39 N.Y.S. 81 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
The action was brought to recover a balance due to the plaintiff upon closing out a stock account between the plaintiff’s testator and the defendant. The case is presented to us upon a bill of exceptions, the plaintiff having with great care inserted only so much of the evidence as is necessary to show precisely the rulings made and the questions which-are sought to be presented upon the appeal. This mode of preparing the case for review by the appellate court cannot be too highly commended. It relieves the court from the burden of examining a great mass of testimony in which, far too often, the questions sought to be raised are covered up, and presents the case for decision clearly and plainly. It is to be regretted that this manner of preparing cases, when the only question involved is one of law, is not more often resorted to.
Harvey Kennedy & Co., who wore stockbrokers, began in the year 1887 to buy stocks for the defendant upon a margin advanced by her. Stocks were bought with more or less frequency down to the 8th day of October, 1888, at which time the last purchase was made. Harvey Kennedy, the broker, died in December, 1889, but the transaction does not seem to have been actually closed out until some time in 1892, when the plaintiff, as executor of Harvey Kennedy, upon notice to the defendant, sold out the stocks and demanded of the defendant payment of the balance due as the result of the operation. Upon her refusal to pay, this action was brought. As the result of the action, the court ordered a verdict for the defendant, and from the judgment entered upon that verdict this appeal is taken.
It appeared that when the purchase of stocks for Mrs. Budd began Harvey Kennedy was doing business under the name of Harvey Kennedy & Co., and that at that time he actually had partners interested with him. During the dealings with Mrs. Budd, however, the partnership ceased to exist, but, nevertheless, Kennedy continued business under the name of Kennedy & Co., and it is insisted by the defendant that in so doing lie rendered himself liable to punishment under section 303 of the Penal Code, which provides that any person who transacts business, using the designation “and Company” or “& Co.,” when no actual partner or partners are represented thereby, is guilty of a misdemeanor. ' The defendant claims' that as such a mode of transacting business is a crime under the statute, the court will not, as a matter of public policy, permit one engaged in business thus contrary to the statute to maintain any action upon a contract tints made by him in defiance of the law. This statute has been regarded by the courts as a highly penal one, and it will not be extended to any case not clearly within it. (Wood v. Erie Railway Co., 72 N. Y. 190.) The object of the statute is to protect persons from giving credit to fictitious firms on the faith of the fictitious designation, and it is not needed to protect those who obtain credit from such a firm. For that reason it has been held that where a firm thus carrying on business gave credit to one who dealt with it, it was not precluded by the fact that the designation was fictitious from bringing an action to recover the amount which was due to it from the person to whom it had thus given credit. (Gay v. Siebold, 97 N. Y. 472.) Within the authority of this case, the objection made by the defendant, that the plaintiff should not recover because Kennedy was engaged in business under a fictitious name, was not well taken.
A more serious question, however, arises upon the plea of the Statute of Limitations. The transaction between Mrs. Budd and
It was the ordinary transaction in which a stockbroker, upon the employment of his customer, buys stocks upon a margin and advances the money to pay, holding the stocks as security until such time as the customer may desire to'have them sold. It was the usual contract between a stockbroker and customer for carrying stocks. That is quite clear from all the evidence in the case, and is not disputed by either of the parties. There lias been considerable discussion in the books as to the precise relation which the stockbroker occupies towards the customer when such a contract has been, undertaken. It has been said that, he occupied the position of agent; that he occupied the relation of pledgee, and that he was a trustee. Whether ho does occupy either of these particular relations depends entirely upon the point of view in which the contract is examined. If we consider .his duties as to the execution of the contract, he is undoubtedly an agent for his customer, as is stated in Galigher v. Jones (129 U. S. 193, 198). If we consider his rights while he is holding the stock which he has bought as security for the advances which he has made, he undoubtedly occupies the position of pledgee. (Markham v. Jaudon, 41 N. Y. 235 ; Gruman v. Smith, 81 id. 25, 27.) When . we consider his duties as to the further performance of the contract after the purchase has been made, and recollect that he has no interest in the contract except, the commissions which he earns;, that.lie,is.-bound to, act solely for.
It is said in another case that it is an essential part of the bargain that the broker shall carry the stock for a reasonable time, for in no other way can the object of the transaction be effectuated. (White v. Smith, 54 N. Y. 522.) In the same case it is said that the broker can close the transaction at any time, if the margin upon his demand and notice is not kept good, and if he has carried the stock for a reasonable time, thus affording the customer an opportiinity to realize his expectations; he may, upon notice, close the transaction with his customer. The object for which the contract is entered into is to give the customer an opportunity, if the stock has been bought for his account, to hold it until the price shall have advanced so that he may make a profit out of the transaction. It is quite clear that this necessarily involves the idea that the contract is to some extent to be a continuing one, because, as is said by Judge Earl in White v. Smith (supra), a contract of that kind which ivas immediately to be brought to an end would be an idle one. The gist of the contract is, that the broker* shall carry the stock until such time as the customer shall have an opportunity to realize a profit from 'its advance, or until he shall give notice to the customer that he elects to bring it to an end. But in any event he is bound to carry the stock for a reasonable time to enable the customer to ascertain whether or not he can make a profit on the transaction, if the customer shall pay upon demand whatever mai’gins the broker is entitled to have. Such being the purpose of the contract there is necessarily to be implied from it the principle that the customer is not expected to pay for the stocks thus to be carried until a demand for that payment has been made. The very object of the contract necessarily involves this idea. The broker is to carry the stock upon payment of sufficient margins to protect him from loss by a fall in value, and that necessarily involves the notion that he is not expected to receive any further sum on account of the stock until he shall have demanded it, or until the transaction has been closed. If that construction of the contract be a correct one it necessarily follows that
The case of De Cordova v. Barnum (130 N. Y. 615) is not adverse to this conclusion. In that case, instead of putting up a margin to protect the broker from loss, the customer had deposited shares of stock in the place of margin upon the purchase of other stock of another kind. The stock which had been bought for speculative purposes had been sold, and the action was brought by the broker to recover the balance due to him upon the close of the transaction, which of course had resulted in a loss to the customer. It was claimed that the stock put up for a margin should have been sold before the action was. brought for the balance, but the court held that, as to that stock, the parties occupied strictly and only the position of pledgor and pledgee, and that it was not necessary to ¡sell the pledge before bringing an action to recover the amount of the debt which the pledge was given to secure. The distinction ’between the two cases is obvious, and it is quite clear that the ruling in that case has nothing to do with the relations of the parties connected with the stock purchased for speculative purposes.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.