Bronner v. Goldman

236 F. Supp. 713, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6756
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 30, 1964
DocketCiv. A. No. 61-374
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 236 F. Supp. 713 (Bronner v. Goldman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bronner v. Goldman, 236 F. Supp. 713, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6756 (D. Mass. 1964).

Opinion

CAFFREY, District Judge.

This is a civil action brought by plaintiff against a group- of individuals who are co-partners doing business as Roberts & Company. Jurisdiction is alleged to exist on the basis of 15 U.S.C.A. § 78aa. Plaintiff seeks rescission of a promissory note which she executed on December 14, [714]*7141959, payable to the order of Roberts & Company, in the amount of $184,242.34, money damages, and other relief. The circumstances attendant upon the execution of the note are set out in full infra. The case was tried to the Court. I find and rule as follows:

Plaintiff, Manja T. Bronner, sometimes known as Manja Tritsch, is a resident of Boston, Massachusetts. She became the owner of a ladies’ apparel retail business called "The Gray Shop” in 1941. She owns substantially all of the stock therein and has managed it since that time. The Gray Shop operated one store in Boston and one in Falmouth, Massachusetts. The gross volume of the two stores for the. calendar year 1959 was approximately $300,000. In her business plaintiff is accustomed to making seasonal loans for business purposes from the First National Bank of Boston. She testified on deposition .that she had been a more or less constant and avid reader of the financial news, including the Wall Street Journal, for a period of four years, and that she was always interested in economics and finance. The record indicates that both prior to and following the transactions with duPont, Hornsey & Company which gave rise to this action she did business with other brokerages, beginning in 1953. These included Burgess & Leith, where she had between 7 and 10 transactions; Hertz & Company in New York; Morton Seidel in Los Angeles; Merrill Lynch in Boston, where she had 24 transactions; and H. C. Wainwright & Co. in Boston, where she had about 32 transactions in 1959 and 1960.

Plaintiff became a customer of duPont, Hornsey & Company in July 1958, and shortly thereafter made the acquaintance of Anton E. Hornsey who acted as the firm's customer’s man in connection with her account. He also served as one of her investment advisers until about September 1, 1960. During this period she actively traded in a variety of stocks through the duPont, Hornsey & Company office.

Defendant’s Exhibit A, a schedule of all plaintiff’s dealings with duPont, Hornsey & Company, indicates that prior to the transaction of December 14, 1959 complained of herein, involving 2,000 shares of American Motors, Mrs. Tritsch bought a total of 8,200 shares of American Motors and sold a total of 7,500 shares of American Motors, realizing a profit therefrom of about $38,740.00.

The record indicates that in March 1959, plaintiff borrowed $98,000 from the Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Company to finance a joint venture with Anton E. Hornsey in the purchase of American Petrofina stock, and the record also shows that on June 3, 1959, plaintiff borrowed $32,000 from the First National Bank of Boston to finance the purchase of 1,000 shares of Lorillard through the office of duPont, Hornsey & Company.

Although plaintiff testified at the trial, “I relied on Mr. Hornsey one hundred per cent because he was a member of the Stock Exchange and he was an adviser to other women, too,” she conceded in other portions of her testimony that she signed a letter dated March 21, 1959 addressed to the President of American Petrofina Company which contained the statement, “I am a business woman who realizes the risk involved in investing money." She also conceded that while urging Hornsey to sell some of her holdings in American Motors in the Spring of 1960 she in fact bought through another brokerage blocks of 50 and 100 shares of American Motors.

The foregoing makes it abundantly clear that plaintiff was, and is, an experienced business woman who, in 1959, was familiar with American business practices and the use of borrowed money to finance both purchases of inventory for her business and to finance speculation in the stock market; that she had borrowed money on several occasions prior to the December 14 transaction for speculative investments; that she was an active trader in the stock market; and that she had entered into a prior joint venture with Hornsey for 9,200 shares [715]*715of American Petrofina in March of 1959 which was substantially identical in its terms to the joint venture with Hornsey of December 14, 1959 which resulted in this lawsuit. :

The defendants are residents of Massachusetts who have been engaged in the money-lending business as co-partners under the name and style of Roberts & Company since April 1959. Arthur L. Goldman at all material times has been the managing partner of the company. For some years prior to December 14, 1959, Anton E. Hornsey, a resident of Massachusetts, was a member of the New York Stock Exchange, owner of a seat thereon, and the senior and managing general partner of the stock brokerage firm duPont, Hornsey & Company, which had usual places of business in Boston and elsewhere. Hornsey is not a defendant herein but the complaint alleges him to be a co-conspirator with Goldman.

On various occasions prior to December 1959, Roberts & Company had made loans of money either to Hornsey or to nominees or straws for his use and benefit. The purpose of these loans was to enable Hornsey to purchase marketable securities for his own account. These loans were made to him at interest rates of from 12 to 15 per cent per annum and were secured by stock certificates delivered to Roberts & Company by Hornsey. The stock certificates so pledged represented shares of stock in companies qualified and listed for trading on one of the national securities exchanges. The loans by Roberts & Company to Hornsey were outstanding and unpaid during the year 1959 and a major portion of 1960.

The first loan made by Goldman to Hornsey was on February 12, 1959, in the amount of $34,000. This loan was made by Investment Funds, Inc., '-a company with which Goldman was associated prior to the formation of Roberts & Company. The first loan made by Roberts & Company to Hornsey was in August of 1959 in the amount of $150,000. This loan was secured by 1400 shares of American Motors, 1000 shares of Crucible Steel, 200 shares of General Time, 200 shares of Hoffman Electronics, 100 shares of Lukens Steel, 500 shares of Siegler Corporation, 300 shares of Thiokol Chemicals and 400 shares of Universal Cyclops.

Investment Funds, Inc. made a loan totaling $39,000 to three individual customers of duPont, Hornsey & Company. These loans were “taken over” by Roberts & Company on April 1, 1959 and Hornsey also guaranteed to Roberts & Company the payment of these three loans through a letter written in October 1959.

On November 25, 1959, while the above loans were still outstanding and unpaid, Roberts & Company made a loan to Hornsey in the amount of $181,961 which was due in one week, i. e., December 2, 1959, and it was the intention of the parties that the loan would be secured by 2,00.0 shares of common stock of American Motors Corporation. In exchange for Roberts & Company’s check for the $181,961, dated November 25,1959, Hornsey executed two documents which were admitted in evidence: ■/

(1) a receipt for the check written on a blank piece of paper, which read:

“Received from Roberts & Company check in the sum of $181,-961.00. On or before December 2, 1959, we promise to deliver to you 2,000 shares of American Motors in negotiable form.”

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Related

Zatz v. Hertz, Neumark & Warner
262 F. Supp. 928 (S.D. New York, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 F. Supp. 713, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bronner-v-goldman-mad-1964.