Broderick v. Alexander (Kahn)

197 N.E. 291, 268 N.Y. 306, 103 A.L.R. 1079, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 941
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 11, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 197 N.E. 291 (Broderick v. Alexander (Kahn)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broderick v. Alexander (Kahn), 197 N.E. 291, 268 N.Y. 306, 103 A.L.R. 1079, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 941 (N.Y. 1935).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

In the morning of December 10,1930, Leta M. Kahn gave an order to her agent or broker to sell fifty shares of stock owned by her in the Bank of United States. The order was executed about noon. The firm of Hoit, Rose & Troster, who are dealers in bank stock, purchased the fifty shares offered by the broker or agent. In accordance with the usual custom among brokers or dealers in bank stock, the delivery of the certificate of the fifty shares sold on December 10th was made on the following day. In the interval the Superintendent of Banks had taken possession of the bank.

*309 The fifty shares of stock delivered by Leta M. Kahn were registered in her name upon the books of the bank. She is subject to the liability imposed by the Constitution of the State (Art. VIII, § 7) and by the Banking Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 2; §§ 80 and 120) upon stockholders of the bank. She does not contest her liability. She claims, however, that Hoit, Rose & Troster, as purchasers of her stock, are bound to indemnify her against such liability accruing after the sale to them. They have been made parties to the action, and judgment has been entered against them upon Leta M. Kahn’s cross-claim.

We have said that the obligation of the buyer to indemnify the seller is implied by law. It rests not on actual agreement, but on equitable principles. Seller and buyer occupy a quasi-trust relationship as long as the seller remains the holder of record and the buyer remains the actual owner of the stock.” (Broderick v. Aaron [Rice], 264 N. Y. 368, 377.) Regardless of whether title to the stock of Leta M. Kahn passed from the seller of the stock prior to delivery of the certificate, or even prior to transfer upon the books of the corporation, the seller by contract of present sale was bound to transfer, and the buyer was bound to accept, fifty shares of stock, together with rights to any benefit accruing upon the stock from the time the contract of sale was made. (Currie v. White, 45 N. Y. 822.) The contract of sale may not call for immediate delivery of the stock — even appropriation of specific stock to the contract may be postponed, yet the purchaser acquired by a contract of present sale a right to the benefits which may accrue upon the stock bought, and that right is, for convenience, called the “ beneficial ownership ” of the stock.

The beneficial owner of the stock at the same time becomes subject to an obligation to indemnify the seller upon a liability which may flow from record ownership of the stock; for the “ duty to bear burdens is correlative to the right to take benefits.” (Johnson v. Underhill, 52 N. Y. *310 203, 214.) To obtain, tbe status of a stockholder with consequent benefits from the corporation and with correlative liabilities to the corporation, transfer of the stock upon the books of the corporation may be necessary. None the less the beneficial owner of the stock may require the holder of record of the stock to transfer to him benefits received, and the holder of record of the stock may, after sale of the stock, require the purchaser, so long as he remains beneficial owner, to indemnify him . for loss sustained by reason of liabilities incurred as holder of record.

These general rules are well established, and in reliance upon them, Leta M. Kahn has obtained judgment against Hoit, Rose & Troster to whom, through her agent or broker, she sold fifty shares of stock. The purchasers do not challenge these rules. They contend that they in turn sold the stock they bought from Leta M. Kahn and were no longer the beneficial owners of her stock when the Superintendent of Banks took possession of Bank of United States.

In Broderick v. Aaron (Rice) (supra) we held that where a purchaser, from a stockholder of record, of shares of stock in Bank of United States, resold the shares before the bank closed, he was not hable to such stockholder of record for the amount of the statutory assessment recovered by the Superintendent of Banks against the stockholder of record. Here the purchasers of the stock attempt to establish the resale by proof that on December 10th, the day before the Bank of United States closed, they bought many blocks of stock in that bank, including the stock of Leta M. Kahn, and that on the same day they made many sales of stock in the same bank, and at the close of business they had sold more shares than they had bought or than they owned; in other words, that they were actually short of the stock. That, on the following day, after the bank was closed, they received delivery of the stock they had bought the previous day, *311 including the stock bought from Leta M. Kahn. As they received delivery of stock bought the previous day, they delivered the stock received to those to whom they had made sales on the previous day. The fifty shares of stock bought from Leta M. Kahn were then delivered upon a contract for the sale of the same number of shares of stock made by them three hours after they had bought the stock which" they delivered.

Thus, though at the time the Bank of United States was closed, the purchasers of the stock from Leta M. Kahn had not transferred to any other person the shares they had bought from her, yet they had, in fact, made contracts of sale of more shares than they had bought or owned. Their claim now is that they had in that manner ceased to be the beneficial owners of any stock in the Bank of United States and were, consequently, not subject to the burdens placed by law upon the stockholders of the bank.

They admit that at the time the bank closed they had not passed title to the stock they had bought to any purchaser, but they urge that they had not received title to the stock they had bought prior to that time. They admit that they had not even appropriated any stock bought prior to that time upon any contract for the sale of similar stock, but they urge that no appropriation of stock upon their contracts to buy had been made by the original seller with their consent. They argue that it follows that prior to the closing of the bank they did not, by their purchase, obtain a beneficial interest in any identified stock, and if by the purchase they acquired the beneficial ownership in unidentified stock, they parted with such beneficial ownership by sale of more unidentified stock than they had bought.

In some respects the factual situation is apparently analogous to that presented in Broderick v. Aaron (Rice) (supra). In both cases the contracts of sale and of resale were made on the day before the closing of the bank and delivery was made thereafter. In both cases no *312 title to identified stock passed either upon the original sale or upon the resale prior to the closing of the bank. There analogy ceases. In the earlier case resale was made a fraction of a minute after the original purchase. It was not disputed that the resale was of the same stock which was bought a moment before, and was made with intention to defiver the same stock which they would obtain their contract of purchase.

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Bluebook (online)
197 N.E. 291, 268 N.Y. 306, 103 A.L.R. 1079, 1935 N.Y. LEXIS 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broderick-v-alexander-kahn-ny-1935.