195 A.D. 502 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
The action is brought by a firm of stockbrokers against a customer to recover $4,576.35, an alleged balance of a marginal account. The complaint set forth an account between the parties commencing on the 23d of July, 1919, and continuing until the tenth of October of that year; but the plaintiffs, recognizing that the controversy between them and their customer was over the execution of an order given by him on the 29th of August, 1919, which he claimed involved an order given the day before, omitted from the accounts two items relating to the execution of orders on August twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth, and alleged their claims with respect thereto separately as follows: That on the twenty-eighth of August, at the request of the defendant, they sold 100 shares of American Sumatra Tobacco short at seventy-eight and one-half per share and that bn the next day they sold another 100 shares of the same stock short on the defendant’s order at eighty-two and three-eighths per share. The giving and execution of the first of those orders were admitted, but the giving and execution of the other were denied, and the defendant alleged that it was an order to buy to cover the short sale made the day before, and he testified that the plaintiffs reported to him verbally the same day that it was so executed at the price at which they, instead, made the short sale.
If the order given on August twenty-ninth was to purchase to cover the prior short sale, as claimed by the defendant, he would have had a credit balance with the plaintiffs and they would have no cause of action against him; but if, on the other hand, it was an order to sell short, then the brokers would have been carrying for him sales of 200 shares short,
These were the only issues presented by the pleadings or by the evidence. No evidence of the daily course of the market after the dispute arose between the parties on the eighteenth of September concerning the order of August twenty-ninth was introduced by either party, and there was only an incidental
The court in submitting the case to the jury first instructed them that if the order of August twenty-ninth was to buy to cover the short sale of the twenty-eighth, there could be no recovery; and if it was to sell, plaintiffs were entitled to recover the amount claimed. These instructions properly presented the issues arising on the pleadings which were the only issues on which the evidence afforded a basis for a verdict; but thereupon the court, without any request on the subject from either party, charged that even though the order of August twenty-ninth was for a short sale as claimed by the plaintiffs, still it was for the jury to determine whether or not plaintiffs, knowing that defendant had repudiated the short sale of
The court further charged that even if the order of August twenty-ninth was to sell, plaintiffs could only charge defendant’s account with the market value at the time of the repudia
If the theory of the court with reference to its being the duty of the plaintiffs to use reasonable efforts to reduce the loss, even though they were right and defendant was wrong with respect to'the order of August twenty-ninth, was not erroneous, still the verdict could not stand for there is no evidence that the plaintiffs could have purchased to cover at any time after September seventeenth at a price which would have left a credit balance in favor of the defendant; and, therefore, even on that theory, the plaintiffs would have been entitled to recover, at least, on the basis of the market price of ninety- and one-half or ninety-one on September twenty-fifth, which was the only definite evidence with respect to the market price after September eighteenth when the dispute arose; for it is perfectly'plain that the testimony first given by the defendant with respect to Sumatra selling at eighty-five could not have referred to the time of the interview, because he made it clear later on that at that time the stock was selling at ninety and one-half or ninety-one, and, therefore, it does not appear to what date he referred in specifying eighty-five as the price. But the theory of the court was erroneous. The court evidently had in mind the rule applicable to the conversion of stock by an unauthorized sale by brokers. (Baker v. Drake, 53 N. Y. 211.) Here, however, there was no conversion. On the theory that the brokers executed the order as given, it was a short sale and the customer did not have the stock, and, therefore, it could not be converted. (Campbell v. Wright, 118 N. Y. 594.) If the brokers did not execute the order as given, the customer, of course, had the right to repudiate their action and to insist that he be given the benefit of the order as if properly executed (Levy v. Loeb, 89 N. Y. 386); but if they executed the order as given by the defendant, he was not warranted in repudiating the sale, and they were not
It follows that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellants to abide the event.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Merrell and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellants to abide event.