166 A. 245 | Pa. | 1932
Argued December 2, 1932. Plaintiffs are a firm of stockbrokers doing business as a partnership in the City of Philadelphia. Upon oral orders received from defendant, they purchased for him on the New York Stock Exchange 100 shares of the common stock of American Foreign Power Company on October 15, 1929, and another 100 shares on October 16, 1929, and paid for them out of their own funds. On October 17th, plaintiffs sent defendant a letter, and two days later a telegram, requesting him to take delivery and make payment, or put up collateral to secure the account. He failed to do either, and on October 25th, plaintiffs, without consulting defendant, pledged this stock and other securities with a bank as collateral for a loan of $780,000 to themselves. They did not have in their possession any other American Foreign Power Company stock. The pledge was a general one, and the bank was not bound to release the stock purchased for defendant on payment to it of the amount of defendant's indebtedness to plaintiffs. After each of these purchases, and on four other purchases made by plaintiffs for defendant a short time before, plaintiffs sent to defendant a written confirmation slip setting forth the transaction, at the bottom of which appeared in small type the following: "It is agreed between broker and customer:. . . . . . That all securities purchased or received for the customer's account and not paid for in full. . . . . . may be pledged either separately or together with other securities, either for the sum due thereon, or for a greater sum, without retaining for delivery a like amount of similar *65 securities, all without further notice to the customer, and with his consent, which is hereby specifically given." By agreement, the case was heard by the court below without a jury. After finding the foregoing facts, the learned judge entered judgment in favor of defendant, on the ground that the hypothecation of the stock was a conversion which wiped out the entire claim. Plaintiffs appealed.
Appellants argue that there was an implied assent to the hypothecation, in that defendant had accepted the terms and conditions printed on the confirmation slips. This contention cannot be supported. The transactions were oral, and were complete upon oral offer and acceptance; hence the confirmations, sent after the transactions, were ineffective to change the terms and conditions of the contracts already completed before the sending of the confirmations. New terms could not be added without a new meeting of the minds and a new consideration: Pearson v. Kurtz,
The learned court went further, however, and held that the conversion constituted a complete defense to plaintiff's claim. This was done on the authority of Sproul v. Sloan, supra, where we held that a conversion by a broker of stock purchased for a customer was an absolute defense to an action by the broker to recover his advances for the stock and his commissions. This ruling was followed, without discussion, in Darr v. Fidelity Title Trust Co., supra, Sterling's Est., supra, and Berberich's Est.,
The reasoning upon which our decision in the Sproul case was based was that the broker had committed a breach of the contract, and therefore should not be permitted to recover anything in a suit upon it. This argument is fallacious. A broker's claim arises when he purchases stock for a customer and advances the purchase price. Immediately upon the purchase, the stock becomes the customer's property, but it remains in the broker's possession as security for the advances and commissions. The relation between the parties is that of pledgor and pledgee: Learock v. Paxson, supra; Barbour v. Sproul,
The settled rule in New York is that a broker's claim for the recovery of a customer's indebtedness is not extinguished by a conversion of the customer's securities; the conversion merely entitles the customer to offset his *68
damages against his indebtedness to the broker: Gruman v. Smith,
We think the New York rule does exact justice between the parties, and we are disposed to make it our own, overruling Sproul v. Sloan, supra, Darr v. Fidelity Title Trust Co., supra, Sterling's Est., supra, and Berberich's Est.,
From what has been said, it is apparent that the judgment of the court below must be reversed. Our action is no reflection on that learned court, which found itself bound by our previous holding. We return the case for further hearing to ascertain the amount of damages, so that it may be disposed of in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Judgment reversed with a procedendo.