173 F. 694 | W.D.N.Y. | 1909
This is a proceeding on the petition of Alice H. Douglas to reclaim two certificates, of 100 shares each, of preferred stock of the Great Northern Railway Company, which are in the possession of the trustee in bankruptcy herein. The petition was referred to the referee, and a decision rendered, which is the subject of review. The salient facts are as follows:
On June 2 and 17, 1908, the petitioner, by her husband, acting as her agent, purchased 200 shares, in blocks of 100 each, of the capital stock of the Great Northern Railway Company, at 134 and 130%, respectively, through the firm of Meadows, Williams & Co., brokers, at Bu ¡Talo, N. Y. On the same days that the stock was ordered, Meadows, Williams & Co. in writing notified the petitioner that the purchases had been made on her account. On July 22d, petitioner notified Meadows, Williams & Co. that she would take up the stocks later. On July 31st, she paid them in cash therefor the sum of $28,698.2(5, which was the amount stated by said firm to be due on account of such purchases. At the time of such payment, and frequently thereafter between the 2d and 2-1th days of August, the petitioner demanded delivery of the stock from Meadows, Williams & Co.; but they informed her that it was being transferred on the books of the Great Northern Railway Company, and the certificates would be delivered to her as .-.con as the transfer was completed. At each time the blocks of stock were ordered to be purchased Meadows, Williams & Co. transmitted said order by wire to their correspondents, Post & Elagg, of New York City, stockbrokers with whom they had an account, requesting them to purchase the preferred stock, which they did at the figures quoted. When the purchases were completed, Post & Elagg so wired Meadows, Williams & Co., who notified the petitioner thereof. The
The primal question is whether the petitioner was the owner of the 200 shares of stock at the time of the bankruptcy. The transaction was the usual one of buying stock in an interior city, first on margin, and then directly.for delivery, through a stockbroker, who consummated the purchase by wire through another stockbroker carrying on business in New York City.' They regarded the transaction as one between themselves, in which the purchase price would seasonably be covered either in cash or collateral security. It is well settled that the right of ownership of stock does not depend upon the precise method of payment or the customary course of business between stockbrokers. In the present case the petitioner paid the broker, with whom she-
Counsel for the trustee concedes that, when shares of stock are bought on margin, the title vests in the customer; the broker having the legal right to retain its possession in pledge for the purchase price. This rule is not thought essentially different in a case where the stock is bought direct, or for delivery, and absolved from the complications ■of speculation. There wor.ld almost seem to he better reason for the applicability to a straight purchase, where the stock is to he delivered, ■of the rule which counsel for the trustee concedes applies to a margin transaction. From the facts herein, Post & Flagg must be deemed to have bought the stock, relying upon the obligation and ability of Meadows, Williams & Co. to pay the sales price. They had the option of refusing to buy the stock until the price therefor was fully paid; but, instead of so doing they completed the transaction, and subsequently recognized the petitioner’s claim of ownership of the stock. Le Marchant v. Moore, 150 N. Y. 209, 44 N. E. 770.
In Denison v. Emery (C. C.) 153 Fed. 427, Corner gave an order to Denison, Prior & Co. for 50 shares of Quaker Oats stock, which order was wired to their Chicago correspondents, Finley, Barrel & Co., by whom the purchase was made. The purchasing brokers did not deliver the stock, but held it as collateral security for the general account of Denison, Prior & Co. Corner afterwards paid Denison, Prior & Co. in full for the stock and demanded a transfer thereof to him; but it was not transferred, although they frequently promised to do so. Possession of the Quaker Oats stock, together with other stocks belonging to different persons, bought on account of Denison, Prior & Co., continued in the purchasing brokers up to the time of the failure of Denison, Prior & Co. Thereafter all the stocks so held as collateral were sold by Finley, Barrel & Co., and the proceeds applied to the indebtedness to them of Denison, Prior & Co. The court, overruling the master, decided that, as the Corner stock was in the possession of the purchasing brokers, was traceable, and could be separated from other stock, and as it had been paid for as between him atid other creditors, except the pledgee, he was entitled to the stock — that it was his property. The Circuit Court of Appeals, affirming the District Court, sub nom. Harmon v. Sprague, 163 Fed. 486, 90 C. C. A. 32, said:
“The stock was bought on the order of the Cleveland brokers, by the Chicago ten, for Corner, and was paid for by him; the bill being sent him by the Cleveland firm. When tins was done, the stock belonged to Corner, and the certificate should have been sent him; but the Cleveland firm failed to*698 do so, and as a result tlie stock was sold, upon their failure, as collateral, to satisfy the account of the Chicago brokers against, them. We think this was done wrongfully. Corner owed neither the Cleveland firm nor the Chicago brokers anything, and consequently the proceeds of Corner’s stock, which went into the funds at the sale, should go to him.”
This holding, in which I concur, may be paraphrased upon the facts of this case. See, also, In re Bolling (D. C.) 147 Fed. 786, affirmed Kean v. Dickinson, 152 Fed. 1022, 82 C. C. A. 667; In re Graff (D. C.) 117 Fed. 343.
The referee was of the opinion, inter alia, that if Post & Flagg had continuously carried the stock from the time it was first purchased to the date of the bankruptcy, and had sold it with other securities pledged with them, the claim of the petitioner to the surplus, if any, would have been superior to that of the trustee; but in his opinion, as the purchase price of the stock was actually paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the seat in the Stock Exchang-e, an asset of the bankrupts, the petitioner would have been in no different position than any other customer of Meadows, Williams & Co., if their stock held as collateral had been sold by Post & Flagg. I am unable to agree with this conclusion. It makes no difference that the 200 shares of stock were not continuously in the possession of Post & Flagg from June 2d to August 24th. It is enough that Post & Flag-g bought the number of shares ordered for the petitioner through her brokers, and caused them to be transferred to her on the books of the Great Northern Railway Company on the 19th day of August, prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy. Whatever jobbing there was in these shares were dealings between the brokers, and the petitioner was ignorant of them. Post & Flagg had the lawful right to satisfy their claim out of the proceeds of sale of the seat in the Stock Exchange. Hyde v. Woods, 94 U. S. 523, 24 L. Ed. 264; Weston v. Ives, 97 N. Y. 222. While, true enough, the seat was an asset of the bankrupts, yet it was incumbered by a lien; i. e. their indebtedness to their associate members in the Stock Exchange, which included the purchase price of the stock in question. Prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy Meadows, Williams & Co. could not have made a valid disposition of the 200 shares of stock, nor could the same have been levied upon or seized under judicial process against them. The legal title was not in them, and upon receiving payment for the stock their interest as pledgee was extinguished. Richardson v. Shaw, 209 U. S. 365, 28 Sup. Ct. 512, 52 L. Ed. 835; Le Marchant v. Moore, supra; Skiff v. Stoddard, 63 Conn. 198, 26 Atl. 874, 28 Atl. 104, 21 L. R. A. 102. The relation of the trustee to the stock is in no sense dissimilar to that of the bankrupts. By his election he obtained no right or title to the stock, and the authorities uniformly hold that a trustee occupies the same relation to the creditors that the bankrupt sustained prior to the inception of the proceedings. In re Kellogg (D. C.) 112 Fed. 52; affirmed sub nom. Hewitt v. Berlin Machine Works, 194 U. S. 298, 24 Sup. Ct. 690, 48 L. Ed. 986.
If, then, we consider the trustee in the shoes of the bankrupts, how can he, for the bankrupts, insist on retaining the stock when the petitioner paid for it, and, moreover, when the bankrupts themselves, be
The referee held that the petitioner had a prior right to the general creditors to 60 shares only of the stock now in the possession of the trustee; but tlie exceptions filed to his conclusions must be sustained, and his decision modified to conform hereto.
So ordered.
“For other cases see same topic & § dumber in Dec. & Am. Digs. ID07 to date, & Itep'r Indexes