Boyle v. Henning

121 F. 376, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5331
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Kentucky
DecidedMarch 31, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 121 F. 376 (Boyle v. Henning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyle v. Henning, 121 F. 376, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5331 (circtwdky 1902).

Opinion

EVANS, District Judge

(charging jury). Without going into details, it may be well to summarize in a general way the respective contentions and claims of the parties as shown by the pleadings, so as possibly to assist you in understanding the issues of fact now to be submitted for your determination.

The plaintiff in his petition asserts demands against the defendant amounting in the aggregate to $25,030.61, made up of $9,830.61, which he alleges the defendant held for him on April 30, 1901, as the result of certain transactions in buying and selling sundry stocks other than the 100 shares of Northern Pacific, $5,000 deposited by plaintiff with defendant on May 8, 1901, $3,000 deposited by him with defendant on May 9, 1901, and $7,200, the proceeds of the sale by defendant for plaintiff of 100 shares of the capital stock of the Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville Railroad Company. These claims in plaintiff’s favor, amounting, as stated, to $25,030.61, are all admitted by the defendant to be due from him to the plaintiff.

The defendant, however, while admitting on the one hand the justness of the plaintiff’s demands, says, on the other, that the plaintiff owes him over $46,000, and that after deducting therefrom the $25,-030.61, which he owes the plaintiff, the plaintiff is indebted to him a balance of $21,117.40. The nature of the defendant’s counterclaim against the plaintiff may be briefly stated thus: He claims that the plaintiff as principal, in December, 1900, employed the defendant as a broker to sell for the plaintiff 100 shares of the common stock of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company at $63 per share; that the plaintiff agreed to pay him therefor a commission of one-eighth of 1 per cent, on the par value of the stock, and such other expenses as might be properly and necessarily incurred by the defendant in the transaction; that, plaintiff not supplying him with the said 100 shares of stock the defendant, pursuant to said employment, and by the authority and under the directions of the plaintiff, sold said 100 shares of stock at the price named, and borrowed the same from another person, and delivered it to the purchaser, who thereupon paid him $8,300 therefor, with which sum, less $12.50 commissions, the defendant credited the plaintiff; that he at once notified and informed the plain[378]*378tiff of said sale and of the borrowing of said stock, and that plaintiff ratified and confirmed the same; that the situation respecting said stock remained thus until May 7, 1901, on which day the defendant, having been called upon to return the stock thus borrowed, did so, and again borrowed the same number of shares thereafter and replaced it, of which the plaintiff was notified, and which he ratified and approved, and that the defendant was compelled to pay and did pay for the said loan of said stock $500, and that on May 8, 1901, having been called upon to return the stock thus borrowed, did so, and again borrowed the same number of shares therefor and replaced it, of which the plaintiff was notified, and which he ratified and approved, and that defendant was compelled to pay for said loan thereof the further sum of $3,500; both of which sums are claimed to have been expenses proper and necessary to be incurred in the execution of the plaintiff’s order, and to have been authorized by him; that though notified and required to do so the plaintiff did not supply the defendant with said stock either to deliver to the said purchaser or to the person from whom the defendant had borrowed jt for the purposes aforesaid; that the persons from whom it was borrowed demanded its return, of which demand the defendant notified the plaintiff; that defendant required of the plaintiff, and SO' notified him, that he should deposit two further sums — one on May 8, 1901, of $10,000, and one on May 9, 1901, of $15,000 — to protect the defendant against loss on account of said transaction, but the plaintiff, excepting $3,000 on the 9th, neither sent either of said sums nor supplied the defendant with the shares of stock, but that instead the plaintiff authorized the defendant to terminate the transaction, and to buy 100 shares of the common stock of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, and that on May 9, 1901, the plaintiff telegraphed defendant to make the best settlement he could unless he could see his way clear to carry it without too much cost; that under these circumstances, and not seeing his way to carry it, the defendant went upon the market, and bought the 100 shares of said stock at the best price at which he could obtain it; that in doing so he exercised his best judgment and discretion; that he had to pay and did pay therefor the sum of $50,000, being at the rate of $500 a share; that this was the lowest price at which he could at the time procure the stock, and that with the stock thus bought he replaced the stock he had borrowed in the execution of the plaintiff’s order; that the plaintiff was properly notified of all this, and ratified and approved it; that after charging the commissions agreed upon and the $4,000 expenses incurred, and after giving credit by the $8,300 received for the stock in December, 1900, and after giving credit by another small item named, and after then deducting the $25,030.61 admitted by the defendant to be due to the plaintiff, there still remained owing from the plaintiff to the defendant the balance stated of $21,117.40.

You will observe, gentlemen, that there is no dispute between the parties concerning the plaintiff’s claim of $25,130.61. That sum is admitted by the defendant to be due from him to the plaintiff. The only contentions are those which grew out of the counterclaim of the defendant against the plaintiff for the forty-six thousand and odd dol[379]*379lars, and which is contested by the plaintiff in three several defenses.

Those defenses may be stated separately, and are, first, a general denial by the plaintiff of all that the defendant alleges upon the subject.

The second defense to the counterclaim is that on the 7th, 8th, and 9th days of May, 1901, there existed what is called a “corner” on Northern Pacific stock; that by reason of that fact practically all the stock of that railroad was withdrawn from the market; that the defendant knew it, and that the plaintiff did not; that the plaintiff gave the defendant no order to buy the stock nor to incur the expenses claimed to have been paid by the defendant for borrowing it, and that the purchase by the defendant of the stock, if he purchased it at all, was in bad faith and without authority, and that it was done recklessly, unskillfully, and negligently under the circumstances then existing; that the plaintiff repudiated the purchase and all the transactions connected with it, and so notified the defendant; and that for all these reasons he is under no liability upon the counterclaim.

As to this defense made by the plaintiff to the counterclaim, the defendant insists to the contrary, and claims that in all he did he acted pursuant to the authority given him by the plaintiff, and within his rights, under the relations existing between him and the plaintiff respecting said transaction, and after the demands for margin made upon the plaintiff and already referred to, and the defendant denies that he made said purchase in bad faith or without authority, or recklessly, unskillfully, or negligently, under the circumstances then surrounding him.

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Bluebook (online)
121 F. 376, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-henning-circtwdky-1902.