Ball v. Shepard

135 A.D. 612, 120 N.Y.S. 830, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4025

This text of 135 A.D. 612 (Ball v. Shepard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball v. Shepard, 135 A.D. 612, 120 N.Y.S. 830, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4025 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinions

Ingraham, J. :

The action is brought to recover the sum of $24,906.25, paid by the plaintiffs to the defendants as an action for money had and received. To intelligently present the question, it is important that the relation of the parties to each 'other and to one Valentine, out of whose transactions the controversy arose, should be stated.

It seems that Valentine was a dealer in bonds, stocks and other securities. He had been in the employ of the defendant, but about ■ four months before July 28, 1908, he had been engaged by the plaintiffs to bring in stock business, and in June plaintiffs had paid him a salary of fifty dollars a week, Valentine, however, retained his outside bond business, and during the time that he had been in the employ of the plaintiffs he had carried on transactions in bonds and other unlisted securities on his own account, sometimes clearing purchases and sales of such securities through tile plaintiffs, and sometimes through other houses engaged in that business. The plaintiffs’ firm was what is known as a stock exchange house, that is, connected with the Hew York Stock Exchange. Prior to this time the defendant had promoted a company called the “Yankee Fuel Company.” This company made a bond issue,of $1,500,000, and at this time about $1,000,000 of these bonds was unsold. On July 28, 1908, Valentine went to the defendants’ place of business and ■ made an offer for $25,000 of Yankee Fuel bonds at ninety cents on the dollar. Valentine had before that sold these bonds to his customers and had purchased them from the defendants. The method seems to have been, when Valentine sold the bonds, he obtained a net price from the defendants, when the defendants would bill the bonds to the purchaser, or the 'brokers who acted for the purchaser, at the price that he was to receive for them, and the defendants would pay him the difference between the net price at which Valentine purchased them and the price at which they had [615]*615been billed to the purchaser. The defendants accepted this offer of Valentine’s. Valentine then requested the defendants to deliver the bonds to the plaintiffs who would pay for them. Valentine then went to Mr. Chinn, one of the plaintiffs, and said to him that he had put through a $25,000 bond deal. Shortly afterwards the bonds were received from the defendants at the plaintiffs’ place of business, when Chinn gave orders not to pay for them until lie could see Valentine about them. Valentine subsequently came in, when Chinn said to him that there were twenty-five Yankee Fuel bonds from Shepard & Co. and asked where his money was. Valentine said, “ Why, that is all right, Mr. Chinn; I have sold those bonds to a Mr. Spingarn, of Spingarn Brothers; lie is an uptown milliner, he owns the building he is in; I have sold him over 200,000 bonds in the past two or three years; in fact, I have sold him 280,000 to be accurate; ” that there was no use of holding Shepard up for the payment of these bonds, because a certified check would be down there within an hour for those bonds from Mr. Spingarn. Whereupon Mr. Chinn told his cashier to pay for the bonds. The plaintiffs’ check was then drawn and was delivered to the defendants’ messenger. This check was delivered about twenty minutes of eleven o’clock in the morning and Valentine stated that he had some arrangement with Mr. Spingarn to send the check down. The Spingarn check not having been received during the day, the plaintiffs tried to communicate with Mr. Spingarn, but were unsuccessful until the following morning when it was ascertained-that Spingarn had never purchased these bonds from them and knew nothing about the transaction. The messenger who delivered these bonds testified that he delivered them to Valentine personally at the plaintiffs’ place of business and received the plaintiffs’ check for them from Valentine. The defendants immediately proceeded to have the check certified and it was at once deposited and paid through the Clearing House on the same day. As soon as the plaintiffs had ascertained that Spingarn had not purchased these bonds, on the morning of the twenty-ninth one of the plaintiffs went to the defendants’ place of business and saw the manager in charge. He told the manager that this $25,000 worth of bonds that Valentine had sold for the defendants to Spingarn could not be delivered and demanded back the .money. [616]*616• The manager said that the company had been advised that the bonds had been sold and that a-- draft was on its way, to which the plaintiffs’ representative - replied, “ then cancel the draft,” and the plaintiffs would have nothing to do with the bonds, when the defendants’ manager said that lie would see what he could do about it. Subsequently, on the same day, the déf en dan ts ^offered -to repurchase -the bonds at fifty cents on the dollar'. The plaintiffs tendered the bonds to the defendants and demanded, the money, but it was refused, and this action,was brought. -

At the end of the plaintiffs’ case the defendants moved --to dismiss the complaint, which was denied. The' motion was'renewed at the end of the whole case, which was again denied, and' to that the defendants excepted. . The court submitted to the- jury two questions : First, whether the plaintiffs purchased the bonds from the defendants, and, second, whether it was-under any material mistake of fact that the plaintiffs were induced to make the payment in question ; that before the plaintiff's could recover they must show that the payment was made in consequence of a material mistake of fact; finally instructing the jury that If you find that in the transaction in question the plaintiffs were acting in the matter to make a clearance and had not bought the bonds from the defendants, and. that in paying the check for $2é,906.25 plaintiffs acted under a mistake of fact, namely, in the belief that the bonds had been bought by Spingarn, and that arrangements had been made under which Spingarn had arranged to send a certified check for. the same to.the plaintiffs,, and that in fact Spingarn had not bought the bonds and had not made such arrangements, and that defendants, had" not changed their position. * * * to their prejudice at thé time-they received notice of the mistake, then the plaintiffs are entitled to recover; and to which I add otherwise, and if you find .to the contrary, the plaintiffs- cannot recover in this action against the defendants.” To this charge the defendants excepted. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs for the full amount claimed^ and -from that verdict the defendants appealed. .

The transaction which resulted, in the defendants procuring from the plaintiffs this check of nearly $25,000 was based upon the sale of these bonds by the defendants to Valentine. Valentine had been in the habit of making such transactions' with the defendants, [617]*617and in the original transaction there was no mention of the plaintiffs’ name, the transaction being solely between the defendants and Valentine, and the price at which Valentine bought these bonds was ninety cents on the dollar. After that sale had been made the defendants were asked to bill the bonds to the plaintiffs at ninety-eight cents on the dollar. In pursuance of that request the bonds were sent to the plaintiffs’ place of business and there delivered to Valentine, and the defendants’ representative received from Valentine the plaintiffs’ check for the amount. This check having been collected on the same day, the ^defendants paid to Valentine, the difference between the amount at which the bonds had been billed to the plaintiffs and the amount at which. Valentine had purchased the bonds.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hathaway v. . County of Delaware
78 N.E. 153 (New York Court of Appeals, 1906)
Lawrence v. . American National Bank
54 N.Y. 432 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 A.D. 612, 120 N.Y.S. 830, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-shepard-nyappdiv-1909.