Miller & Co. v. Lyons

113 Va. 275 | Va. | 1912

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Lyons brought an action of assumpsit in the Circuit Court of the city of Richmond against the firm of Miller & Co., stock brokers of the city of New York, with a branch office in the city of Richmond, and recovered a verdict and judgment for $7,145, to which Miller & Co. applied for and obtained a writ of error.

During the progress of the trial several bills of exceptions were taken to the admission of evidence, but as they present no question of particular interest, and were, we think, correctly decided, they need not be further noticed in this opinion.

The testimony' and other evidence before the jury tends to-*286prove that Lyons, during a series of years, commencing in 1906 and coming down to July, 1910, was the purchaser of stocks through the firm-of Miller & Co. upon margins. The nature of the contract between Miller & Co. and Lyons is disclosed by the statements and receipts given by Miller & Co. to Lyons upon the purchase or sale of stocks or the receipt of money paid by Lyons to Miller & Co., as, for example, upon the purchase of stocks, Miller & Co. would issue to Lyons a receipt in the following form, printed in red ink:

“The amounts of securities specified in this receipt are deposited with Miller & Co., and are to be used by them as margin or collateral security to protect them from loss in any present or subsequent transaction between them and the party to whom it is issued. If the said Miller & Co. shall at any time, for any reason, deem the said margin insufficient, then the •said Miller & Co. may close any or all of such transactions without demanding further payment or additional security, and may buy in or sell any stocks, bonds, securities, grain, provisions, ■or other property sold or purchased for the party to whom this receipt is issued, and may sell any securities held as collateral, ■on the New York Stock Exchange, New York Produce Exchange, New York Cotton Exchange, New York Coffee Exchange, Chicago Board of Trade, or elsewhere, at public or private sale, without demand or notice.”

And on each transaction where there was a purchase or a sale made a notice of the same was sent, at the bottom of which was printed plainly the following:

“It is understood that on all marginal business we reserve the right to close transactions for your account, without further notice, whenever your margins are running out, and to settle contracts in accordance with the rules and customs of the New York Stock Exchange.”

It is admitted by both parties, plaintiff and defendants, that .such was the contract between them.

The business between the plaintiff and the defendants was carried on through Mr. Roden, the agent of Miller & Co. in charge of the Richmond office, and on the 26th of July, 1910, Eyons was the holder of 1,100 shares of Atlantic Coast Line stock *287and 500 shares of American Car and Foundry stock, and, measured by the opening prices of those stocks upon the morning of that day, his account was $4,000 less than a ten per cent, margin; thereupon Mr. Roden called Mr. Lyons over the ’phone about half past ten o’clock, but Mr. Lyons was not at that time in his office. He again called about a quarter past eleven o’clock, and when Mr. Lyons came to the ’phone, Roden, according to his statement, told him that his account required $4,000 additional margin, to which Mr. Lyons responded: “I have just gotten to the office; I have got a great big pile of mail in front of me; I am very busy; I won’t have time to attend to it to-day; won’t it be satisfactory to send it up to-morrow?”; to which Roden (according to Roden’s account) replied that it would be satisfactory to send it “tomorrow, if the market did not decline further.” Lyons replied: “I haven’t got time to attend to it to-day, but I will certainly send it up in the morning.” Roden said: “All right, Mr. Lyons,” and that was all. An hour later the market had declined. Coast Line had opened at 107 and Car Foundry at 44; Coast Line sold off to 106 and Car Foundry to about 42, and whereas Mr. Lyons’s account had required $4,000 at the opening, this decline of a point in Coast Line and two points in Car Foundry made it necessary to have about $3,000 more. Roden testified: “I had not any doubt in the world but what I could get hold of Mr. Lyons, and I went to the ’phone about twelve o’clock, when Coast Line was selling at a still lower price, about 104, called up his office, and I was told that he had gone home. Then I went back to the desk and penciled a note to Mr. Lyons; I wrote him a note, and told him the market had declined further, and we must have five thousand dollars at once, or we would have to liquidate part of his account. I called my young man, Mr. Hotze, and gave him this note. He read it, and I put it in an envelope and addressed it to Mr. John H. Lyons, care Richmond Leather Company, and told Mr. Hotze to take it down there and give it to Mr. Lyons, and if he was not‘there to leave it. After he had gone I went to the ’phone and called up Mr. Lyons’s home. I was told that he was not there. I thought perhaps Mr. Lyons had not had time to get home. So, in the meantime, Mr. Hotze got back and said that Mr. Lyons was not there at his office, but he had left *288the note. I again called np his home, but he was not there. I left word with whoever answered the ’phone to have Mr. Lyons call my ’phone, Monroe 601, as soon as he got there.” He then called up the Commonwealth Club, of which Mr. Lyons was a member, and was told that Mr. Lyons had just left. Then he informed the New York office that he could not locate Mr. Lyons anywhere; that he had called Mr. Lyons in the morning, and told him that they must have this $4,000 margin, and informed the New York office of what had taken place between them. Later in the day the decline was so constant and of such a general character, and the market in such a precarious condition, that Miller & Co., acting upon the authority which they had under the contract, and according to their best judgment, closed out a portion of the plaintiff’s account, and sold 500 shares of Coast Line and 200 shares of Car Foundry at the best bids which they could get, selling them in lots of 100, and members of the firm personally executing the sales of the stock upon the New York Exchange. Miller & Co. assert that these sales were made in good faith and in the exercise of their best business judgment, for the protection of both parties, and in accordance with the terms of the contract had with the plaintiff, after he had violated his contract and failed to keep up his margins.

On the next day Lyons wrote a letter to Miller & Co. and sent a check for $5,000, demanding that he be reinstated. In this letter he claimed that the agreement between himself and Roden was that it would be satisfactory if a check for $5,000 was sent the next day; Roden claiming that the agreement was that it would be satisfactory provided the market did not decline.

It may be as well to give here Lyons’s statement of what occurred on the 26th of July.

He said he had just gotten to his office when he was told that Mr. Roden was at the ’phone and wished to speak to him; that Mr. Roden said: “Mr. Lyons, the market looks very weak, and I must have $5,000 to-day.” Mr. Lyons states: “I took my watch out and said, ‘Gee, Mr. Roden’—that is the way I know it was 11:15, I took out my watch and looked at it, and said, ‘Gee, Mr. Roden, it is 11:15, and I have just this minute gotten to my office ’— I don’t'think I had taken my coat off; ‘can’t you wait until *289to-morrow?’ He said, ‘Mr. Lyons, will you certainly attend to it to-morow?’ I said, ‘I certainly will.’ He said, ‘Don’t fail,’ and he repeated it again. I said, ‘Mr. Roden, I will certainly attend to it the first thing in the morning.’ He said, ‘All right, that will do.’ I said, ‘I thank you very much, Mr. Roden; I am very much obliged to you.’”

It will be observed that this differs from Roden’s account in two particulars: In the first place, Roden claims to have asked for $4,000, while Lyons says the demand was for $5,000—but this difference is not material; and, according to Mr. Roden’s account, his promise was conditional—that it would be satisfactory to have the money the following day, if the market did not decline further, whereas, according to the statement of Mr. Lyons, the undertaking was unconditional.

Mr. Lyons’s statement is corroborated by his book-keeper— that is to say, corroborated so far as a conversation can be corroborated by a witness who hears only one of the interlocutors.

The case for the defendant in error rests upon two propositions—first, that Miller & Co. did not have a right to sell his stocks, or any of them, without notice, as was done on July 26, 1910, after having, by their acts, and by the course of dealings between themselves and him, covering a period of four years, led him to believe that a sale would not be made without an opportunity being given him to increase and maintain his margin; second, that he made with Miller & Co., on the morning of July 26, 1910, a valid contract, whereby Miller & Co. bound themselves unconditionally to wait until the following day for the margin called for, and therefore they (Miller & Co.) did not have the right to sell his stocks, nor any part of them, on that day.

These two defenses are by no means contradictory the one of the other, or even in any degree inconsistent. Either one of them would be sufficient if maintained by satisfactory proof, or both off them together may be relied upon by the plaintiff to maintain his suit.

That covenants and stipulations made by a covenantor for his benefit may be waived by him, either by express terms or by a course of dealing, is a well-established principle in every system *290of enlightened jurisprudence. That a covenantor may, by his conduct, so lull his covenantee into a sense of security as thereby to estop himself from the exercise of a right for which he had contracted is equally clear. Instances illustrating this principle abound in the law with reference to contracts of insurance, but its operation is not limited to any specific class of contracts and dealings between men. Such estoppels are founded upon principles of morality and public policy, their object being to prevent that which deals in duplicity and inconsistency. Bower v. McCormick, 23 Gratt. (64 Va.) 310.

In Georgia Home Ins. Co. v. Kinnier’s Adm’x, 28 Gratt. (69 Va.) 88, it was held that “Any acts, declarations, or course of dealing by the insurers, with knowledge of the facts constituting a breach of a condition in the policy, recognizing and treating the policy as still in force, and leading the assured to regard himself as still protected thereby, will amount to a waiver of the forfeiture by reason of such breach, and estop the company from setting up the same as a defense when sued for a subsequent loss.”

In the case before us, under the contract between the parties, it may be conceded that Miller & Co. had the right to sell the stocks carried by them for Lyons whenever his margin fell below ten points, and that they were the sole judges of the necessity and propriety of sale; yet, applying the principle declared by Judge Burks in the case just cited, any acts, declarations, or course of dealing upon the part of Miller & Co., with knowledge of the facts, and which led Lyons to believe that they would not exercise their right-to sell without giving him timely notice, estops them from setting up their right to sell under the contract, when sued for a loss incurred by reason of a sale made in derogation of such course of dealing.

That the evidence in the record does tend to establish such a course of dealing as tended to lull Lyons into a false sense of security, and such as to induce a reasonable man to believe that the power of sale would not be exercised without an opportunity upon his part to put up additional margin, is plain. Running through the whole course of their transactions, covering about four years, there were many instances in which Lyons’s margin fell below ten per cent.

*291On May 28, 1907, they had demanded $1,000 margin, and he had sent $500, and thereupon they wrote to him as follows: “In response to our request for $1,000 margin you sent us to-day $500. In the present state of the market it is very necessary that we should have full margin on all accounts, and we would, therefore, thank you to let us have to-morrow $500 additional, in accordance with our original request.”

On August 9, 1907, they wrote to him: “In the absence of additional funds, as requested by us several times, we have placed an order to sell your Atlantic Coast Line, when present margin is exhausted, at 82^£.”

On August 10, 1907, they wrote: “We have wired you to-day at Woodberry Forest requesting fifteen hundred dollars more on your Atlantic Coast Line stock. Our New York office informs us that they have, in the meantime, entered a stop loss order at '74 |. The-stock closed at 79.”

October 7, 1907: “Atlantic Coast Line is selling now at 77. Your account requires $1,000 additional amount early to-morrow. We were unable to get you on the ’phone to-day.”

October 9, 1907: “We have no response to our request made on Monday, the 7th instant, for additional margin. Unless you attend to this matter at once we will have to close the account out when present margins are exhausted.”

October 10, 1907: “We beg to acknowledge $1,000 received to-day. Same has been credited to your account. Coast Line broke again, selling at 71 The account now requires $1,000 in addition to the $1,000 above named. Please see that we receive check for this amount to-morrow.”

October 11, 1907: “Coast Line closed at 70 to-day. We have been trying all day to get you over the ’phone. So far we have been unable to reach you. We must have $1,500 additional margin on your stock before 11 o’clock to-morrow morning; if it is not received we will have to enter an order to close the account when present margins are exhausted.”

October 26, 1909: “We wired you to New York, requesting you to let us have $1,000 additional margin, and also requesting you to reply to our telegram. At this writing we have not received a reply, although we are informed by the Telegraph Com*292pany that our message was delivered to you in person. We must have this check Monday morning, otherwise we will have to enter an order to sell your stocks when present margins are exhausted.”

We think these letters justify the comment made upon them in the brief of defendant in error: They show “the demands for margins when required to be paid and notice of Miller & Co.’s intention to close out account on stop loss order, or ‘when the margins are exhausted.’ They show that the fact that they could not get him over the ’phone did not lead.them to believe that they were justified in selling without giving Lyons until the next day to put up more margins. They afford a fair sample of Miller & Co.’s course of dealings with Lyons throughout the entire term covered by the account.”

In the instances cited, and in many others that appear in the record, it seems that although the market might be weak and falling, although the margin had fallen below the ten per cent. limit, although the demands for margins were not always promptly met, that Miller & Co. never went beyond the point of reiterating the demand for margins, with the declaration in some instances that they had put in a stop loss order—in other words, that the stock would be sold when the existing margin was exhausted.

Upon this evidence, the court instructed the jury as to the rights of plaintiffs in error under the original contract, unmodified and unaffected by the course óf dealing between the parties; it then instructed the jury as to waiver of the right by express agreement or by a course of dealing between the parties; and those instructions we think fully and fairly submitted the question to the jury.

There is, in our opinion, no conflict between instructions Nos. 3 and 4, given by the court at the instance of the defendant in error. In No. 3 the jury is instructed as to the effect of the general course of dealings between the plaintiff and the defendants, as to the purchase and carrying of stocks upon margin, and in instruction No. 4 the attention of the jury was directed to what occurred between Lyons and Roden on the 26th of July, 1910. As we have seen, the plaintiff relied upon two theories to maintain his case—the-general course of dealing between the parties, and the specific *293contract of July 26, 1910. The law, as applicable to the two branches of the case, is presented in instructions 3 and 4, and we find in them no insufficiency, no inconsistency, but are of opinion that they fairly and properly present the law of the case upon the points covered by them.

A great deal of reliance was placed by counsel for plaintiffs in error upon instruction “C,” which was offered by them and refused by the court. What we have already said disposes of this question. The plaintiff could properly advance both theories of his case before the jury, introduce evidence in support of each, and ask the court to instruct with respect to them; and the assertion of defendant in error’s right, under the arrangement of July 26, 1910, did not, in our judgment, involve an abandonment, or in any degree diminish his right to rely upon the course of dealing which had prevailed between the parties up to that time.

The real source of trouble in this case was that Miller & Co., the principals, disapproved of and repudiated the act of their agent, Roden, when he advised them of what he had done. This view is strongly supported by a letter from Roden, on the evening of July 26, 1910, to Mr. Lyons, in which he says: “After my talk with you on the ’phone to-day the market broke very badly, and additional margins were demanded on your account. I called your office and sent down there, but you were gone. I tried your house and the club, at neither of which places could you be had. I left word at each place for you to call me up, and have not yet heard anything from you. No answer being obtainable, our New York office gave orders to liquidate part of your account, which was done by selling 200 Car Foundry and 500 Coast Line. They positively declined to carry the account over night without additional margin, and I was unable to supply it, being unable to locate you.”

Mr. Lyons, upon returning to his office the following morning, called Roden up over the ’phone, and said: “Mr. Roden, I am very much surprised to receive this letter. I am utterly astonished; what is the meaning of it?” His reply was: “Mr. Lyons, I did not do it; New York did it. I am just as sorry as you are.” Mr. Lyons then said to Roden: “Mr. Roden, I promised to send you 15,000 up this morning, and I am going to do it. I am going *294to send it right this minute. I am living up to my contract. You made a direct contract with me, and I am living up to my contract, and I expect you to live up to yours.” That check was sent. There is no reason to believe that it could not and would not have been sent the day before if it had been insisted upon.

But, it is said, if it had been sent the day before, the course of the market during the day had still reduced the margin below 10 per cent., and that the cash, if paid the day before, would certainly have been as good as the promise to pay the following day; all of which is very true, if that were a complete statement of the contract or agreement or arrangement of July 26, and just there comes in the importance of the difference which exists in the accounts of what took place between Mr. Roden and Mr. Lyons. According to Mr. Lyons (and his view seems to have been accepted by the jury) there was an unconditional promise to wait until the next day, the effect of which was to relieve Lyons of all apprehension during the intermediate period. It was in accordance with the course of dealing which had theretofore prevailed between the parties, and he went to his home in the full security that he would have nothing to apprehend until the following day.

The instructions are predicated upon facts which the evidence tends to establish, they present familiar principles of the law of waiver and of equitable estoppel, and we shall content ourselves by saying that the law covering the case was properly put before the jury.

So much for the defendant in error’s right to recover.

The next question which arises is as to the measure of damages.

Plaintiffs in error contend that it was the duty of the defendant in error, if he was injured and had sustained damage by reason of the conduct of plaintiffs in error, to minimize the damage and to diminish the plaintiff in error’s loss by reasonable diligence upon his part—that is to say, that Lyons ought at once to have repurchased the stock, and that he is only entitled to recover the difference between the price it brought when sold by Miller & Co. and what it would have cost him to recover his position by a repurchase of the stock at a subsequent day.

Lyons promptly notified Miller & Co. that he considered he had been wronged by them, that he demanded restoration to *295the position which he occupied by a repurchase by them of the stock which they had. sold. They were the wrong-doers, and not Lyons. Surely it was as incumbent upon them, in their own interest, to diminish the loss occasioned by their wrongful act, which they could have done had they promptly acceded to Lyons’s demand, as it was upon Lyons to diminish the consequences of their wrongful act by himself going into the market and buying-back an equivalent amount of the stocks which they had sold.

When the question as to the 'measure of damages was considered by the circuit court, the contention was made by plaintiffs in error that it was for the court to determine at what day the price of stocks was to be ascertained, and adopted by the jury, and, on the other hand, it was contended by the defendant in error that it was for the jury to determine that question. The court decided the contention in accordance with the views of plaintiffs in error, and determined that the price of the stocks on the 16th of August, 1910, just twenty-one days after the sale, was the proper time at which to ascertain the price of the stocks, in order to determine the quantum of damages, with the result that the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount already stated.

We know of no case in the reports of this court which throws any light upon this question, but it has frequently been before the courts of New York.

In the cases of Romaine v. Van Allen, 26 N. Y. 309, and Markham, v. Jaudon, 41 N. Y. 235, it was laid down as a rule, and a recovery was permitted which gave the plaintiff the highest price of the stock between conversion and the trial, which principle, if adopted in this case, would have resulted in a very much larger verdict than that which was given.

In Baker v. Drake, 66 N. Y. 518, 23 Am. Rep. 80, however, those cases were overruled, and it was said: “The advance in the market price of the stock from the sale up to a reasonable time to replace it, after the plaintiff received notice of the sale, would afford a complete indemnity.”

Lyons, thinking, with reason, that he who had committed the wrong should right it, demanded, as we have seen, on the 27th of July, that Miller & Co. should repurchase the stocks which they had sold, and that demand was insisted upon by him, *296and was never finally rejected by Miller & Co. until he received their letter of August 10th. After Lyons ascertained that Miller & Co. would not yield to his demand, we think he was entitled to a reasonable opportunity to consult counsel, to employ other brokers, and to watch the market for the purpose of determining whether it was advisable to purchase on a particular day, or when the stock reached a particular quotation, and to raise funds if he determined to repurchase.

In the case of Burnhorn v. Lockwood, 71 App. Div. (N. Y.) 301, 75 N. Y. Supp. 828, the court said: “The respondent resided in the city of New York, and was here at the time. No other facts or circumstances were shown which aid in the determination of the question. In the absence of evidence of special circumstances showing other elements of necessity for further time, we think it may be stated, as a general rule, that the customer is entitled to a reasonable opportunity to consult counsel, to employ other brokers, and to watch the market for the purpose of determining whether it is advisable to purchase on a particular day, or when the stock reaches a particular quotation, and to raise funds if he decides to repurchase.” In that case the record showed that the conversion occurred on May 13, and the court ruled that the plaintiff was entitled to the highest price at which the stock sold prior to June 12th. Thirty days, therefore, was the time allowed in that case.

In Colt v. Owens, 90 N. Y. 368, thirty days were allowed as a reasonable time.

In Randolph v. Albany City Bank, 1 N. Y. St. Rep. 592, it was held that the reasonable time elapsed before the expiration of six months, and that the question depends upon the circumstances of each case.

In Wright v. Bank of Metropolis, 110 N. Y. 237, 18 N. E. 79, 1 L. R. A. 289, 6 Am. St. Rep. 356, it was held, upon the facts of that case, that a reasonable time expired July 1st following the 9th day of May of the same year, which was nearly two months.

Every case seems to depend in this respect upon its own facts. Lyons had been dealing with Miller & Co. through a long period, through their accredited agent, Roden. Those dealings, *297while directly with Roden, appear always to have been communicated to and approved by his principals. By that course of dealing Lyons had been led to believe that a sale would not be made without giving him due notice. A sale was made, and he felt himself aggrieved. He immediately demanded reparation, and, after a considerable period spent in negotiation, his demand was refused. Taking all the circumstances into consideration, we are unable to say that the court erred to the prejudice of plaintiffs in error in fixing upon August 16th as the date at which the value of the stocks was to be estimated in order to give to Lyons that indemnity to which he was entitled.

We shall conclude this branch of the case by citing Galigher v. Jones, 129 U. S. 193, 32 L. Ed. 658, 9 Sup. Ct. 335. Speaking of the unlawful conversion of stocks, and the time at which their value should be ascertained in order to give the party injured a satisfactory indemnity for the wrong done him, Mr. Justice Bradley, delivering the opinion of the court, said: “Perhaps more transactions of this kind arise in the State of New York than in all other parts of the country. The rule of highest intermediate value up to the time of trial formerly prevailed in that State, and may be found laid down in Romaine v. Van Allen, 26 N. Y. 309, and Markham, v. Jaudon, 41 N. Y. 235, and other cases, although the rigid application of the rule was deprecated by the New York Superior Court in an able opinion of Judge Duer, in Suydam v. Jenkins, 3 Sandford (N. Y.) 614. The hardship which arose from estimating the damages by the highest price up to the time of trial, which might be years after the transaction occurred, was often so great that the Court of Appeals of New York was constrained to introduce a material modification in the form of the rule, and to hold the true and just measure of damages in these cases to be the highest intermediate value of the stock between the time of its conversion and a reasonable time after the owner has received notice of it to enable him to replace the stock. This modification of the rule was very ably enforced in an opinion of the Court of Appeals delivered by Judge Rapallo in the case of Baker v. Drake, 53 N. Y. 211 [13 Am. Rep. 507], which was subsequently followed in the same case in 66 N. Y. 518 [23 Am. Rep. 801], and in Gruman v. Smith, 81 N. Y. 25; Colt v. Owens, 90 N. Y. *298368, and Wright v. Bank of Metropolis, 110 N. Y. 237, [18 N. E. 79, 1 L. R. A. 289, 6 Am. St. Rep. 356].” See also Mullen v. Quinlan, 195 N. Y. 109.

In that case (Galigher v. Jones) it appears that the stock was sold on the 27th and 29th of November, 1878, at $1.25 per share; “that in December the stock sold as high as $2.00 per share; in January the highest price was $3.10; in February the highest price was $5.50. The referee allowed the defendant the highest price in January, namely, $3.10 per share, being an advance of $1.85 above what the plaintiff sold the stock for, which, for the whole 600 shares, amounted to $1,110. The reason assigned by the referee for not allowing the defendant the highest price in February (namely, $5.50 per share) was that before that time the defendant had reasonable time, after receiving notice of the sale of his stock by the plaintiff, to replace it by the purchase of new stock, if he desired so to do; and he allowed him the highest price' which the stock reached within that reasonable time. In this conclusion we think the referee was correct, and as to this item we see no error in the result.” It appears, therefore, that in that case the court approved a delay of more than two months.

Upon the whole case, we are of opinion that the case was properly submitted to the jury, that the facts warranted the verdict, that there is no error in the judgment, and that it should be affirmed.

Affirmed.