead of having the stock transferred and certificates issued in his name, has, through his agents, the respondents, let the stock stand in the names of Mactague and Allen. Meanwhile the complainant, Brown, was appointed receiver of said company. The latter being insolvent, the Circuit Court, by order
In the cases cited, the right of this receiver to relief by way of discovery against stockbroker agents of undisclosed owners of stock, who sought to evade assessments, was sustained. Those cases were fully considered by this court, and we see no occasion to recede therefrom. Indeed, in Kurtz v. Brown, wherein it was sought to have this court review and reverse Brown v. McDonald, we then said, and here repeat:
“Examination has¡ deepened, our conviction that the decisión in Brown v. McDonald, as an application of equitable principles to the facts of the case, was wholly in accord with well-recognized principles' of chancery jurisdiction. It exhibits the capacity of the law, while adhering firmly to precedents of far-removed times, to adapt itself to new conditions.”
Now we think the facts of this case are such that the principles of Kurtz v. Brown are applicable thereto, and therefore controlling. Here, as there, the respondents are stockbrokers, who admit purchasing the assessable stock in question, but disclaim ownership and liability to assessment on their part. In both cases they are the agents and representatives of undisclosed principals, who do own the stock and by virtue of such ownership are liable for assessments thereon. In both cases the respondents are and were not mere witnesses or strangers to the subject-matter of th.e suit, but active agents of principals using them to conceal their own identity and to evade a conceded liability which already exists and is not created by discovery. The only difference between the cases is that in Kurtz v. Brown the broker, after purchasing for his hidden principal, had the stock transferred and the certificates issued in the name of a straw insolvent holder. In the present case the brokers, after buying for a concealed principal, kept the stock standing in the name of a straw insolvent holder. In both cases the hidden principal uses his broker agent for the same purpose, viz.:
“By the act of his agent to vest ownership in himself; and at the same time divest the liability incident to such ownership.” Kurtz v. Brown, supra.
In the present case the broker’s act is one of omission; in Kurtz v. Brown, one of commission. In both cases, the purpose and result are identical; the difference solely of means to effect such result.
The court below was clearly right in holding the cases cited controlled the present one, and its decree is therefore affirmed.