47 N.Y.S. 376 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The defendants were stockbrokers in the city of Hew York and members of the Consolidated Exchange in that city, upon which exchange their principal dealings were transacted. In the years 1891 and 1892 the plaintiff was a customer of the defendants, and through them speculated in stocks. During this period he deposited With the defendants as margins, or to secure them against .loss, in fulfilling his orders, $29,000 in money and railroad bonds of the par value of $15,000. The transactions of the plaintiff through the defendants’ firm were very numerous. It is stated that they approximated in number 2,000, At the end of the dealings between the parties the defendants claimed that the plaintiff’s deposit, or margin, had been exhausted, and that he was indebted to' them in a large sum. The plaintiff claims that at this time he discovered that the transactions reported to him by the defendants as made in the fulfillment of his orders were fictitious; that as mat.ter of fact they neither bought stock when he ordered a purchase nor sold stock when -he ordered a sale. Thereupon he instituted this action; and in. it he sought to recover the money paid the defendants and the value of the securities deposited with them. The defendants answered admitting their employment by the plaintiff as brokers for the purchase and sale of stocks. They denied that the purchases and sales reported by them were fictitious, and alleged that, on the contrary, they were actual. Thus the only issue in this case under the pleadings (except a plea of another action pending, to which it is unnecessary to refer) was whether the defendants actually fulfilled the plaintiff’s orders or whether the sales and purchases reported by them were fictitious and in fact not made. On a previous trial of the action, at the close of the plaintiff’s case the court dismissed the complaint. On appeal the judg
(Prout v. Chisolm, 89 Hun, 108.) The opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Dykmaií on the prior appeal very clearly shows the nature of the plaintiff’s action, and is decisive of his right to maintain it. It leaves but little to be added by us. The rule of law as to the duty of an agent to his. principal has been so long and so positively settled that it may now be said to be elemental*y. The relation of an agent to his principal is one of confidence and trust. “ The principal bargains, in the employment, for the exercise of the disinterested skill, diligence and zeal of the agent for his own exclusive benefit.” (Story on Agency, § 210.) “Hence it is well settled * * * that an agent employed to sell cannot himself become the purchaser, and an agent employed to buy cannot himself be the seller.” (Id. § 211.) “ Thus, for example, if an agent authorized .to buy should buy of himself, and the bargain is advantageous to the principal, * * * the latter has his election to ratify it or not; if disadvantageous, he may affirm it or repudiate it at his pleasure. On the other hand, if the agent makes any profits in the care of his agency by any concealed management, either in buying or selling, or in other transactions on account of his principal, the profits will belong exclusively to the latter.” (Id. § 214.)
It is, therefore, wholly immaterial in this case whether in fact the plaintiff suffered any loss by the failure of the defendants to execute his orders, or whether as matter of fact the plaintiff is better, or at least no. worse off than if his orders had been executed. A broker, agent - or servant cannot speculate on the orders of his. employer or master. There are so-called exchanges or offices in many cities in which persons assume to speculate in stocks.. In these places it is . understood, both by customer and banker, that stocks are not to be actually sold or ^purchased, but' that the customer is to pay the banker or the banker pay the customer, according to the fluctuation of the market price of stocks in those exchanges where stocks are really bought and sold. But such transactions are mere gambling. They are illegal, and the maintenance of establishments where such dealings are carried on is criminal. In such cases where the dealings are fair the persons are probably subject to no other criticism or condemnation than is to be passed on gamblers' generally. But there is no pretense in this case that the plaintiff
We think the evidence sufficient to support the verdict of the jury,, and that we are not warranted in disturbing that verdict.
The books of the defendants did not. disclose the names of the-parties from whom they bought stock or to whom they sold stock. The defendants testified that they were unable to give such information ; that the only record of the parties with whom they dealt on the' exchange was in the clearing house sheets, made u.p .each day. • These clearing house sheets, after a period of from thirty to sixty days, were destroyed. Hence it was not possible for the plaintiff to disprove the existence of any particular transaction by calling the person with whom it was said to have been made, because the name of no such person was given to him. Of course it was also irnprac- . ticable for the plaintiff to call every possible vendor or purchaser of stock to or from the defendants to impeach the accounts rendered by them to the plaintiff. He sought to establish the fictitious character of the transactions represented by the accounts by showing the manner in which defendants transacted their business, the ordinary channels through which purchases and sales would be made, and the records in which, in the ordinary course of business, the defendants’ sales and purchases would, to some extent, be manifested. It appears that the business of the defendants, with isolated exceptions, was transacted in the .Consolidated Exchange. In the ordinary course Of business' on that exchange stocks are not delivered by the vendor to the purchaser) but cleared through the clearing house. To this rule it appears there are exceptions, but the exceptions are rare. During a period' of some thirty days, beginning when the plaintiff gave his first order .to the defendants, it appears that the defendants did not clear a single share of stock through the clearing house, though they represented that during the same period they purchased
Several exceqttions were taken during the trial to the admission or exclusion of evidence, some of which require notice. The records of the clearing house were sufficiently proved' and properly received in evidence. It is conceded that clearing house sheets were
As to- the admissibility of the official reports of sales on the exchange, the question is more doubtful. In Whelan v. Lynch (60 N. Y. 469) it was held that a price current list taken from a newspaper, aside from any explanation as to the authority from which it was obtained, was not legitimate evidence of the facts stated. The court distinguished the case then before it from 'those of Lush v. Druse (4 Wend. 313); Terry v. McNiel (58 Barb. 241), and Cliquot’s Champagne (3 Wall. 117), but.it did not assume to overrule those authorities. I think the decision proceeded on the sole ground that the authority or source from which the information stated in the price current list was obtained was not shown.
In the case before us it appears that these reports are compiled by employees of the exchange who are stationed on its floor to witness the purchases and sales there made and record the same. These records, made in the form of reports, are daily published and given to the members of the exchange for their, information. The defendants were members of the exchange, and the reports are in" the nature of entries on the books of the association. But further it appears that these reports were daily posted in the office of the •defendants for the information and guidance of the customers who might deal through them. They were thus accredited by the action •of the defendants themselves, and we think such action was in the nature of an admission that the reports weveprima^facie correct statements of the transactions represented by them to have taken place.
So far as the defendants’ requests to charge, which were refused by the court, relate to the rule of damages or the question of fraud, they have been disposed of by what we have already written. The •court was asked to charge that the defendants were under no legal obligation to give the plaintiff the names of the parties to whom they sold, or from whom they purchased stock, and that no pre
These requests, we think, were properly refused. “ It is the duty of an agent, where the business in which he is employed admits of it or requires it, to keep regular accounts of all his transactions on behalf of his principal, not only of his payments and disbursements, but also of his receipts, and to render such accounts to his principal at all reasonable times without any suppression, concealment or overcharge.” (Story on Agency, § 203.) It appeared by the testimony of defendants’ own witnesses, who were also stockbrokers, that their books recorded the names of the parties of whom they purchased or to whom they sold stocks. We would be of the opinion that, in a business like that carried on by defendants, it would be the duty of a broker to so record the transactions had on behalf of his principal that at any time the principal might be able to examine into the broker’s actions and verify them. So the General Term held on the previous appeal. But; at most, it was a question of fact for the jury to determine whether, in the proper conduct of their business, the defendants should not have kept a record of the names of their vendees and vendors. It cannot be said, as matter of law, that the defendants were under no obligation to keep such a record, or that their failure to keep the record created no presumption against them.
The court was also asked to charge that, in order to make out his cause of action, the plaintiff must prove that every transaction claimed by the defendants to have been' made was fictitious; and also that, to render a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum demanded by him, the jury must be satisfied of the same fact, that is, that every one of the transactions was fictitious. We think this refusal was right. To make out the plaintiff’s cause of action it was not necessary to prove that every transaction was fictitious; but if any of them were fictitious he was entitled to have such transactions rejected from the accounts. ■ Nor, to entitle him to recover the whole sum demanded in the complaint, was it necessary that ah
On the whole we are of the opinion that this action was presented by the court to the jury with perfect fairness; that the verdict of the jury was warranted by the evidence, and that no legal error was committed which requires a reversal of the judgment.The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred, except Baktlett, J., not sitting.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.