168 Misc. 869 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1938
A study of the records establishes that the plaintiffs are only perfunctorily parties to the litigation and that the sole issue is whether the defendants Fonda, Inc., and Garotti have a valid lien against the deposit of .$15,000 held by the defendant New York Stock Exchange. Upon the trial plaintiffs admitted that since they had obtained an assignment to the seat on the exchange largely because of certain proceedings had in the Surrogate’s Court, county of New York, no affirmative relief is requested. Likewise it developed that defendants Garotti and Fonda, Inc., have limited their proof to the establishment of their rights to the fund held by the Stock Exchange and neither requested nor attempted to prove any right to affirmative relief against the plaintiffs. Again since sufficient funds are held by the exchange to satisfy the alleged liens of Fonda, Inc., and Garotti and as they never had any dealing with the plaintiffs, perforce no misrepresentation can be charged against the latter, the counterclaims of these defendants must fall and, therefore, they are dismissed so far as the plaintiffs are concerned. Furthermore, by reason of the changes occurring herein since the institution of the action by the plaintiffs to compel the assignment of the seat on the exchange standing in the name of William J. Ehrich the situation and interest of the defendant New York Stock Exchange is no more than that of a stakeholder. It is, therefore, only necessary to determine to whom the exchange shall pay the fund in its possession, whether Edward P. Ehrich, as administrator cum testamento annexo, shall have the entire fund or whether defendants Fonda, Inc., and Garotti must first have their claims against the decedent satisfied as valid liens against the seat itself or the proceeds of the sale thereof. Approaching the problem thus presented the first task is to determine the nature of a seat on the New York Stock Exchange. Is it a chattel, has it the characteristics of property, or is it intangible, and if an intangible is it assignable? To determine this attention must be directed to the manner in which a seat on the exchange is created. Examining the constitution of the exchange we learn that a seat as it is termed merely gives the privileges of membership in a voluntary unincorporated association. By the same instrument the discovery is had that membership depends entirely upon the will of the admissions committee which can arbitrarily and without explanation admit or reject. Limiting membership to individuals, the manner in which such member may utilize it is specifically provided for in
Submit findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment accordingly.