160 A. 302 | Conn. | 1932
The finding shows that the plaintiff and others, including the defendant, in the fall of 1929, joined in forming a "pool" for the purchase and sale of securities for mutual profit. The agreement was a verbal one and provided, among other things, that the defendant, who was a stockbroker in the city of Bridgeport, should buy and sell securities upon his own initiative on behalf of and for the benefit of the members of the pool and without advising or consulting them, and should receive a specified proportion of the profits, the balance to be divided among the other members of the pool in certain proportions. The defendant bought and sold a large number of securities under this agreement, and on or about March 4th, 1930, the securities remaining in the pool were sold and the pool terminated. Members of the pool, including the plaintiff, had contributed various amounts from time to time, the sums being placed in the hands of the defendant who, under the agreement, had entire control and management of the pool. The defendant kept all the funds of the pool in his private account. The members had full confidence in his good faith and honesty and believed that he was trying to make profits for them by trading for the pool, and so left all the trading to his judgment.
The plaintiff brought this action alleging that he paid into the pool and into the hands of the defendant certain stated sums of money and certain stocks at various times; that his share of the profits upon the termination of the pool amounted to more than $2700 and that he had been paid $2100 thereof by the defendant; that he had demanded of the defendant the payment of the amounts contributed and the balance *88 of his profits, but had been refused. He asked for an accounting and $10,000 damages and other relief. The defendant made a general denial and filed a counterclaim setting up his version of the agreement and of the sums received from the plaintiff and alleged that he had paid certain sums to the plaintiff out of the profits of the pool as they existed at the time of the payments; that he had finally been obliged to sell all the securities in the pool for the reason that the members would not go further with it, causing a net and final loss of more than $2200, and that he had demanded that the plaintiff and the other members of the pool recompense him for the loss, but they had refused. Upon plaintiff's motion, a ledger account of the transactions of the pool was filed by the defendant, and is a part of the record before us. After hearing the evidence, the trial court concluded that the plaintiff had failed to prove his complaint and the defendant had also failed to prove his counterclaim, and entered its judgment accordingly.
The foregoing is sufficient to present one of the vital questions raised by the appeal, viz.: what legal obligation, if any, did the defendant assume in receiving the various sums paid over to him by the plaintiff for the purposes of the "pool"?
The plaintiff brought his action and prosecuted it on the theory that the defendant was his "broker" and subject to all the liabilities which a broker assumes toward a customer. The underlying feature of the relationship of a customer and his broker, is that of agency. 1 Mechem, Agency (2 Ed.) § 73; Cadigan v.Crabtree,
If that were the relation of the parties, it would be necessary to hold the plaintiff was the principal and the defendant his agent in carrying out the purposes of the "pool." The defendant would have been subject to the orders of the plaintiff, and the latter would ordinarily have become obligated to him for commissions for services performed as the broker. Upon the facts which have been outlined, such was obviously not the case. The defendant was jointly interested in the undertaking, supplying the judgment, knowledge and discretion necessary to carry on the venture, and the other members furnished the cash as their part of the contribution to the enterprise. Under such circumstances, this was clearly a joint adventure, the relations and obligations of which in general are those which govern a partnership. This concept of a joint adventure as distinguished from a partnership, is of comparatively modern origin and is a creation of the American courts. At common law and still in England, such an enterprise is treated as an informal partnership. It has been defined as those "special combinations of two or more persons, where in some specific venture a profit is jointly sought without any actual partnership or corporate designation." Schouler, Personal Property (5th Ed.) § 167a. So where two or more parties combine their property, money, efforts, skill or knowledge in some common undertaking, it has been held to be a joint adventure.Wilson v. Maryland,
The finding of the court that the statement shows a loss of the total investment of the parties with the exception of the amounts which they had received during its continuance, is assigned as error. In several respects the requested changes and additions to the finding could properly be allowed, but even with a finding thus amplified and corrected, no other reasonable conclusion could be reached than that reached by the trial court, that the plaintiff had failed to establish that money was due him from the pool aside from the payments which had been made.
The judgment in this case cannot be otherwise than unsatisfactory to both parties. Where men enter into a loose verbal arrangement of this character, as a pure gamble for profits, place their money under the unrestricted control of one of their number to be used at will, and where no party to the arrangement keeps any specific written record of the resulting transactions, the result is what might be fairly expected.
The decision of the trial court that the plaintiff had not established a right to any further payments, was a sound conclusion upon this record.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.