256 Mass. 147 | Mass. | 1926
This is an action of contract under R. L. c. 99, •§§ 4-7, now G. L. c. 137, §§ 4-6, to recover payments alleged to have been made on wagering transactions in the year 1916. The writ is dated March 24, 1919. An auditor was appointed by the Superior Court, presumably under St. 1914, c. 576, § 2, now G. L. c. 221, § 56. The case was heard by that court without a jury, upon the auditor’s report and without other evidence. The plaintiff made a motion in writing that upon all the evidence a finding be ordered for the plaintiff for the amount claimed in the declaration, with interest from the date of the writ. He also made twenty requests for rulings. The defendant made a motion in writing that upon the pleadings and the evidence the defendants were entitled to a finding. “The court denied the plaintiff’s motion for a finding, and granted the defendants’ motion . . . and with reference to the plaintiff’s requests for rulings made the following ruling, — The within requests are denied because immaterial in view of the findings of the auditor.” The plaintiff duly excepted to the denial of his motion, to the granting of the defendants’ motion, and to the refusal of the plaintiff’s requests.
The witnesses before the auditor were the plaintiff, a defendant, Walter L. Dodge (a former clerk of fhe defendants), and Joseph J. Heard. There were numerous exhibits. The plaintiff testified at the outset that he had previously traded
The auditor found “that, on July 14, 1916, plaintiff paid defendants $500, for which they agreed to sell and buy stocks ... on the New York (City) Stock Exchange, according to the rules and customs there prevailing, as the plaintiff should from time to time thereafter order them to do, under a margin contract for dealing in stocks. . . . that both parties to the contract knew what such a margin contract was . . . [that] irrespective of any evidence admitted against , plaintiff’s objections . . . [and] upon the evidence of the acts of plaintiff,” the plaintiff expected and intended that the defendants should execute and fill his orders on said exchange by making actual sales and purchases of the stock to be dealt in, including the delivery or receipt of the certificates therefor, according to the custom of brokers, on his account and carrying the same, by virtue of said margin contract, for the use and protection thereunder, and for the benefit of the plaintiff if there should be any net profit accruing from the transaction.
The auditor found “that plaintiff owned no certificates and never delivered any to defendants for the shares of stocks he thereafter ordered them to sell for him, and that he never expected to be called upon to deliver any such certificates, but relied upon defendants to make such deliveries of certificates for him when necessary, according to the custom of dealing on said exchange”; that “defendants did not have reasonable cause to believe that plaintiff intended that there should be no actual sales or purchases, with deliveries of certificates, made on his account”; “that plaintiff intended that defendants should make for him 'short’ sales, that is to say — sales for which he personally did not have and did not expect to have certificates to make deliveries therefor”; “that defendants did not know that plaintiff intended that the sales ordered by him should be 'short’ sales”; “that, not at the outset but during the course of the transactions, defendants had reasonable cause to believe that
The auditor further found that, according to the custom of dealing on said exchange the “defendants had reasonable cause to believe, during the course of the transactions, that the purchases ordered to be made were so ordered by plaintiff with the intention that the cost of them should be less than the proceeds of the shares sold”; “that, at the time of the transactions in question, there was a usage or custom among brokers dealing on said New York Exchange, whereby odd lots of stock, bought or sold, were paid for by ‘pairing off7 or setting off transactions, as found to have been done in this case; that such ‘pairing off7 custom was to reheve them from the longer process of exchanging certificates of stock between them for such odd lots, and was considered by them equivalent to the actual manual delivery of the certificates called for by each transaction”; “that defendants were not always in position to have made immediate delivery to plaintiff of certificates for the shares bought for his account under said margin contract”; “that their asset of ‘ shares due from customers7 was probably of doubtful value, especially if such customers were of the limited financial ability and having no certificates of stock as appeared to have been the position of the plaintiff. The evidence . . . did not show from what customers, who had sold ‘short7 through' defendants, certificates were due, or to
The denial of the motion that a finding be ordered for the plaintiff was manifestly right. To recover under R. L. c. 99, §§ 4-7, now G. L. c. 137, §§ 4-6, the plaintiff on the whole case must prove that he employed the defendants on a margin contract to buy or sell for his account securities, intending that there should be no actual purchase or sale by the defendants; as also that the defendants had reasonable cause to believe that said intention existed. To sustain this burden the plaintiff established a prima facie case, G. L. c. 137, § 6, by the finding of the auditor that the sales made by the defendant at the direction of the plaintiff were “short” sales; and the plaintiff was entitled to recover unless further findings of the auditor overcame and rebutted the presumption which arose from the fact that the plaintiff did not own the stocks at the time of the contract of sale or at the time of the giving of the order to sell. Marshall v. James, 252 Mass. 306. Fisher v. Drew, 247 Mass. 178, 181. Barrell v. Paine, 242 Mass. 415.
The findings of the auditor in matters of fact are prima facie evidence as to matters embraced in the order of appointment. G. L. c. 221, § 56. In the case at bar the auditor expressly found that the plaintiff expected and intended that the defendants should execute and fill his orders on the New York Stock Exchange, and in substance that such was his intention even though he did not intend to complete his sales or purchases, by delivering or receiving in person a certificate therefor; his intention being that the defendants should receive and deliver certificates as his brokers, and that through them he should make actual purchases and sales. Rice v. Winslow, 180 Mass. 500, 502. Post v. Leland, 184 Mass. 601, 604, 605.
It is plain the presumption of the statute which attaches to a sale of stock a plaintiff does not own may be rebutted and overcome by evidence which satisfies the trier of fact
The judge was right in allowing the motion that a finding be ordered for the defendants. The finding that the plaintiff had an intention that there should be actual purchases and sales of securities was not substantially contradicted or affected by evidence outside the report, nor by inconsistent and material findings within the report. Matthys v. Hornblower, 224 Mass. 248. Barrell v. Paine, 236 Mass. 157, 163, 164.
If it be a fact that the plaintiff intended there should be actual sales and purchases of the securities, it necessarily follows that the belief of the defendants as to the plaintiff’s intention was immaterial, and the rulings requested in that regard were properly refused. A careful examination of the plaintiff’s contention as to his requested rulings discloses no reversible errors in law.
Exceptions overruled.