192 A.D. 257 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
This action is to obtain an interlocutory judgment requiring the defendants to account for certain transactions wherein said defendants acted as stockbrokers for the plaintiffs, and to whom plaintiffs had paid certain moneys for the purchase and carrying of stocks on margin for plaintiffs’ account.
The complaint alleges the copartnership of the plaintiffs and
The answer puts in issue all of the allegations of the complaint, and for a distinct and separate defense and counterclaim
The allegations of defendants’ separate defense and counterclaim are put in issue by plaintiffs’ reply thereto.
The action came on for trial at Special Term, and at the close of the plaintiffs’ case, upon motion of the defendants, the learned court dismissed the complaint, whereupon judgment was entered in favor of the defendants and against plaintiffs dismissing said complaint, together with costs in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiffs.
In granting defendants’ motion to dismiss it may be inferred from the remarks of the court that it doubted whether a fiduciary relation could exist between brokers, and that the court desired the submission of authorities in support of plaintiffs’ claim. The court, however, stated that it appeared that the real purchasers or sellers of the stock were customers
It is the contention of the respondents upon which they seek to uphold the action of the court at Special Term that the plaintiffs were not the customers of the defendants, but merely cleared through them, and that the relationship of broker and client did not exist and that no fiduciary relationship ever existed between the plaintiffs and the defendants. I am unable to agree with such contention. The evidence clearly shows that so far as the defendants were concerned they knew no one in the various transactions except the plaintiffs. So far as the evidence shows it was the plaintiffs’ money alone that'the defendants received. The mere fact that the plaintiffs may have acted in behalf of then customers in nowise changes the situation. Even assuming the defendants were clearing for plaintiffs, who in turn were serving their customers in the transactions, still I see no reason why the defendants should not account for moneys paid to them by the plaintiffs and by whom the defendants were employed. The evidence shows that the plaintiffs paid to the defendants $1,960 of their own money. This the defendants received and claim to have expended in various transactions which they conducted in behalf of the plaintiffs. The defendants claim that they have expended more than the moneys which they received from the plaintiffs, and that there is a balance due them. Under these circumstances I can see no reason why
In 2 Dos Passes on Stockbrokers (2d ed. p. 767) it is said: “ In equity the best-known remedy to enforce a liability where there have been numerous transactions between the client and broker is by bill for an accounting. It is one of the settled principles of equity jurisprudence, that where the relation of principal and agent, or broker, exists, a bill in equity will lie to compel an accounting. And the liability to do this follows, as a matter of course, from the admission or establishment of the agency. By means of a bill filed by the principal, or client, against the agent, or broker, all of the transactions may be investigated, and a fuller and more satisfactory result reached than by any other means.”
The position of the plaintiffs, appellants, finds support in the case of Noble v. Kendall (182 App. Div. 801). That was a case where the plaintiff opened an account with a Washington firm of brokers for the purchase and sale of stock on margin. The Washington brokers employed the defendant Kendall, a New York broker, to execute said stock transactions in the city of New York. The plaintiff brought action for an accounting, joining as parties defendant the Washington brokers and the New York broker, alleging that they acted jointly as plaintiff’s agents and brokers. The case reached this court upon appeal from an order denying the motion of the New York broker for judgment upon the pleadings arising upon his demurrer to the plaintiff’s complaint for insufficiency, and from the order granting plaintiff’s motion for judgment overruling said demurrer. This court reversed the order appealed from and granted the motion of the New York broker for judgment upon the pleadings. While perhaps unnecessary to the decision in that case, this court in the opinion written by Mr. Justice Laughlin, all the other members of the court concurring, said: “If, as is fairly to be inferred, the Washington brokers employed appellant’s firm to execute the orders, then the latter would be answerable not to plaintiff, but to the other brokers who employed them. (Evans v. Wrenn, 93 App. Div. 346; affd., 181 N. Y. 566. See, also, Montgomery County Bank v. Albany City Bank, 7 N. Y. 459; McBride v. Illinois Nat. Bank, 163 App. Div. 417.)”
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellants to abide event.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Smith and Page, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellants to abide event. •